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MOTION - PICTURES IN EDUCATION A PRACTICAL HANDBOOK FOR USERS OF
VISUAL AIDS BY DON CARLOS ELLTS AND LAURA THORN BOROUGH WITH AN
INTRODUCTION BY PHILANDER P. CLAXTON PKtlVHl, IfNrVKRSIJY OK AIAB
M4 M RMKR U. b. COMMUNION Eft OF EDUCATION NEW YORK THOMAS Y.
CROWELL COMPANY PUBLISHERS Copyright, irk THOMAS M M VK1. I.
INTRODUCTION ScHOOi-S are old, but the effort to adapt them to the
interests and needs of all children and of adult men and women as
well and to make them take hold on the life and work of the world
in which we now live is new. The more sincere this effort becomes
and the wider and plearer the vision of the purposes and
possibilities of education, the keener becomes the search for more
effec tive methods of teaching and the more willing are we to pay
the cost of satisfactory results, whatever the cost may be. It is
for this reason that we are now paying twenty times as much for
education in the United States as we paid fifty years ago, more
than six times as much in proportion to population, and are paying
far more willingly than we formerly paid the smaller amount. The
increase in expenditures for education is not more remarkable,
however, than the enrichment of courses of study, changes in
methods, and extension of equipment for teaching. In these fifty
years the work and play of the kindergarten, nature study, the
physical sciences, literature, sociological subjects, agriculture,
home economics, trades and industries, commercial sub jects, music,
physical training, hygiene and sanitation, have become essential
parts of the curriculum. Labo ratories, shops, playgrounds,
libraries, maps and charts in abundance and large variety, museum
collections, plats of ground, plantsand animals, pictures, both in
vi Introduction prints and slides, and films for projection have
been added to the meagre equipment of textbook, desk and
blackboard, and the rod and other instruments of pun ishment far
more numerous then than now. The chief alue of all this added
equipment is to provide an abundance of helpful concrete material
and opportunity for self-activity m analyzing, organizing, and
interpre ting it. Among these additions to equipment for the
increase of interest and the assurance of success in teaching, the
most recent and probably the most valuable is the mo tion picture.
Certainly the use of no other means of teaching has ever increased
so rapidly, nor has any other ever gained at the same time such
popularity with all classes of people, in school and out. Though
the first motion picture machine using films was exhibited at the
Worlds Fair at Chicago just thirty years ago, the production,
distribution and exhibition of motion pictures has for several
years been one of our largest industries. The commercial use of
motion pictures for entertainment still overshadows their
educational use, but their value in schools of all grades, esj
edally in high schools, colleges, professional and technical
schools, and in extension classes, fanners institutes, womens
clubs, and commercial, civic and social organizations of all kinds,
is gaining recognition rapidly. Many hun dreds of high schools and
college lecture rooms are now equipped with films and projecting
machines. When the results in more effective teaching and in time
sav ing are considered, the pictures are not costly. If they were
in general use in all schools, the cost would be only a very small
percent of thetotal cost of education. When their value is fully
understood and the means of supplying pictures adapted to school
use have been bet Introduction vii ler worked out, they will, no
doubt, be considered as necessary a part of school equipment as are
textbooks, maps, charts and blackboards. The perfection of the
means of producing color films, stereoscopic films, and talking
films will hasten this. Toward this more effective and more general
use of motion pictures in education this book should prove a
valuable aid...
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