Literature on the Rural School 127 



schools of Page County, la., by Superintendent Jessie Field. As indi- 

 cated by her published annuals, and otherwise, she has led all the other 



young women superintendents in the work of organizing the boys and 



girls into clubs and classes for the study of school gardening, bread 



making, grain propagation, and the like. 



Report of the Committee on Industrial Education in Schools for Rural 

 Communities, of the National Educational Association. 



Among Country Schools. O. J. Kern. Ginn & Co. A clear, help- 

 ful, and inspiring text. 



The American Rural School. H. W. Foght. Macmillan. Covers the 

 entire subject carefully. 



The School and Society. John Dewey. McClure, Phillips & Co., New 

 York. 



The School and its Life. Charles B. Gilbert. Chapter XXII, "Home 

 and School." McCIurg. 



Efficient Democracy. Wm. H. Allen. Chapter VII, " School Efficiency." 

 Dodd, Mead & Co. A most helpful and stimulating volume. 



The School as a Social Institution. Henry Suzzallo. Monograph. 

 Houghton Mifflin Company. 



Wider Use of the School Plant. Clarence Arthur Perry. Chapter VI, 

 "School Playgrounds." Charities Publication Committee, New 

 York. 



Education in the Country for the Country. J. W. Zeller. Annual Vol- 

 ume N.E.A., 1910, p. 245. 



Teachers for the Rural Schools ; Kind Wanted ; How to secure Them. 

 L. J. Alleman. Annual Volume N.E.A., 1910, p. 280. 



The State Board of Health of Maine (Augusta) issues a series of prac- 

 tical pamphlets on health and sanitation in the school and the home. 



The Most Practical Industrial Education for the Country Child. 

 Superintendent O. J. Kern. Annual Volume N.E.A., 1906, p. 198. 



Among School Gardens. M. Louise Green, Ph.D. Charities Publication 

 Committee, New York. 



A Model Rural School House. Henry S. Curtis. Educational Founda- 

 tions, April, 1911. A. S. Barnes & Co. Dr. Curtis is a national 

 authority on the question of the school playground. 



Education for Efficiency. E. Davenport. D. C. Heath. A most able 

 plea for making the schools serve every worthy interest. 



