Health education and the nutrition class, a report of the Bureau of educational experiments; descriptive and educational sections . 32 .3438 47 .3065 Ht., 44 .1737 47 .1569 November: Wt., 33 .3814 Ht., 35 .1777 December: Wt., 36 .5038 44 .3526 Ht., 36 .1937 44 .1394 January: Wt., 37 .4037 Ht., 35 .1888 February: Wt., 31 .4179 39 .3863 Ht., 31 .2123 39


Health education and the nutrition class, a report of the Bureau of educational experiments; descriptive and educational sections . 32 .3438 47 .3065 Ht., 44 .1737 47 .1569 November: Wt., 33 .3814 Ht., 35 .1777 December: Wt., 36 .5038 44 .3526 Ht., 36 .1937 44 .1394 January: Wt., 37 .4037 Ht., 35 .1888 February: Wt., 31 .4179 39 .3863 Ht., 31 .2123 39 .1553 March: Wt., 36 .4416 Ht., 36 .2121 April: Wt., 38 .4558 43 .3736 Ht., ins. .. 28 .2283 43 .1708 May: Wt., 33 .5077 Ht., 34 .2302 Jime: Wt., 36 .4850 42 .3888 Ht., 35 .2186 42 .1647 October: Wt., 37 .4794 41 .4716 Ht., 37 .2284 41 .1842 GROWTH IN WEIGHT AND HEIGHT 133. Chart 4 CtJBVES OF GbOWTH IN HEIGHT Individttalcjompositb 134 HEALTH EDUCATION included who had sufficient measurements to makecomparable curves. Their significance lies in the similarity betweenthe individual rates of growth in height with butlittle deviation from the trend of the compositecurve. EELATIVB GAINS AND VABYING DEGREES OP UNDERWEIGHT In order to throw some light upon the variationin growth within the Nutrition Group, we have sub-divided it into three sections; one is made up of thechildren 8 and 9% underweight (Section 1), anotherof the children 10-12% underweight (Section 2), anda third of the children 13-20% underweight (Section3). These sections contain 8, 20, and 9 cases respect-ively, the first and third each comprising approxi-mately 25% of the entire group. Only those childrenare included for whom we had weighings in October,February,


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectchildren, bookyear192