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lUNIOR AGRICULTURIST SUPPLEMENT
A Teacher's Supplement Issued to Further >^ vtp)Q) v^j* jj«? j.
1 Teaching in Elementary Schools ^ ^<^ ^^ '
/^ Agricultural Teaching in Elementary ..^i«w»o ^ -•
BULB GROWING
^B rT^HE strong man or woman is the one who is following a schedule, is the
^K I one who is on his or her way to a definite goal not to be turned aside
^K -*■ by environmental factors. The educational system aims to fashion men
^K and women who shall have the power to picture the high type goal and the
^F force to keep directly on the way. This power and force may be materially
" augmented by giving children definite problems and responsibilities to meet.
The country boy has a better chance in this world than a city boy because
the farm ever has its variety of responsibilities which the country boy must
^ meet. There is the wood to get each evening of the year. The cows must
I be milked and the horses fed. In fact, the country boy is brought up to
make responsiblity-mccting a habit and a responsibility-meeting boy becomes
a responsibility-meeting man, a man who follows a schedule easily.
The city home tends to take duties away from children, thus producing
men and women perhaps who take the easy way, the way of least resistance.
These men and women are going but they know not where. They do little
to become good ancestors or to leave anything to the world.
As teachers we can not insist easily on home responsibilities for the
cliildren, such as milking the cow, feeding the hens, taking care of the horse,
but we can "tie" our charges to a plant for several months of the year.
One hundred hyacinths were grown by the children of the Chico Normal
Training School last term. The one in charge of the work was surprised in
his remote office one day by a lO-year-old boy who said that he was going
away and wished to take his beautiful flower, which was on exhibition at
the school, with him. On being asked how he would carry the plant on the
train so many rfiiles, he replied, "I will carry it in my hand. I want it very
much." To care for this hyacinth day after day, to see it develop into a
beautiful blossom through his efforts, to feel that it was his meant much to
the boy on his way to be a man.
The more we see of bulb growing the more we feel its potentiality. We
should like to see every child in California plant, care for and bring to
blossom at least one hyacinth.
Bulbs, particularly hyacinths, bring quick, definite, satisfactory results.
Teachers, read the article on bulb growing and interest each child in your
school in growing a bulb at home or at school.
We advise growing the bulb at home. The vision of the home has long
l)ecn dim and hazy in the eyesight of the educational system. In its building
it has given little attention until recently to the fundamental needs of the
home. Health versus history, cooking and sewing versus spelling, manual
training (with the home needs in view) versus square and cube root, agri-
culture versus grammar — which shall they be? Any opportunity to direct
attention to the home or to put a premium on home work should be accepted
at once.
Selection of varieties. — Hyacinths and narcissus do very well for school
and home purposes. They are hardy and give excellent returns. Daffodils
and Chinese lilies are very satisfactory for early bloorris. They may be
brought into flower at Christmas time. Send to seed houses for bulb cata-
logues and order your bulbs early. Select medium-sized, solid bulbs.
Bulb-growing contests. — Competition adds interest to one's work or play.
Organize bulb-growing contests. Prizes may or may not be offered.
Whether the bulbs are grown at school or at home, have the bulbs displayed
at school as fast as they blossom. There they may be judged separately.
The exhibition may continue for several weeks. Decorate the cans and
I'ots with crepe paper. Place white sand on the soil.
BULB SCORE CARD.
Per cent
Brilliancy of color 15
Size of blossom 20
Sturdiness of plant 20
Length of stem 10
Diary of growth and care 35
Total 100
Ideas must -work. — Think of the cry of a squirrel, the caw of a crow,
the exhaust-oran auto engine; now try to express the idea. You may
have heard these sounds time and time again, yet you can not at first
imitate them. There is little educational value in the indefinite ideas until
they have been expressed or worked. . More and more we feel the educa-
tional value of doing things with the senses and the hands. It may be the
making of a kite or whatnot desired in manual training, the growing of a
bulb in agriculture, the patching of a gown in sewing, the baking of a loaf
of bread for the home in cooking. It matters not the form of work or
play, so long as it is definite expression of a thought.
What Can an Illy Prepared Teacher Teach in Agriculture?
Agriculture and education are today alike definitely indefinable, yet each
one who gives some thought to either topic senses its meaning. Each
defines either term from his own point of view yet all definitions have much
in common. Agriculture of yesterday as the vocation of the farmer may
be definitely defined, but the agriculture of today as applied to education —
the agriculture as taught in the schools — is not standardized. Agriculture
teaching is in chaos.
