ii6 Agricultural Instruction in the Public High Scltools 



cation " and " public school agriculture," or their equivalents. 

 There is also room for an intermediate treatment with a broader 

 outlook than either, which might be called "philosophy of agricul- 

 tural education" with its complement "methods of agricultural 

 education." The short and expressive term of "agricultural edu- 

 cation" more properly belongs to such a synthetic treatment 

 than to work of college grade usually passing by that name. 



