The Kindergarten magazine . rpose of being used after the WorldsFair is over. They are designed in panels, and as parts arecomplete. There are ten sjiccial panels ten feet si.\ inchesby four feet, and four nu-dallion panels foiu feet by fourfeet, beside numerous iHlicrs representing the signs of the/.odiac, and one large ceiling decoration fcjr the librar)-. Children at tlic Worlifs I-air. 501 The subjects for the special panels are taken from childlife, illustrating occupations ami pastimes of children, andcertain fairy talcs, also from suj;j^esti(jns in Die Mutter undKosc-Liedcr. There are t
The Kindergarten magazine . rpose of being used after the WorldsFair is over. They are designed in panels, and as parts arecomplete. There are ten sjiccial panels ten feet si.\ inchesby four feet, and four nu-dallion panels foiu feet by fourfeet, beside numerous iHlicrs representing the signs of the/.odiac, and one large ceiling decoration fcjr the librar)-. Children at tlic Worlifs I-air. 501 The subjects for the special panels are taken from childlife, illustrating occupations ami pastimes of children, andcertain fairy talcs, also from suj;j^esti(jns in Die Mutter undKosc-Liedcr. There are three subscription list*>: In) The f^encral fund list. (I)) The childrens list. (c) The special panel list. The special panel list includes those who subscribe tospecial i)ancls, which revert to them after the exhibition isover. The general fund ami childrens lists include sub-scriptions to all unspecified ilecorations, and go to defray theexpenses of all such work. Thr list of subscriptii^ns will be published next THE ROUNDS AMONG KINDERGARTNERS, WEST. ^HE Kindergarten world is by no means is no longer merely a neighborhood affair. Ithas passed the stage of pioneer struggle, and isbeing extended wherev^er there are progressivepeople with aggressive policies. A six weeks1^ tour from center to center of this ganglia of thework has revealed mines of interesting facts anddispelled the mists of fiction which hearsayinvariably accumulates. Beginning in the known,traveling from thence to the unknown, investi-gating the near that we might better estimatethe far, we visited first a few of the home Kindergartens andworkers, the former numbering a full hundred. As a spe-cial preparation to answer the many questions asked aboutColonel Parkers work, we spent a morning in that was the usual atmosphere of informality and goodwill. The cardinal aim in this normal school is the studyof pedagog} from life. The student teachers, whatever elsethey m
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookpub, booksubjectkindergarten