Agriculture as a vocation is practiced for its own sake. Agriculture in
the schools is a means to an end, namely: to direct the attention of boys
and girls towards nature and her activities through growing plants and
animals. By so doing the children find recreation both as children and as
adults; they learn to meet new problems successfully for themselves and
their neighbors; they acquire a taste for beautification of school and home;
they obtain a fund of experiences which largely formulate their spiritual
and biological point of view; they become interested in the farmer and his
work.
Can a normal school graduate teach such agriculture although at first
glance she may seem illy prepared? Certainly. Is a normal school teacher
so illy prepared to teach education through agriculture? Granted she is
not ready to step between plow handles and teach the boys and girls to
plow nor is she prepared to demonstrate to boys and girls how to cultivate
and dig potatoes, yet because of her opportunities in training she is prepared
to set before her pupils and the patrons of her school the best things which
are in print, the best things with which she is conversant. Normal schools
are favored institutions. They are well equipped in types — sanitation, recrea-
tion, literature, art, agriculture, and the like, and their faculties are skilled in
interpreting these types for their students. The students are prepared to
project these best types as they work in their several communities.
Is a certified teacher too illy prepared to teach agricultural education?
No. First of all, each should orient himself correctly, and, second, each
should attempt but a few projects.
Suggestions for Correct Orientation.
1. Agriculture in education is a means to educate children through agri-
culture; to teach boys and girls how to meet new situations successfully for
themselves and their neighbors. This is a definition of agricultural education
and is a starting point.
2. Survey the environment in which you are working or expect to work.
What are the people doing?. What plants and animals are being grown?
Are they being grown successfully? What is the condition of the homes?
Do they need beautification? Are they sanitary? Are you satisfied with
the appearance of the schoolhouse and yard, etc.?
- 3. Adjust yourself to the needs of the people and to their understanding.
Do not announce that you are going to teach agriculture to your boys and
girls, many of whom come from farm homes. The patrons of your school
sit in judgment on your successes and failures. Get results through doing
things. Convince these judges after a term's work that "agriculture" which
you have disguised is absolutely necessary in the curriculum of the school.
Properly oriented one or more of the following projects may be attempted:
1. Beautification of school and home grounds.
2. Home and school gardens.
3. Hygiene and sanitation of the home and farm.
4. An agricultural club.
In successive numbers of the Junior Agriculturist Supplement the above
unifying centers will be discussed concretely in an attempt to aid teachers
to teach agriculture successfully in elementary schools.
COLLEGE ^
AGRICULTURE
Berkeley. Cal.
JUNIOR AGRICULTURIST SUPPLEMENT
A Teacher's Supplement Issued to Further
Agricultural Teaching in EJementary Schools
Vol. L January, 1917. No. 2
SCHOOL GARDENS.
Every idea seeks expression. And just so far as the idea is given
expression, just so far as the idea is set to work has it an educational value.
To acquaint children with nature and her activities, to give boys and girls
ideas regarding plants and animals without growing or working with them is
a waste of time largely.
As an average thing February is the ideal plant growing month. The soil
is awakening and teeming with life, for the soil now a reservoir for water,
air and food is becoming warm. Do not let this month slip by without
starting a few plants with the children.
The school garden has many reasons for being:
1. The children grow plants correctly and successfully under the guidance
of the teacher. They learn how to prepare a .seed bed properly; how to
plant seeds; how to thin plants; how to irrigate, etc. (Note: For informa-
tion, see seed catalogues — The Principles of Agriculture Through the School
and the Home Garden, and other texts.)
2. All the boys and girls are interested since they work together in com-
panionship.
3. Social values are determined. It is a good thing for children to learn
early that there are tools, land, water, seeds to share in common; that com-
munity property belongs to all and not to one alone; that the rights of
others, the right of the neighbor must be considered. Boys and girls learn
that the world does not begin and end with them.
4. If the school garden is worth attempting it is worthy to take a dignified
place on the program. And by the way. all children should take part.
Gardening is very beneficial to all and can hurt no one.
Grammar and geography arc beneficial, a wise educational system has
decided. If you believe in the school garden and you have the support of
your patrons, why demand these subjects of all children and put the growinj^
<•! plants and animals on the basis of choice?
A period in the garden breaks the monotony of desks, books, chalk.
