. The story of the exposition; being the official history of the international celebration held at San Francisco in 1915 to commemorate the discovery of the Pacific Ocean and the construction of the Panama Canal . ether the janitor service is poor, or bad. Dr. Howe of New York said that opposition to school hygiene is duelargely to the fear of parents that some of their rights are being must inspire parents with the idea that we would do nothing more fortheir children than we would do for our own, said Dr. Howe. Therebywe can gain the confidence of the mothers. Four separate session
. The story of the exposition; being the official history of the international celebration held at San Francisco in 1915 to commemorate the discovery of the Pacific Ocean and the construction of the Panama Canal . ether the janitor service is poor, or bad. Dr. Howe of New York said that opposition to school hygiene is duelargely to the fear of parents that some of their rights are being must inspire parents with the idea that we would do nothing more fortheir children than we would do for our own, said Dr. Howe. Therebywe can gain the confidence of the mothers. Four separate sessions were held in Hall C of the Exposition were presented by leading workers in school hygiene from all parts ofthe United States, and the meeting was, therefore, national in fact as wellas in name. The discussions covered many aspects of school hygiene andchild welfare in general, and emphasized the broad scope and great public,as well as individual, benefits of school health work. Many ofTreated tne Papers presented the results of extensive investigation andexperimental study. Among the most important of these were thefollowing: Some Results of the Health Inspection of 400,000 Rural School. HEALTH IN THE SCHOOLS 39 Children in Pennsylvania, Samuel G. Dixon, Commissioner of Health,Harrisburg, Pa.; Some Lessons from the Open Air School, Sherman , Director Elizabeth McCormick Memorial Fund, Chicago; ASystem of Sanitary School Inspection with Graded Standards and ExactRating of School Buildings, Walter S. Cornell, , Director of MedicalInspection of Schools, Philadelphia; The Height and Weight of SchoolChildren, Lee K. Frankel, , Metropolitan Life Insurance Company,New York; The School and the Social Hygiene Movement, W. F. Snow,, Secretary of the American Social Hygiene Association, New York;The Hygienic Value of Grading a School According to the Intelligence ofthe Pupils, H. H. Goddard, , Director of Research, The TrainingSchool, Vinelan
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Keywords: ., bookauthortoddfran, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, bookyear1921