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TITLE:
The Saturday Review of Literature
[Each Saturday Review of Literature issue covers books, arts, literature, movies, ideas, music, science, poetry and much more. Many regular features and writers, and most reviews are also essays on the subject at hand. ALL the latest books had to have an ad in The Saturday Review! ]
ISSUE DATE:
APRIL, 1973; MARCH 10, 1973, VOLUME I, NUMBER 3, EDUCATION
CONDITION:
RARE edition, standard magazine size, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)
IN THIS ISSUE:
[Use 'Control F' to search this page. MORE MAGAZINES' exclusive detailed content description is GUARANTEED accurate for THIS magazine. Editions are not always the same, even with the same title, cover and issue date.] This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
COVER: Conversing with Jerome Kagen; Searching for Friere; The Return of Mom; Inside Summer Camps.
FEATURES:
Off to Summer Camp
By Ellen Bilgore.
The ritzy rich-kid camps and not-so-ritzy
agency camps glimpsed on this tour
of America's summer stomping grounds
have more in common than fresh air
and lanyards. Camp directors call it
"the education of the whole child."
Searching for Freire
By John Egerton.
A group of southerners went on a weekend
retreat with Brazilian educator-critic-
philosopher PAULO FREIRE. They were
looking for his revolutionary prescriptions,
but they ended up searching for
meaning in the man himself.
Return of Mom
By Sara Stein and Carter Smith.
Early learning authorities increasingly
agree that home is where education
happens and that parents are the most
important teachers in a child's life.
The rewards of mom's new role are
great -- but so are its challenges.
A Conversation With JEROME KAGAN.
One of the world's most respected experts
in human development has an
optimistic message for those who
fear early deprivation may doom
a child to lifelong failure.
"Photography Is Not an Art: It Is a
Model of Perception"
By Barbara Confino.
The 80 students at the Visual Studies
Workshop in Rochester, New York,
are proving that there is more to
photography than just a beautiful print.
They hope their environment may
eventually serve as a "model of
possibilities" for society at large.
UP FRONT:
INSIDE SR: A look at this month's authors.
Learning the Odds in Las Vegas
By K. C. Cole.
A visit to a school for gamblers
in Las Vegas.
Sex School Dropout
By Theodosia Gardner.
A housewife finds a great deal afoot
in sex institute curricula.
Wey's Way.
Herbert Wey, chancellor of North Carolina's
Appalachian State University, has some
provocative ideas about teacher training.
Curriculum Vitae:
The Meaning of Life at Harvard.
Teen-age DJ
By Leon Taylor.
The golden days of radio hit a
dormitory at Indiana State.
Male, Damn It
By Jim Schoettler.
A male first-grade teacher does what he
can to break down sex stereotypes.
TRAVEL: The New Expatriates
in Paris.
By Lawrence Litzky.
EDITORIAL: Nixon's Three Rs:
Reducin', Retrenchin', 'n' Retrogressin'
By Ronald P. Kriss.
The new education budget is bigger,
but more may prove to be less.
SR/REVIEWS:
EARLY CHILDHOOD:
Accidents on trikes; a cookbook for
kids; surrogate social workers in
Appalachia; sex in the preschools.
SCHOOLS:
How to survive as a substitute teacher;
the representative nature of public school
boards; behaviorism in junior high.
COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES:
Anxiety at Cornell; Simon's Rock,
the "early" college; suicides on
campus; Ivy League admissions.
LIFE & LEARNING:
The growing demand for "non-traditional"
study; brains bring problems; Heliotrope,
a successful -- and growing -- free university.
MEDIA & MATERIALS:
A teacher who makes his own science
kits -- by the thousands -- in Virginia;
Animal Pikchurs; a new bilingual monthly.
MUSIC: Boulez and the
Philadelphians; Caballe as Norma.
By Irving Kolodin.
FILM: Facing Reality
By Arthur Knight.
SR/BOOKS REVIEWED:
The New Professionals:
Edited by Ronald Gross and Paul Osterman
Reviewed by Benjamin DeMott
Home Comfort: Stories and Scenes
of Life on Total Loss Farm
By Hugh Beame, Peter Gould, et al.;
edited by Richard Wizansky.
Defeat of an Ideal: A Study of the
Self-Destruction of the United Nations
By Shirley Hazzard,
Reviewed by Susan Cowley.
Hammarskjold,
By Brian Urquhart.
SR Recommends (Education):
Books for Children
By Karla Kuskin.
Shorter Reviews:
Uncle Tom's Campus
By Ann Jones.
Reunion: Twenty-five Years out of School
By Robert Douglas Mead.
GAMES: Literary Crypt; Wit Twister; Kingsley Double-Crostic No. 2030.
______
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