Recently we sat quietly in a chihl's desk for thirty minutes. We do not
wonder that boys and girls grow restless.
5. The growing child particularly needs exercise, outside air, play. He
gets all of these and more in the garden. Gardening is play with a definite
educational trend.
6. The school garden is a miniature world, all of nature's forces
work. Insects, birds, earthworms, moles, gophers are busy working out men
life history. xJIeat, light, and other forces are taking expression. The school
garden is coritinually oflfering experiences to vitalize the other subjects in
the curriculum. Arithmetic, geography, art, and the like may be given new
direction. Figure Xo. I dji(grammatically pictures this thought of correlation.
7. An interest in planfs and animals developed or fostered at school is
invariably: carried into the homes. '')tir experience in ten years with school
gardens shQTv^ that from 65 to 75 of the children who have gardens
at school cTuplicatc them at home.
The above are values that are particular to the school garden and are not
proposed as arguments for the teaching of agriculture in elementary schools.
HOW TO START A SCHOOL GARDEN.
Write to the Extension Division, Chico State Normal School, Chico, for
enrollment blanks. As soon as these are filled out and returned, vegetable
and flower seeds will be mailed to you free. However, if you wish to pur-
chase your own seeds we urge you to do this at once; at least, enroll with us
in order that the boys and girls will receive the "Junior Agriculturist"
regularly, free.
Selection of plat. A plat 40 by 100 feet for 30 to 40 children does very
well. If your school is in a city get permission to garden a vacant lot.
NjAjNI m RiELATHSW
Figure 1.
The plan. With the children develop a working plan on the board. The
following points must be considered.
1. Number of children and size of individual plats.
2. Ease of access to each garden.
3. Paths 1 to 2 feet wide.
4. Three types of gardens — individual, community, and experimental.
5. Arrangement of vegetables and flowers for beauty and practicability.
Certain colors clash. Corn and carrots side by side is not a practical
arrangement. Corn, tomatoes, potatoes and the like should be grown in
mass by themselves.
6. Attractiveness of the garden as a whole.
Figure II is suggestive. Individual plats 3 by 4 feet for primary children
and 3 by 6 feet or larger for older boys and girls in groups of four make an
advisable arrangement.
In the experimental plats, try out the different methods of irrigating,
sprinkling, flooding, trenching. Determine the value of fertilization. Grow
new types of plants, peanuts, sugar beets, cotton, and so on. Attempt to
solve some plant growing problem.
As a project in drawing or arithmetic have the children map the plan to
scale. Prepare a plan yourself and tack it on the school wall.
HOW TO LAY OUT A SCHOOL GARDEN.
Bring tools to school. I'rcpare stakes, 14 inches long, ly^ by 1J4 inches,
sharpened at one end, three to each pupil. The stakes should be painted
white. With a tape measure, yardstick, stones or mallets, two or three balls
of string, and a plan, you are ready to lay out the gardens. Half a dozen
boys with work planned for each can lay out a plat a half acre in size in one
hour by using the following method: Two boys should measure and mark
off the four corners. One boy should follow, carrying stakes, another accom-
panying him to drive the same. One boy should carry string. Stretch the
string around the four corner stakes. Let boys with yardsticks measure off
distances according to the plan and mark the places for stakes on two sides.
See that the stakes are always driven on the same side of the string. Let
boys with mallets and stakes
follow, driving stakes care-
fully in their proper places.
With the stakes driven on
opposite sides, others should
stretch string across, con-
necting the corresponding
stakes. The string need not
be broken at each stake. It
may be merely wound and
carried on to the next stake.
With stakes driven at their
respective distances at the
two remaining sides, treat as
above with the string. The
garden now has the appear-
ance of a great cobweb with
the string crossing in such a
way as to outline each gar-
den. The whole class may
now be used to drive stakes
at each intersection of the
string. Use great care to
drive the stakes perpendicularly and on the correct side of the string. With
the stakes in place, unwind the string. Do not let the string remain. It
stretches and is easily broken.
How to prepare the individual seed beds. Assign the plats to the several
children. If the plat as a whole was not plowed and harrowed each child
must spade and otherwise prepare his plat. The primary children may need
considerable help from the teacher and the older children. See that the
spading is thoroughly done.
The first few inches of loosened soil should be thoroughly worked until all
clods have crumbled. Use rakes and hoes as needed.
It is taken for granted that the soil is moist and ready to be cultivated.
