The Exceptional Child

Przednia okładka
C. Scribner's sons, 1917 - 764

Z wnętrza książki

Spis treści

Pseudoatypical Children p 90 Change of Schools p 90 Different stand
99
CHAPTER VIIEXCEPTIONALLY BRIGHT CHILDREN
106
Robert Wiener p
108
Winifred Sackville Stoner Jr pp 108 ƒƒ 19 W S boy 5½ years p
113
P E G boy 2 years 11 months pp 115 ff 707
119
W B boy 16 years p
120
Ulysses S Grant p
121
Jacques Inaudi p
123
Tredgolds feebleminded man p
124
Otto Pöhler pp 125 f 32 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart p
127
Johann Wolfgang Goethe pp 127 281
128
William James Sidis pp 128 ff
131
CHAPTER VIIIPSYCHOPATHIC DISORDERS AND PSYCHO
140
Dementia vs Amentia p 140 Absence of mental endowment vs destruc
152
H H girl 14 years pp 131 151 f 44 N boy pp 145 f 45 M boy pp 145 f 46 R boy pp 145 f 47 Farnells boy 12 years p
155
Farnells girl 16 years p
156
Williamss girl 8 years p
157
Charles Lamb p
158
CHAPTER IXTHE FEEBLEMINDED GROUP
159
CHAPTER XJUVENILE DELINQUENCY
185
Napoleon I pp 186
186
What is Crime? p 185 Law vs crime Artificial offenses Success as
191
Louise 18 years p
202
CHAPTER XISEXUAL PERVERSION AND PROSTITUTION
213
Prostitution and FeebleMindedness p 213 Small percentage of aments
223
E S boy colored 9 years 9 months p
224
PART IITHE PROBLEM OF CLINICAL RESEARCH
230
tests Anatomical data The skeleton Musculature and character
237
F C boy 15 years p
242
G S boy 15 years p
243
R F boy 17 years p
244
boy 17½ years p
245
age Body measurements Early Observations p 100 Opportunities
248
PAGE
259
trums Illusions etc Tics Vasomotor disturbances Balance Tro
268
CHAPTER XVISCHEDULE OF TESTS
276
77
286
Completer Schedule p 276 The Study of Individual Children
294
PAGE
296
T boy 20 years pp 246 586
305
Armando p
317
Boston boy 12 years p
341
Edgerton boy 12 years p
342
Boston girl 11 years p
343
Boston girl 10 years p
344
PART IIITHE PROBLEMS OF PREVENTION
372
Various Aspects p 372 Variations vs deviations Adjustments in home
378
CHAPTER XXIVPROVISIONS FOR EXCEPTIONAL CHIL
481
Kathryne Frick p
503
CHAPTER XXVSANATORIUM SCHOOLS FOR ATYPICAL
504
CHAPTER XXVITHE TRAINING OF TEACHERS
533
APPENDICES
549
73
552
The mentally defective is very suggestible and therefore apt to be
558
IIPHYSICAL CAUSES OF GENERAL AND MENTAL DEFICIENCIES by
567
IIIPRENATAL AND NATAL CAUSES OF EXCEPTIONAL DEVELOPMENT
574
G male 26 years p
585
boy 14 years p
587
H H girl 9 years p
588
A boy 14 years p
589
VIIIDEFORMITIES IN CHILDREN by Dr E H Arnold New Haven
592
IXTHE RÔLE OF NEUROMUSCULAR EDUCATION IN TRAINING ATYPICAL
598
XITHE DEAF CHILD FROM THE STANDPOINT OF THE EDUCATOR
610
XIITHE BLIND CHILD by Dr F Park Lewis Buffalo N Y p
618
XIIIHEREDITARY WEAKNESS PREDISPOSING TO TUBERCULAR DISEASES
626
OUTDOOR SCHOOLS AND MEDICAL TREATMENT FOR EXCEPTIONAL
633
XVITHE MENTALLY BACKWARD CHILD FROM THE STANDPOINT OF
639
XVIICARE OF THE NEUROTIC AND PSYCHOPATHIC CHILD by Dr Fred
646
Williamss girl 11 years p
656
Williamss girl 11 years p
659
Williamss boy 11 years p
664
Woman gnawing fox case p
667
Williamss boy 8 years p
668
Williamss boy 34 years p
669
Williamss boy 14 years p
672
Williamss case male 30 years p
673
P E G s girl 10 years p
682
XXISEXUAL HYGIENE by Dr Arthur W Weysse Boston Mass
683
XXIVINHERENT IMMORALITY by Dr Ross Moore Los Angeles
696
APPENDIX IIIFIRST AND SECOND YEAR DATA Of
707
159
708
Boy 14 years p
712
F G boy 74 years p
713
A W girl 10 years p
714
W B boy 11½ years p
715
T B boy 10½ years p
716
R U boy 11 years p
717
B C boy 11 years p
718
APPENDIX VBIBLIOGRAPHY OF SOME OF THE Books
719
