APPENDIX I 



EQUIPMENT AND NOTES OF PUPILS 



Equipment of pupils. Each pupil should have a 

 laboratory note-book of about 8 X 10 inches, opening at 

 the end, in which both drawings and notes can be made. 

 The paper should be unruled and of good quality (not too 

 soft). Each pupil should have also instruments of his 

 own as follows: scalpel, pair of small scissors, spring 

 forceps, pair of dissecting-needles, small glass pipette, and 

 paper of ribbon-pins for pinning out specimens. The cost 

 of this outfit need not exceed $1.00. The laboratory 

 should furnish him with a dissecting-dish and a dissecting- 

 microscope, or at least a lens. 



Laboratory drawings and notes. Each pupil should 

 make the drawings called for in the directions for the 

 laboratory exercises. These drawings should be in out- 

 line, and put in by pencil ; the lines may be inked over if 

 preferred. Shading should be used sparingly, if at all. 

 Each drawing and all the organs and animal parts repre- 

 sented in it should be fully named. See the anatomical 

 plates in this book for example. With such complete 

 "labelling," little note-taking need be done in connec- 

 tion with the dissections. 



Notes should be made of any observations which cannot 

 be represented in the drawings; for example, on the 



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