If rains have not so prepared the soil it must be irrigated. Corrugate the
plat with trenches six inches deep and close together. Fill the trenches with
water. Within forty-eight hours, very likely, the soil will work freely.
Shape the plats so that edges are continuous. See that the plats are
slightly higher than the paths. They should slope from the center towards
the i)aths.
Planting. Plant the seeds as soon as possible after the bed is prepared —
before the top soil has lost its moisture. See that rows are straight and
parallel. Use strings, straightedges, etc. Insist on careful plantings, since
success or failure is determined at this step. Do not let the children plant
too many seeds. See that the soil is carefully pressed over the seeds.
Culture of the seedlings. Soon after the plants appear thin them out.
leaving the strong plants. The distance apart for the plants in the rows is
determined by the diameter of the root or the diameter of the head of the
mature plant.
Irrigate as needed with the trench system.
Cultivate often. Use the rake more and the watering pot less.
Harvesting. At the very outset discuss with the children uses for the
garden products. See "Junior Agriculturist."
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MISCELLANEOUS SUGGESTIONS.
Tools. Select a place for storing tools. Either ask the children to bring-
tools from home or purchase them. Call upon the board of trustees, your
parental club, or purchase the tools with money raised through school enter-
tainments and the like. Buy man-size tools with the exception of the spade.
Use the so-called "woman's spade." You will need a hoe, a rake, a spade in
each set, one set to three pupils.
If sprinkling pots are acquired, take off the sprinkling attachment. Use the
trench method in irrigating. Do not sprinkle except to prevent the soil
drying out before the seeds have germinated. If it is necessary to sprinkle
at this time, see that the soil is moistened to a depth of several inches.
Seeds to plant. In the primary grades grow hardy, rapid gerrninating
seeds that will mature in a few weeks, such as bulbs, lettuce, radish, and
the like.
For the grammar grades, select plants of larger economic value, corn,
potatoes, cotton, sugar beets, etc. The plants grown in the community
should determine largely the trend of the school garden.
Vacation time. The children living near the garden should care for the
plants during vacation time for a percentage of the output. In the country
some one, child or adult, can be found who will give a little time now and
then to further the work. If possible plan to mature crops which need care,
before the close of the school. ^
THE WIDE SCOPE OF THE SCHOOL GARDEN AND ITS USE.
The school garden is a miniature world patterned after the universe. In
the garden practically all of nature's forces are at work. Here the children
may obtain fundamental background experiences with plants and animals
which are necessary to afford a foundation upon which to build the super-
structure of literature, art, biology. Children must needs get this back-
ground, for life is a continual reaction with nature and her forces and the
interpretation of the same. The school must not concern itself alone with
tools and agencies for interpretation, arithmetic, geography, history and the
like, but must carefully build the foundation. These definite, typical, clear-
cut experiences obtained in garden work offer exercise to the agencies,
arithmetic, drawing, painting, oral and written speech. Through the garden
the children may be brought in touch with the work and problem of their
community.
The garden should become a unifying center for the study of plants and
animals. In the preparation of the seed bed, earthworms are encountered.
Study them. As the plants mature insect pests are met. Study them. Now
is the ideal time. The children have a vital interest in the cabbage butterfly
since it is a question of its destruction or the loss of their cabbages. Every
garden hour brings a surprise.
It is a short step from the garden pest to the big problem of the com-
munity, of the state, in controlling insect pests.
Let the garden offer real problems to be solved through the aid of figures.
Arithmetic takes on a new. meaning. Astounded, the child realizes that
arithmetic is a tool to ease one's way rather than "another subject" taught
at school.
Experiences with birds and insects met in the gardens should offer subject
matter for art, for drawing.
School garden experiences should help to interpret geography, history, civil
government. Establish a "garden city" where boys and girls may receive
actual training in civic life. See chapter 17, "Principles of Agriculture
Through the School and the Home Garden."
To make gardening most potential, clear, definite instruction with practice
should be undertaken. Fundamental principles underlying success in growing
plants should be demonstrated to the children. The children should know'
the "why" of each garden practice. Why cultivate soil? Why use the trench-
method in irrigation? and the like. This question will be discussed more fully
in a later issue of the Supplement.
:IUNIOR AGRICULTURIST SUPPLEMENT
A Teacher's Supplement Issued to Further
Agricultural Teaching in Elementary Schools
\..l. 1 February-March, 1918. No. 4
MORE ACTIVE PRODUCERS WANTED.
