Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 225, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 January 1928 — Page 9
.TAN. 27, 1928
TEACHERS OPEN CONFERENCE ON COURSECHOICE Columbia Professor Speaks at Parley Studying Curriculum. The curriculum-making conference sponsored by the Teachers’ College of Indianapolis opened today at the school with a welcome address by Roy P. Wisehart, public instruction superintendent. 9 “General Problems in Curriculum Building" was discussed by Dr. Frederick G. Bonser, educational professor cf Columbia University Teachers’ College. ■ Dr. Bonser will address conference and general public tonight at 8 p. m. on “Education as Complete Living.” The sessions are open to kindergarten and elementary supervisors, schools principals, education faculty interested in curricular improvemembers, critic teachers and others ment in elementary grades. The conference will close Saturday noon. Others prominent educators to speak are L. N. Hines, Indiana State Normal president; Lillian Dinius, primary education professor of Ball Teachers’ College; Velorus Martz, associate professor of elementary education, Indiana University; W. L. Richardson, education professor of Butler University; Prances Dearborn, Indiana State Normal School; Mrs. Evans Woollen; H. M. Whistler, state teachers training supervisor; Charles F. Miller, Indianapo--1 lis public school superintendent; W. W. Borden, of South Bend; Effie T. Zenor, president of the primary sec< tion of the Indiana State Teachers’ Association; Grace L. Brown, Indianapolis kindergarten superintendent; Emma Colbert, dean of Teachers’ College; Mrs. Alice Corbin Sies, Teachers’ College president, and Mrs. George L. Roferts, head of the edubcational department of Purdue University.
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Editors
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Miss Helen McLeod (above), and Frank Yarbrough.
Washington High School will publish its first official school poper the first week in February. The permanent title is “The Surveyor.” The paper will have six pages and will be issued the first week in each month. All the printing will be done in the school shop.' Frank McLeod was chosen associate editor. Miss Martha W. Dorsey, head of the English department, is sponsor. FETE SCHOOL PRESIDENT V ” Teachers’ College Head to Be Honor Guest Saturday. Board members of the Teachers’ College will receive Saturday in honor of Mrs. Alice Corbin Sies, president. Those in line will be Mrs. Evans Woollen, president; Mrs. W. W. Critchlow, Mrs. John H. Rolliday, Mrs. George Hufford, Mrs. Albert Metzger, Mrs. J. W. Winslow, Mrs. Hilton U. Brown, Mrs. J. A. McDonald, Mrs. Thomas H. Cox, Mrs. Lee Burns, and Mrs. F. Rollin Kantz, SCHOOL HOST TO P. T. A. j Children at Daniel Webster Give Programs for Parents. Children of the Daniel Webster School, No. 46,i whose parents have not missed a Parent-Teacher meeting throughout 1927 entertained in honor of the P.-T. A. Club today at the building. Each room gave a program of playlets, pageants, songs and recitations under direction of the teacher. Three hundred and eleven children took part.
PUPILS; WRITE, PRODUCE PLAY Drama of Old England to Be Presented at No. 76. "He Who Calleth IJimself King,” a drama of Merrie England in the thirteenth century written by 8A pupils of School No. 76, was presented by the class Tuesday afternoon in the school auditorium. Mrs. Clara Bowden, music and civics teacher, is directing. Presentation of the play ir. an English study project. The children made special study of the crusades, chivalry, life in the castles, the period fashions, and the early guild systems. The play depicts the life of a “burly” king who, under the influence of a group of knights, pilgrims, archers, minstrels and outlaws, changes his view of life. The scenes are in the king’s hunting lodge. The following pupils had parts in the play: Sylvia Adeff, Mildred Bacon, Philip Berstein, Ralph Brafford, Warren Brown, William Caswell, Richard Cheesman, Jerome Cohn, James Delbrook, Maurice Epstein, James Funkhouser, Ted Greeman, William Greenough, Milton Heller, John Helsly, Kenneth Hilgedick, John Hitz, Jeanne Hodges, Walter Hotchkiss. Margaret Howard, Maxine Ingram, Hudson Jones, Ernest Lich, Carlos Hiner, Frances Morrison, Dortha Oldham, Ralph Pratt, Eleanor Semans, Charles Sherflck, Cleo Shullenberger, Denton Smith, Marie Smith, Marvin Stewart, Virginia Teague, Magdalene Wallace, Sarah Wills, Lucile Woody and William Sherfick.
