Meaning of the Movement 33 



interested In living things that It would have no 

 desire to kill them. The gun and sllng-shot 

 and steel-trap will be laid aside because the child 

 does not care for them any more. We have 

 been taught that one must make collections If 

 he Is to be a naturalist; but collections alone 

 make museums, not naturalists. The scientist 

 needs these collections; but It does not follow 

 that children always need stuffed animals, birds' 

 eggs, and bottled specimens, although It Is 

 Important to encourage a regulated collecting 

 Instinct. 



Nature-study Is not merely the adding of one 

 more thing to a course of study. It Is not 

 coordinate with geography or reading or arith- 

 metic. Neither Is It a mere accessory, or a 

 sentiment, or an entertainment, or a means of 

 Injecting vacant wonder Into the pupils. It Is 

 not ''a study." It Is not the addition of more 

 ''work." A new "study" taught by the old 

 method would not represent progress. The 

 idea has to do with the whole point of view of 

 elementary education, and therefore Is under- 

 lying. It Is the full expression of personality. 

 3 