(".iven, an active interest, it is no task at all for a grammar school boy or girl
to spade and to plant a plot 10 by 20 feet. There are 200,000 or more such boys and
girls in this state. Bring mathematics to bear and one may be astounded at the
possibility ; 200,000 times 200 .square feet equals 40,000,000 square feet, or more than
900 acres. An acre may produce 20 tons of carrots, beets, or turnips, 200 bushels
of potatoes, one and one-half tons of sorghum. One acre correctly handled will
produce a large amount of foodstuff.
It is not too large a problem for the state to organize this potential force, to
make producers of the boys and girls. In so doing, they will receive real education
through doing, through creation, for the garden is a miniature world patterned
after the universe. In the garden, practically all of nature's forces are at work.
Here the children may obtain fundamental background experiences with plants and
animals which are necessary to afford a foundation upon which to build the super-
structure of literature, art, biology. Children must nce<ls get this background, for
life is a continual reaction with nature and her forces and the interpretation of the
same. The school must not concern itself alone with tools and agencies for inter-
pretation, arithmetic, geography, history and the like, but must carefully build the
foundation. These definite, typical, clear-cut experiences obtained in garden work
offer exerci.se to the agencies, arithmetic, drawing, painting, oral and written speech.
Through the garden, the children may be brought in touch with the work and
problem of their community.
The garden should become a unifying center for the study of plants and animals.
In the preparation of the seed bed, earthworms are encountered. Study them. .-Vs
the plants mature, insect pests are met. Study them. Now rs the ideal time. The
children have a vital interest in the cabbage butterfly since it is a question of its
destruction or the loss of their cabbages. Every garden hour brings a surprise.
It is a short step from the garden pest to the problem of the community, of the
state, in controlling insect pests.
The big problem is one of organization, of helpful supervision. The University
of California and the State Board of Education are the first links in the educational
chain. Then follow the high and the normal schools, and the elementary schools.
The state should reach down through these institutions to the people.
There should be field men to assist superintendents and teachers directly in
different localities. Their work should con«»ist largely in teacher training and in
active helpful direction of this phase of industrial and vocational work.
HELPFUL DIRECTION IS NECESSARY.
If you are urged to further the home garden — if you have become somewhat
enthusiastic over its possibilities, we suggest that first of all you decide this one
question, "Am I willing to work overtime in order that planted areas may be
visited — am I willing to visit the home plots of the children?'* If you can not
36877
answer this question in the affirmative, take our advice and let the home garden
alone and start a school area, which can be easily supervised. We urged the home
visit in the last issue of the "Supplement" and speak of it again as we believe
it is the only way to get active participation on the part of the boys and girls.
Teachers visit the home gardcits.
SCHOOL AGRICULTURE.
Agriculture, as a vocation, is practiced for its own sake. Agriculture in the
schools is a means to an end, namely : to direct the attention of boys and girls
toward nature' and her activities through growing plants and animals. By so
doing the children find recreation, both as children and as adults; they learn to
meet new problems successfully for themselves and their neighbors; they acquire
a taste for beautification of school and home; they obtain a fund of experiences,
which largely formulate their spiritual and biological point of view ; they become
interested in the farmer and his work ; they become producers.
Can a normal school graduate teach such agriculture, although at first glance
she may seem illy prepared? Certainly. Is a normal school teacher so illy pre-
pared to teach education through agriculture? Granted she is not ready to step
between plow handles and teach the boys and girls to plow nor is she prepared to
demonstrate to boys and girls how to cultivate and dig potatoes, yet because of
her opportunities in training, she is prepared to set before her pupils and the
patrons of her school the best things which are in print, the best things with
which she is conversant. Normal schools are favored institutions. They are well
equipped in tN^pes — sanitation, recreation, literature, art, agriculture, and the like,
and their faculties are skilled in interpreting these types for their students. The
students are prepared to project these best types as they work in their several
communities.
Is a certified teacher too illy prepared to teach agricultural education? No.
First of all, each should orient himself, and second, each should attempt but a
few projects.
SUGGESTIONS FOR CORRECT ORIENTATION.
1. Agriculture in education is a means to educate children through agriculture;
to teach boys and girls how to meet new situations successfully for themselves
and their neighbors.
