<h2><SPAN name="COLOR_PHOTOGRAPHS_AND_CONVERSATION_LESSONS" id="COLOR_PHOTOGRAPHS_AND_CONVERSATION_LESSONS"></SPAN> COLOR PHOTOGRAPHS AND CONVERSATION LESSONS.</h2>
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<p class="drop-cap">SINCE Nature Study Publishing
Company, in January,
1897, put before the
teaching world the first
accurately beautiful representations,
not only of the forms of
nature but of the tints and colors also,
the brightest minds have been active
in noting the effectiveness of the color
photograph in school. Thousands of
teachers have vied with each other in
applying them in nature study with
most gratifying results.</p>
<p>An important discovery has been
made almost at the same time by
many of them. The lively interest
aroused by the bird presented, the
agreeable sensations the child experiences
in relating incidents and hearing
from his mates and teacher about
its habits, and the reminiscences of
delightful outdoor experiences, all
tend to warm the child to enthusiasm.</p>
<p>This point of warmth is the supreme
opportunity of the teacher. Instruction
given under such a glow is intensely
educative. A few minutes of
such work is worth hours of effort
where the child is but indifferently
aroused.</p>
<p>Many of the best first primary teachers
do not begin to teach reading during
the first few weeks of the child in
school. They aim, first, to establish
a bond of sympathy between themselves
and their pupils, to extend their
range of ideas, and to expand their
powers of expression. Expression is
induced and encouraged along all lines,
by words, music, drawing, color work,
and physical motions.</p>
<p>The common things of life are discussed,
experiences related, and the
imagination brought strongly into
play. Songs and recitations are given
with the actions of birds, animals, persons,
or machines, imitated joyously
by groups of children. Games calculated
to train the senses and the
memory are indulged in. The whole
nature of the child is called into play,
and perfect freedom of expression is
sought.</p>
<p>Experience shows that intelligent
training along these lines is profitable.
The time of learning reading and
spelling is somewhat deferred, and
number work is delayed, but the children
who are skilfully trained in this
way outstrip the others rapidly when
they bring their trained powers to bear
upon the things that are popularly
supposed to be the business of a school.
Superintendent Speer has shown that
pupils whose technical instruction has
been deferred for several months in
this way are found at the end of the
second year far superior to others of
equal promise, who have been put at
reading, spelling, and number work
directly.</p>
<p>To conduct a conversation lesson
requires some tact. Not tact in asking
questions, nor in "talking down"
to the level of the children. Direct
questions are of doubtful value in the
first grade. In fact, the value of the
lesson may sometimes be judged by
the absence of such questions put by
the teacher. The question mark and
the pump handle resemble each other,
and often force up perfunctory contributions,
and sometimes they merely
produce a dry sound. Children do
not care to be pumped.</p>
<p>Here are a few questions that give
the children little pleasure and less
opportunity for expression: Isn't this
a very pretty bird? Do you see
what a bright eye it has? How many
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</SPAN></span>
of you have seen a bird like this?
How would you like to own him, and
have him at your house? Don't you
think, dear children, God is very good
to us to let us have such beautiful
birds in the world?</p>
<p>Any one of these questions by itself is
not harmful, but an exercise made up
of such material merely gives the class
a chance to say, "Yes, ma'am," and
raise their hands. All talk by the
teacher and no activity by the class.
With a bright smile and a winning
voice, the teacher may conduct what
appears to be a pleasant exercise with
such material, but there is little real
value in it under the best circumstances
and it should be avoided systematically.
It is unskilful, and a
waste of time and opportunity.</p>
<p>Attempts to lower one's conversation
to the level of little children are
often equally unsatisfactory. Too
much use of "Mamma bird," "baby
birdies," "clothes," "sweet," "lovely,"
"tootsy-wootsy," and "Oh, my!" is
disappointing.</p>
<p>Ordinary conversation opened with
a class in much the same style and
language as used by one adult in talking
with another is found to be the
most profitable. Introductory remarks
are generally bad, though some otherwise
excellent teachers do run on
interminably with them. To begin
directly with a common-sense statement
of real interest is best.</p>
<p>Here are a few profitable opening
statements for different exercises: One
day I found a dead mouse hanging
upon a thorn in a field. Mr. Smith
told me he heard a Flicker say, "Wake
up! Wake up! Wake up!" Willie
says his bird is fond of fruit, and I
notice that most birds that eat fruit
have beautiful, bright feathers. This
bird likes the cows, and I once saw
him light on a cow's horn.</p>
<p>Such statements open the minds of
young people where many times direct
questions close them. Questions and
regular contributions to the conversation
flow readily from members of the
class when the right opening has been
made. Do not let the class feel that
your purpose is to get language from
them. Mere talk does not educate.
