12 books found
The american people have definitely decided that the public schools shall teach pupils to think and to do; that, so far as is consistent with a reasonably liberal culture, the training of the student shall relate intimately to the life he expects to lead. For a century and a halfagriculture has been regarded by a few of the foremost educators as worthy of a place in our public scools, but it is only whithin the last decade that the dream of these educators has approached realization. Agriculture, wherever well taught, has proved to be a source of strenght to the school, whether a one-teacher country shool, a high school, acollege, or a university.
Science/ Agriculture reference authorized for use in secondary schools in Saskatchewan, 1925-1932 (Saskatchewan Dept. of Education Circulars: Regulations and recommendations governing programmes and courses of study for secondary schools 1926-1931, etc.).
by Henry Jackson Waters, John Charles Whitten, John Moore Stedman, John Waldo Connaway
1896
by Ernest Browning Forbes, Henry Jackson Waters, Merritt Finley Miller, Perry Fox Trowbridge, Claude Burton Hutchison
1908
by Charles Albert Keffer, Charles M. Conner, Charles P. Fox, Henry Jackson Waters, John W. Clark, Paul Schweitzer
1891
by Bruce Bryant, Conrad D. Bue, Donald C. Duncan, Eugene C. Robertson, G. L. Stewart, Garland Bayard Gott, Gerald Meyer, Harry Elwood LeGrand, James E. Biesecker, James F. Wilson, Orwoll Milton Hackett, Ralph C. Heath, Ralph Leroy Erickson, Raymond Lee Nace, Thane Hubert McCulloh, Thomas Andrews Hendricks, Walton Henry Durum, Bruce LaVerne Foxworthy, C. M. Hoffman, Ernest D. Cobb, Granville G. Wyrick, J. Richard George, John Calvin Reed, Vernon Emanuel Swanson, Walter Basil Langbein, Nobuhiro Yotsukura, Philip M. Cohen
1949