2. Survey the environment in which you are working or expect to work. What
are the people doing? What plants and animals are being grown? Are they
being grown successfully? What is the condition of the homes? Do they need
beautification? Are they sanitary? Are you satisfied with the appearance of the
schoolhouse and yard, etc.
3. Adjust yourself to the needs of the people and to their understanding. Do not
announce that you are going to teach agriculture to your boys and girls, many of
whom come from farm homes. Get results through doing things. Convince these
judges after a term's work that ''agriculture" which you have disguised is abso-
lutely necessary in the curriculum of the school.
Properly oriented one or more of the following projects may be attempted :
1. Beautification of home and school grounds.
2. Home and school gardens.
3. Hygiene and sanitation of the home and school and farm.
4. An agricultural club.
— 3
MANY NEW CLUBS FORMED.
Teachers are showing an active interest in the California Junior C.arclening
Club. Here are the new members :
So. pupils
euroUe«l
Secieta •> t :easiiitfr
Name of club ©.• teacher
Delano-- __ Ruth Dunlap 29
Vflalphom ..Olive E. Fish 8
NVheatland Elizabeth Carlin 6
Cliico Margaret Collins 6
Cliico Ella Camper —
r.akersfiel.l _. - Mrs. F. VV. Hort 3i
Chici)-- .C. Karle Morton 7
Lakesiili Mary R. Miller 17
Oakland-- -- Miss K. A. Swain i7
Clawson School.. . _.
McKinley School.-. Maude T. Pesante 21
Dixon Mrs. E. P. Hay 13
Orland Mrs. Artie Hollis 20
San I.ui* Ohis|
Re.l r.tuff
Foss X'atlcy
Calistoga
Oakland School
Sclma School- _
Thornton --
IleverlyHilN.
LosAngclcs-
Site? --Eleanor
Lincoln School.
San Leandro- -.C.uy Smith ISO
San I. uis Obispo Margaret D. Talbot 44
Edison School,
Berkeley -IJIlian G. Chace 10
Florin Louise Williams 18
-.Margaret D. Talbot-.- 41
1). C. Elder 168
--Mrs. Agnes S. Love 14
- -Jo. Carney 28
C. E. Hudspeth 209
--- H. F. Smith 58
-Clarence Vanee 40
W. H. Weaver 25
Prime 10
Shafter. Kern Co Laura Carpente
North Sacramento Certrude Donnooan 28
Sites. Colusa Co Eleanor Seaton 10
East Bakersfield Frances M. Watson 21
Moflesto Mrs. E. R. I'tter 40
(iranite Station Mice .M. Hohna 8
San l.candro Dorothea Force 41
Rosamond ^liss E. Van Aken 13
Shafter. Kern Co. — '.aura Carpenter
Darr's—. L E. Wall 194
Franklin Peter J." Kramer 34
San Lean. i Mazel Peppin 53
Secretary-treasurer
or teacher
Xo. piipih
eurolleil
Name of clul)
Lindsay Maude Pierce 14
Camanche Eleanor Stille 30
W. P. Frick School- Margaret Poore 24
Alameda C. E. Lawson 70
Oakdale Mrs. Jennie Dillwort-- 5
Oakdale-- S. P. Robbins 45
Rocklin P. G. Jacobs 50
San Lucas-- __ — Katherine Richmond — 16
Fresno Mrs. W. L. Bachrodt— 54
Potter Valley Mary Beck 20
Port Costa T. A. Mclver 38
Homestead--
Oakland-
Los Molinos-.
Valley Center
Bishop .
Elizabeth -Helen
Foster Mary
Hester Nash 16
A. Duhem 40
Charles Hertzog 28
Mrs. K. Werner- 12
Luceal Root IS
Holt 16
Miller 10
Longfellow Loutse Caldwell -_. — 40
Aptos Cecil Davis 10
Ortigaleta — -- Nina Cleveland 7
West Covina. . _Ruth Farrell 20
San Gabriel _ M. S. Serviss —230
Gridley -- -_-i:<lith Harris - 20
Calistoga Mil<lred Wilkinson ^ 8
Inyokern-- Elizabeth Morrison 10
Bishop Mrs. E. E. Dorrance —
Famosa .Hester Nash IS
Port Costa M. Tver 38
San Jose Stella Briggs
Orland Hazel Morrissey 27
Rimona.- __ .Mrs. K. C. Orr 36
Oleander __ -Gaude Grimes 37
San Francisco. rx>uise McDermott 20
Beaumont .\gnes Roberts 20
608 Lake street,
Bakersfield Neva Lawson 14
Coloma School,
El Dorado Cecelia Popini 10
Pond-. -T. Grace Mitchell 15
THE ORLAND CLUB.
