Medical inspection of schools in Great Britain . B. OPEN-AIR REST ROOM FOR TUBERCULAR CHILDREN. BUREAU OF EDUCATION. BULLETIN, 1917, NO. 49 PLATE A. COOKING CENTER, EDINBURGH. • i ?mmt mH. iiiii -- • ^^ II-— ^.-E^-^-KSIEm::::::^!! fc:,N ^ i* ^Mi^BP^&ai Bv:\^ S\ ^T 1 ,T\- H ^ y^M •^Mp[S| m \ & ^rXii^^^ i 1^ ^m^B^B^BlKS^ B. PREPARING TO SEND OUT HOT FOOD FROM THE COOKING CENTER, EDINBURGH. REMEDIAL MEASURES. 33 render him unfit to attend the ordinary elementary school, and yethis condition must not be so bad as to render him unfit to beeducated. Again the number of epileptic children in a lo
Medical inspection of schools in Great Britain . B. OPEN-AIR REST ROOM FOR TUBERCULAR CHILDREN. BUREAU OF EDUCATION. BULLETIN, 1917, NO. 49 PLATE A. COOKING CENTER, EDINBURGH. • i ?mmt mH. iiiii -- • ^^ II-— ^.-E^-^-KSIEm::::::^!! fc:,N ^ i* ^Mi^BP^&ai Bv:\^ S\ ^T 1 ,T\- H ^ y^M •^Mp[S| m \ & ^rXii^^^ i 1^ ^m^B^B^BlKS^ B. PREPARING TO SEND OUT HOT FOOD FROM THE COOKING CENTER, EDINBURGH. REMEDIAL MEASURES. 33 render him unfit to attend the ordinary elementary school, and yethis condition must not be so bad as to render him unfit to beeducated. Again the number of epileptic children in a local areais not always sufficient to justify the establishment of a specialschool, and the difficulty of making satisfactory arrangements withanother authority is not in every case easily overcome. According tothe report of the board of education for 1912, there were only sixresidential schools for epileptics in England and Wales at that schools had accommodation for about 500 children, but withthe exception of one established by the Manchester authority, theywere all under voluntary management. A description of the
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