Schools and Classes for Exceptional ChildrenSurvey Committee of the Cleveland Foundation, 1916 - 122 |
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Strona 12
... necessary , without accurate information as to the needs , the authorities set aside Longwood School . This school was too large for the number of backward children found within a sufficiently limited area . In order to make use of the ...
... necessary , without accurate information as to the needs , the authorities set aside Longwood School . This school was too large for the number of backward children found within a sufficiently limited area . In order to make use of the ...
Strona 18
... necessary for them to reach the grades in which we find them . Of these children , 6,731 have repeated two years of their school life . Some are behind as many as four , five , or six years . Most of these chil- dren are found in the ...
... necessary for them to reach the grades in which we find them . Of these children , 6,731 have repeated two years of their school life . Some are behind as many as four , five , or six years . Most of these chil- dren are found in the ...
Strona 31
... necessary qualifications . In the selection of the teachers the authorities have not been so liberal as they were in the construction of the building . It is poor policy to spend large sums of money on the erection and maintenance of a ...
... necessary qualifications . In the selection of the teachers the authorities have not been so liberal as they were in the construction of the building . It is poor policy to spend large sums of money on the erection and maintenance of a ...
Strona 32
... necessary . No one is qualified by an innate capacity for such work . Definite practice is required in the same way that definite practice is necessary for the teaching of arithmetic , history , or geography . The principal of the ...
... necessary . No one is qualified by an innate capacity for such work . Definite practice is required in the same way that definite practice is necessary for the teaching of arithmetic , history , or geography . The principal of the ...
Strona 33
... necessary if the children are to make the progress of which they are capable . For these children pro- vision may be made without great difficulty . The state has set no limit to the number of deaf children that may be found in a ...
... necessary if the children are to make the progress of which they are capable . For these children pro- vision may be made without great difficulty . The state has set no limit to the number of deaf children that may be found in a ...
Inne wydania - Wyświetl wszystko
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
ability able academic Alfred Binet arrangement auscultation backward children Binet tests Binet-Simon tests blind cent chil classes for backward classes for defectives CLASSES FOR EXCEPTIONAL CLEVELAND FOUNDATION clinical psychologist conducted cost DAVID MITCHELL deaf defective speech diagnosis of feeblemindedness Division of Medical dren EDUCATION SURVEY examination exceptional children expenditure feeble feebleminded children given handicapped Harmon School incompetent individual Industrial School institution instruction intelligence manual Medical Inspection mental status mental tests mentally defective mentally exceptional method necessary Newton D normal child normal children normal mentality number of children organized physi physical physician present progress pupils qualified regular grades regular school buildings retarded Russell Sage Foundation satisfactory scale school system SCHOOLS AND CLASSES segregation selected self-supporting semi-blind socially competent special classes special school special teacher speech defect sputum sufficient summarize SURVEY COMMITTEE tion training centers tuberculosis unable Vineland
Popularne fragmenty
Strona 78 - An accurate and incontestible diagnosis of one of these borderline cases can be satisfactorily made only after a thorough physical examination of the patient, knowledge of the family history, personal history, especially the story of his infancy and early childhood, school history and records, social and moral reactions, sexual habits, emotional stability, associates, interests, and the fullest inquiry as to his general information and practical knowledge.
Strona 1 - Plan" is one of the 25 sections of the report of the Education Survey of Cleveland conducted by the Survey Committee of the Cleveland Foundation in 1915. Twenty-three of these sections will be published as separate monographs.
Strona 75 - A last word for those persons who desire to employ the method. Any one can use it for his own personal satisfaction or to obtain an approximate evaluation of a child's intelligence; but for the results of this method to have a scientific value, it is absolutely necessary that the individual who uses it should have served an apprenticeship in a laboratory of pedagogy or possess a thorough practical knowledge of psychological experimentation.
Strona 76 - It is without doubt the most satisfactory and accurate method of determining a child's intelligence that we have, and so far superior to everything else which has been proposed that as yet there is nothing else to be considered.4 The value of the method lies both in the swiftness and the accuracy with which it works.
Strona 77 - Where we shall draw the line between the child whom we shall call a normal child with mental defects, and a subnormal or feebleminded child who is mentally defective, is a problem which can not be solved wholly within the realm of psychology. No Binet-Simon tests, nor any other tests, will inform us as to what children we shall consider feebleminded.
Strona 78 - The Binet tests, in the hands of competent examiners, usually corroborate the results of clinical examination in the recognition of all degrees of mental defect in children under ten, and of pronounced defect in older persons. These tests are not so effective in detecting slight mental defect in world-wise adolescents and adults. In other words, the Binet tests corroborate where we do not need corroboration, and are not decisive where the differential diagnosis of the high grade defective from the...
Strona 115 - CLEVELAND EDUCATION SURVEY REPORTS These reports can be secured from the Survey Committee of the Cleveland Foundation, Cleveland, Ohio. They will be sent postpaid for 25 cents per volume with the exception of "Measuring the Work of the Public Schools" by Judd, "The Cleveland School Survey" by Ayres, and "Wage Earning and Education
Strona 17 - ... imbeciles, idio-imbeciles, and idiots. The criterion by which we distinguish the two groups of exceptional children is that of social fitness. Can a child be educated for self-support and an independent existence in the community? If so, he is socially competent. If not, he is socially incompetent. 205 A child of normal mentality may be so badly deformed that he will require certain assistance, but this does not make him socially incompetent. The fact is that a child of normal mentality must...
Strona 99 - Plans for the classes should eliminate chance methods. There should be some organization which will permit the experience of one class being an advantage to the others. For this purpose the most satisfactory method is the appointment of a supervisor who will have authority to direct all the classes. To summarize : The abilities of the pupils should determine the type of teachers who would be selected for the different classes. There seems to be no reason why the teachers of the feebleminded should...
Strona 85 - The present report is based on the proposition that competency in this field involves ability to use a wide range of psychological tests and measures and a grounding in the theory and practice of applied psychology...