Througli ihc invitation of Superintendent Cheney of Glenn County and Prin-
cipal Drew of Orland, we visited Orland. After driving against a cold north
wind for an hour, we arrived, chilled through. While thawing out in the sunshine
behind a building, we watched the movements of the children at play and at work.
The main building is an attractive bungalow, long since outgrown. The overflow
of children is housed in what used to be the one-teacher high school. Careful
supervision was felt, not seen. The children played joyously in the well-equipped
yard. After recess, classes interchanged buildings. They reminded one of a flock
of geese crossing the sky as the children, single-file, made their way across the
yard. There was no confusion; all was business, although there wri'^ no evidence
of .supervision. Xo teachers were in range.
We talked to over 400 children, small and large. .Attention was good. Active
interest was splendid. Every child desired to grow plants or animals. The enthusi-
asm, if directed and sustained, will go far towards food prorluction.
At the teachers' meeting all agreed that home supervi.sion. home guidance were
necessary. It was suggested that the town be divided into sections with garden
supervisors over each section. The inspectors, to inspect and to score the several
gardens in their districts and later to report to the teachers concerned. The teach-
ers are then to inspect and to score the best gardens. It was thought advisable
for one section to grow potatoes, another milo, another common garden vegetables,
and for the children of difTerent sections to pool their interests. Other ways and
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means were discussed. (See Supplement of last issue.) We look for big returns
at Orland. Orland's problems are yours. How can interest be sustained? It is up
to the teachers.
Such an experience is evidence of the fact that properly directed and properly
supervised the grammar school boys and girls might become a tremendous force in
food production. Children respond actively, for one is appealing to the creative
instinct which is dormant or active in us all. Thousands of boys and girls could
easily be thrown into the food drive.
PRODUCTION AND INSTRUCTION.
Production and instruction should go hand in hand. It is difficult to measure
educational values to be obtained through maturing a plant or an animal. It is
easy to measure, to weigh, the material products of a garden. Therefore worry
not about educational values, but see that the areas produce. Educational values
will be absorbed in the process of production. Instruction lends 100 per cent
production.
Instruct the children in the big principles underlying plant and animal growth.
One may teach the fundamental principles of plant growth through producing a
bulb, a carrot, corn, potatoes or what not. It matters not so much the tA^pe of plant
as the method and the teacher. One may learn as much agriculture through pro-
ducing a bulb as an alfalfa plant if the psychology of the transaction is right.
Give definite instruction in principles. Put a good text into the hands of the
children, then use it right. See "Supplement" of December-January.
Study Outline.
Plant — Bulb, potato, corn or what not.
a. Identificat on.
1. Different varieties.
b. Uses.
c. Needs.
1. Air.
2. Food.
3. Moisture.
4. Light.
5. Warmth.
d. Cultivation.
1. Plowing, spading.
2. Harrowing, disking.
3. Weeding.
4. How performed.
(a) Tractor.
(&) Horse.
(c) Hand.
e. Food.
1. Fertilization.
2. Physical and chemical condition of soil
3. Cover crops.
a. Inoculation.
4. Rotation of crops.
/. Moisture.
1. Capillary water.
a. How conserved.
b. Its function.
2. Gravitational water.
a. How conserved.
b. Its function.
3. Irrigation.
a. Sprinkling.
b. Flooding.
c. Trenching.
4. Relation to humus, clay, lime. etc.
g. Light.
L Open areas.
2. Direction of planted rows.
3. Crowding.
4. Thinning.
/;. Warmth.
1. Relation of humus, clay, sand, lime,
cultivation, irrigation, etc.
2. Time to plant certain seeds.
General Method of Teaching: Step 1. Teach principle under discussion by
experimentation. Step 2. Make application to the child's plant project. Step 3.
Show how the farmer makes application. Emphasize "doing." Experiment and
demonstrate. Avoid mere telling. It is astonishing, the amount of one's second-
hand information. How do you know that house flies breed in manure, that
"wrigglers" turn into adult mosquitoes, that seeds need air for germination? Few
have had first-hand experiences and information. Many have been told. Give
boys and girls first-hand information. Give them a fund of original experiences.
This fund of real experience gives them power to interpret and to meet new
situations.
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