FRESHIES ARE READY Shortridge Outlines Plan for New Students. Students who have received their eighth grade diplomas this week and plan to become Shortridge High School freshmen Monday should have little fear of the first days in “high,” according to the message sent from Shortridge to the new students. The following program was issued: “Freshmen will proceed directly to the auditorium where George Buck, principal, will give them a welcoming address. He will explain the rules enforced within the school and other points helpful to the new students. They will be given the Shortridge Blue Book published by the True Blue Club. Later, they will be conducted on a tour through the entire school by the Big Sisters of the club and introduced to upper classmen. All teachers will be in their classrooms to receive them.” i
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Living While Learning BY ALICE CORBIN SIES President Indianapolis Teachers’ College We hear so much today about the need of bringing life into the schools. Some critics say that our schools teach the deadwood of many yesterdays. Life itself reveals anew philosophy, new science, vital discoveries and inventions. These new elements should be brought into the school. They are a part of the civilization which children will build when they become adults. How are we to reproduce life in the school? How may educators set up a situation in which learning takes place naturally, as it does in the world of experience? Many of our leaders and critics of the present day are suggesting that we seleCT from the world at large the most outstandirtg people—men and women who meet the demands of modern life most successfully. They recommend that research methods be employed to study the lives and character of these outstanding people. Successful lives may be analyzed into habits, duties and knowledge which may ijecome a part of the school course of study. In like manner should we study the achievements of society, new inventions and scientific discoveries. This material should be incorporated into the new course of study. Children in school will then partake of real life experiences, experiences dug out of society and brought to light by modern research methods. Thus we will make the stuff which children learn in School the same as life itself. Children will live while learning.
‘SAFETY* PLAY GIVEN Children Take Part in Production They Wrote. The Junior Civic League of the James Whitcomb Riley School No. 43, presented a four-act play, “Safety First,” Wednesday afternoon before parents and children. The league is composed of pupils of the fifth and sixth grades making up four rooms. Each room wrote one act of the play and every child took part. The directors were: Miss Mabel Overhiser, Miss Esther Coffinfl, Miss Sadie Hoose and Mrs. Sue Sims, fifth and sixth grade teachers. APPOINTS JUNiOR - GROUP John Fomey Heads Vaudeville Committee at Shortridge John Forney, Shortridge High School junior, was appointed chair-
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man of the Junior vaudeville committee this week by William Hoffman, class president. Forney is president of the shortridge Press Club, aedile in the Roman State, Indiapapolis Times school correspondent, sports editor of Monday’s Echo, and Annual canvasser. ANNUAL EDITOR NAMED Charles S. Bouslog Is Chief of Shortridge Yearbook Staff. Charles S. Boulog has been elected editor-in-chief of the Shortridge High School 1928 annual. He is a senior member of the Shortridge branch of the National Honor Society, and of the Tuesday Echo staff. During his junior year he - was chairman of the junior vaudeville committee on the triState debate team.
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STUDY CONCRETE WORK School Pupils Build Bird Baths And Lawn Benches. Extensive concrete work has been carried on in the shops of the Lucretia Mott School No. 3 during the semester under direction of Charles Youngman, shop instructor. The school is one of the three city grade schools to have concrete projects and the only white grade school. The finished individual work of the boys include large bird baths, lawn benches, flower boxes of various sizes and trellis stands. Much of the other shop work this semester was done dn the .“factory plan.” They have completed twenty hall trees and twenty-four sewing boxes for their mothers. Youngman plans to have them double the number of sewing boxes for a later exhibit. TEACHING IS PRACTICAL Butler Students Aid in Classes at Tech High School. Forty-five Butler University "cadets” are assisting in Arsenal High School classes as a part of their teachers’ training work. They prac-
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French, home economics, Latin, physics, Dotany, Spanish and commercial departments.
