Chicago where youth are taught to swim without going into the water, being repeatedly drilled in the various movements which are necessary for swimming. When one of the young men so trained was asked what he did when he got into the water, he laconically... Vocational Education - Página 200editado por - 1921 - 359 páginasVisualização completa - Sobre este livro
| National Society for the Study of Education - 1900 - 1068 páginas
...greater extent than obtains at present. I am told that there is a swimming school in the city of Chicago where youth are taught to swim without going into...so trained was asked what he did when he got into the water, he laconically replied, " Sunk. " The story happens to be true ; if it were not, it would... | |
| John Dewey - 1903 - 42 páginas
...greater extent than obtains at present. I am told that there is a swimming school in the city of Chicago where youth are taught to swim without going into...so trained was asked what he did when he got into the water, he laconically replied, "Sunk." The story happens to be true; if it were not, it would seem... | |
| 1912 - 1240 páginas
...George Kerschensteiner :— "I am told that there is a swimming school in a certain city where youths are taught to swim without going into the water, being...so trained was asked what he did when he got into the water, he laconically replied, 'Sunk.' The story happens to be true ; were it not, it would seem... | |
| Susan Elizabeth Blow - 1908 - 430 páginas
...following very pertinent illustration: I am told that there is a swimming school in the city of Chicago where youth are taught to swim without going into...so trained was asked what he did when he got into the water he laconically replied, " sunk." The story happens to be true; if it were not it would seem... | |
| John Dewey - 1909 - 84 páginas
...be a vital social insti- \ tution to a much greater extent than obtains at present. I am told that there is a swimming school in a certain city where...taught to swim without going into the water, being re13 peatedly drilled in the various movements which are necessary for swimming. When one of the young... | |
| John Dewey - 1909 - 88 páginas
...must be a vital social institution to a much greater extent than obtains at present. I am told that there is a swimming school in a certain city where...taught to swim without going into the water, being re13 peatedly drilled in the various movements which are necessary for swimming. When one of the young... | |
| John Dewey - 1981 - 188 páginas
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| National Society for Vocational Education - 1910 - 998 páginas
...Moral Principles of Education. I am told that there is a swimming school in a certain city where youths are taught to swim without going into the water, being...so trained was asked what he did when he got into the water, he laconically replied, "Sunk." The story happens to be true; were it not, it would seem... | |
| Georg Kerschensteiner - 1911 - 62 páginas
...Professor John Dewey, in his Moral Principles of Education: I am told that there is a swimming-school in a certain city where youth are taught to swim without...so trained was asked what he did when he got into the water, he laconically replied: "Sunk." The story happens to be true; were it not, it would seem... | |
| Irving King - 1912 - 460 páginas
...correspondingly neglected. •See Reeder, pp. 63-69. " In a certain city there is a swimming school where youth are taught to swim without going into...so trained was asked what he did when he got into the water, he laconically replied, ' Sunk.' The story happens to be true ; if it were not, it- would... | |
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