IO Honoré Balzac p 92
725
380
749
185
750
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Strona 207 - Where the wood-grape's clusters shine; Of the black wasp's cunning way, Mason of his walls of clay, And the architectural plans Of gray hornet artisans! For, eschewing books and tasks, Nature answers all he asks; Hand in hand with her he walks, Face to face with her he talks, Part and parcel of her joy, — Blessings on the barefoot boy!
Strona 92 - I returned, and saw under the sun; that the race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong, neither yet bread to the wise, nor yet riches to men of understanding, nor yet favour to men of skill ; but time and chance happeneth to them all.
Strona 160 - This is the mildest degree of mental defect, and the feeble-minded person is ' ' one who is capable of earning a living under favorable circumstances, but is incapable, from mental defect existing from birth, or from an early age, (a) of competing on equal terms with his normal fellows; or (b) of managing himself and his affairs with ordinary prudence.
Strona 310 - The fireplaces were of a truly patriarchal magnitude, where the whole family, old and young, master and servant, black and white, nay, even the very cat and dog, enjoyed a community of privilege, and had each a right to a corner.
Strona 77 - Johnny Jones has lost a leg, Fanny's deaf and dumb, Marie has epileptic fits, Tom's eyes are on the bum, Sadie stutters when she talks, Mabel has TB Morris is a splendid case of imbecility. Billy Brown's a truant, And Harold is a thief; Teddy's parents gave him dope, And so he came to grief. Gwendolin's a millionaire, Jerald is a fool; So everyone of these darned kids Goes to a special school.
Strona 137 - When we add to these predisposing causes the small and decreasing families, the later marriages, so that more and more are born of post-mature parents and thus physiologically tend to precocity; the over-nurture of only children who are so prone to be spoiled and ripened still earlier by unwise fondness; the mixture of...
Strona 568 - About (25 per cent) 5,000,000 have defective vision. "About (25 per cent) 5,000,000 are suffering from malnutrition, in many cases due in part at least to one or more of the other defects enumerated. "Over (30 percent) 6,000,000 have enlarged tonsils, adenoids or enlarged cervical glands which need attention.
Strona 310 - The young folks would crowd around the hearth, listening with breathless attention to some old crone of a negro, who was the oracle of the family, and who, perched like a raven in a corner of the chimney, would croak forth for a long winter afternoon a string of incredible stories about New England witches, grisly ghosts, horses without heads, and hairbreadth escapes and bloody encounters among the Indians.
Strona vii - The purpose of the book is to give a perspective of the entire situation, and to suggest ways and means of coping with the problem in its various aspects.
Strona 309 - It was the last of autumn and first day of winter coming together. All day long the plowmen on their prairie farms had moved to and fro in their wide level fields through the falling snow, which melted as it fell, wetting them to the skin— all day, notwithstanding the frequent squalls of snow, the dripping, desolate clouds, and the muck of the furrows, black and tenacious as tar. Under their dripping harness the horses swung to and fro silently, with that marvelous uncomplaining patience which...

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