Problems of SubnormalityWorld book Company, 1917 - 485 |
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Strona iii
... School Child , " etc. , etc. WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY JOHN W. WITHERS , PH.D. Superintendent of Public Schools in the City of St. Louis 8 ( 00 ) Yonkers - on - Hudson , New York WORLD BOOK COMPANY Copyright , 1917 , by World Book Company ...
... School Child , " etc. , etc. WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY JOHN W. WITHERS , PH.D. Superintendent of Public Schools in the City of St. Louis 8 ( 00 ) Yonkers - on - Hudson , New York WORLD BOOK COMPANY Copyright , 1917 , by World Book Company ...
Strona xiii
... public - school ad- ministrators have begun to realize that the problem of the exceptional child has become one of the most important administrative problems in the schools . In the effort to solve this problem we have attempted to ...
... public - school ad- ministrators have begun to realize that the problem of the exceptional child has become one of the most important administrative problems in the schools . In the effort to solve this problem we have attempted to ...
Strona xiv
... public schools ; and to the solution of this task Dr. Wallin devotes a considerable portion of this book . Dr. Wallin has for many years enjoyed unparal- leled opportunities in the first - hand study of a great vari- ety of types of ...
... public schools ; and to the solution of this task Dr. Wallin devotes a considerable portion of this book . Dr. Wallin has for many years enjoyed unparal- leled opportunities in the first - hand study of a great vari- ety of types of ...
Strona 25
... public and private residential institutions for the training of feeble ... schools or classes for the training of " mentally deficient , " " sub ... School Organization and the Individual Child , 1912 , Part II , pp . 1-40 . J. E. Wallace ...
... public and private residential institutions for the training of feeble ... schools or classes for the training of " mentally deficient , " " sub ... School Organization and the Individual Child , 1912 , Part II , pp . 1-40 . J. E. Wallace ...
Strona 27
... public - school care of feeble - minded and backward children . Residential Institutions At the beginning of the present century residential training schools , workshops , and colonies for the feeble- minded were supported by the ...
... public - school care of feeble - minded and backward children . Residential Institutions At the beginning of the present century residential training schools , workshops , and colonies for the feeble- minded were supported by the ...
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Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
according adult alcoholic Alfred Binet Arith assigned average backward children Basis of classification Bicêtre Binet and Simon Binet scale Binet tests Binet-Simon blind borderline boys cent chil child chronological age cial clinic colony Conclusions congenital syphilis criminal deaf defective children deficiency delinquent diagnosed as feeble-minded dren educational efficiency epilepsy epileptic eugenic evident examination fact feeble feeble-minded children feeble-minded persons girls given heredity high-grade ical idiots imbeciles individual industrial inmates insane institutions instruction intelligence quotient large number less Louis ment mental age mental retardation mentally defective Method minded mindedness Missouri moral morons normal children organized parents pedagogically retarded percentage Pereire physical physician practical probably problem psychological psychologist Psychopathic public schools pupils regular grades reported Seguin social special classes special schools standards Subjects subnormal superintendent teachers tion types ungraded class Vineland XII-year
Popularne fragmenty
Strona 116 - Near" genius or genius. 120-140 Very superior intelligence. 110-120 Superior intelligence. 90-110 Normal or average intelligence. 80- 90 Dullness, rarely classifiable as feeble-mindedness.
Strona 102 - ... 2. The pedagogical method, which aims to judge of the intelligence according to the sum of acquired knowledge. 3. The psychological method, which makes direct observations and measurements of the degree of intelligence. From what has gone before it is easy to see the value of each of these methods. The medical method is indirect because it conjectures the mental from the physical.
Strona 43 - feeble-minded person" in this act shall be construed to mean any person afflicted with mental defectiveness from birth or from an early age, so pronounced that he is incapable of managing himself and his affairs, or of being taught to do so, and requires supervision, control and care for his own welfare, or for the welfare of others, or for the welfare of the community, who is not classifiable as an "insane person...
Strona 43 - Evidence shall also be heard and inquiry made into the social conditions, such as want of proper supervision, control, care or support, and other causes making it unsafe or dangerous to the welfare of the community for such person to be at large, without supervision, control and care.
Strona 43 - feebleminded person" in this article shall mean any person afflicted with mental defectiveness from birth or from an early age, to such an extent that he is incapable of managing himself and his affairs, or of being taught to do so...
Strona 15 - Unfortunate! Since my pains are lost and my efforts fruitless, take yourself back to your forests and primitive tastes ; or if your new wants make you dependent on society, suffer the penalty of being useless, and go to Bicetre, there to die in wretchedness.f He, of himself, never educated any other idiot, but directed " certain kinds of private education...
Strona 372 - Hampshire's legislature next took action by authorizing the governor and council in 1913 to appoint "three suitable persons who shall investigate all matters relating to the welfare of the dependent, defective and delinquent children of the State, especially the questions of orphanage, juvenile courts, detention homes, desertion, physical and mental degeneracy, infant mortality, accidents and diseases, and make report, with recommendations concerning the above matters, to the legislature of 1915.
Strona 215 - The quotient does not seem, however, to afford an actually constant expression of degree of feeblemindedness, but shows a tendency to fall in value as age increases. This tendency, it is evident, is but slight within the limits of age that have been mentioned, so that for many problems it can be neglected.
Strona 197 - L'Annte psychol., 1911, 17,149. passible to glean enough of the history of the case to make the "setting" of the scale other than guesswork. As matters stand, the best that can be done with the Binet Scale is to "interpret" the results in the light of such facts as are obtainable. That is, the verdict often depends on the judgment of the examiner almost as completely as when no "scale
Strona 382 - The board of managers shall appoint a superintendent of the colony, who shall be a welleducated physician and a graduate of a legally chartered medical college, with an experience of at least five years in the actual practice of his profession...