Our boys : a study of the 245,000 sixteen, seventeen and eighteen year old employed boys of the state of New York . m 111 11iiiii ^ S j « € g Ouii Boys 11 r; i ?: n n n n lllFF ; ? ? - - ; ~ 1 ! ? 1 f! rliiiiii 1II i p ; s V ; ?> ;. iln m n n n 1 i in nild nnE : - \i\ 1 ; ? \\ t ? :; • ;: i;- is - ; ? ]?? 1^ ?. ^ ^ 1 : ; • ;• ^ s 11, • : -^ ^ r i i 1 ~ • • 1 i 1 ii JUULIUU LJbJL u u u mi uu lij JilU 114 Our Boys There is no correlation between rank in family and grades completed Charts No. S-G and No. 8-H show the percent of boys of the fourparentage groups from the oldest to the sixth olde


Our boys : a study of the 245,000 sixteen, seventeen and eighteen year old employed boys of the state of New York . m 111 11iiiii ^ S j « € g Ouii Boys 11 r; i ?: n n n n lllFF ; ? ? - - ; ~ 1 ! ? 1 f! rliiiiii 1II i p ; s V ; ?> ;. iln m n n n 1 i in nild nnE : - \i\ 1 ; ? \\ t ? :; • ;: i;- is - ; ? ]?? 1^ ?. ^ ^ 1 : ; • ;• ^ s 11, • : -^ ^ r i i 1 ~ • • 1 i 1 ii JUULIUU LJbJL u u u mi uu lij JilU 114 Our Boys There is no correlation between rank in family and grades completed Charts No. S-G and No. 8-H show the percent of boys of the fourparentage groups from the oldest to the sixth oldest hoy that com-pleted each of the various grades. Chart No. 8-G gives the recordfor Greater New York and chart No. 8-H gives the record for theother cities over 25,000 population. Rank in the family, as is shownl>y these charts, has little if anything to do with the number ofgrades completed. It has commonly been assumed that oldest boysdo not complete so many grades in school as their younger two charts show conclusively that in each of the four parent-age groups there is little, if any, difference in the amount of school-ing received by the oldest boys and their younger brothers. In


Size: 947px × 2638px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjec, booksubjecteducation