Animated expression alone is valuable.</p>
<p>Have plenty of material to use if the
class seem slow to respond, and have
patience when they have more to offer
than the time will admit. Bear in
mind that a conversation lesson on
some nature subject is not a nature
lesson, but is given to induce correct
thinking, which shall come out in
good language. It may incidentally
be such a nature lesson as to satisfy
the requirements of your course of
study in that line, but if you give it
as a conversation lesson, let conversation
be the exercise.</p>
<p>Where a few in the class tend to
monopolize the time you may frequently
bring a diffident one into the
exercise by casually looking at him as
if you felt his right to be heard. It is
better not to ask him to talk, but to
make it easy for him to come into the
conversation by referring to something
he has previously done or said, or by
going near him while others talk. A
hand on his shoulder while you are
conversing with others, will sometimes
open him to expression. Sometimes
you need to refer to what Willie's
father said, or what you saw at his
house, or to something that Willie
owns and is pleased with. Many
expedients should be tried and some
time consumed in endeavoring to get
such a pupil into the conversation
instead of saying point blank, "Now,
Willie, what do you think?"</p>
<p>The matter of spoken language is
words largely. The thinking of children
is always done in words, as far as
school matters go. The thoughts of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</SPAN></span>
the average child are correct enough
from his standpoint, and when the
teacher represses him on his first
attempt to carry his part in the exercise,
he is hurt to such an extent that
he may never recover from it, and he
may always believe himself peculiarly
unfortunate in that he is incapable of
speaking as others do.</p>
<p>The truth is that all children are
eloquent. They talk easily, very
easily, in comparison with adults who
have been frightened out of their
natural tongues, and are forever trying
to say what they think in terms that
they do not think it in.</p>
<p>All children are sensitive concerning
their speech. Some of the keenest
hurts children experience are inflicted
by those who notice patronizingly or
critically the language they use.
Mothers are in a hurry to have them
learn English at once, and so correct
them instantly when such mistakes as
"runned," "mouses," and "me wants"
occur. The child allowed to think
in his own terms overcomes his
verbal difficulties in a short time if
associated at home with those who
speak correctly, and he is perfectly
excusable for using what we call
incorrect forms until he has acquired
the so-called correct ones.</p>
<p>There are times when the child's
mind is open to acquisition of formal
expertness in language. He will find
these times for himself and exercise
himself in forms without being driven
to it at the very times when his mind
is most active with other things which
he tries to express to us in his moments
of overflowing enthusiasm. In these
moments he should not be bothered
and confused by formal quibbling. In
his most active states intellectually he
ought not to be repressed. This applies
to the child who hears good English
at home. It also applies, with slight
modifications, to the child who hears
imperfect language at home. The
child who will eventually prove capable
of correct speech will learn to
speak the best language he hears
without direct instruction if encouraged
in it and given the respect a
growing child is entitled to receive.</p>
<p>Children learn to speak while at
play. They are active and much interested
when they are acquiring a
natural vocabulary. Much of the
vocabulary is wrong from the standpoint
of the grammar and dictionary,
and they have to unlearn it. They
have to unlearn it at school and from
the lips of pains-taking parents. One
reason it is so hard for them to learn
the correct forms is this unintelligent
way of teaching. Another is that the
incorrect conversation is heard under
circumstances favorable to retention
and reproduction; that is, when the
child is much interested and happy;
while the correct forms are given him
when he is but half aroused, or when
he is somewhat intense over another
matter, and many times the intended
instruction goes in at one ear and out
at the other. When the skill of the
teacher and the things of the school
room become so powerfully attractive
to the pupil that once hearing a new
word will fix it, once seeing a word
will make him master of it in all its
forms, then the language lesson will
not need to be given; for language,
which is as natural to man as breathing,
will flow in correct forms trippingly
from the tongue, being so
fixed in the pupil's mind from the
first that he will have nothing to
unlearn.</p>
<p>Conversation lessons are intended to
take care of some of the crudest errors
in speech before the child has committed
the indiscretion of putting
them in writing. It can be done with
so much less severity in conversation
than in a written lesson. Notice
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</SPAN></span>
silently the peculiarly bad expressions
and forms of statements of the whole
class, then plan your talking lesson in
which those who are not guilty of
those errors are allowed to lead. Then
let the child whom you consider most
likely to profit by hearing correct
expression from his mates give you
the necessary statement. If he use
correct forms, let another try.</p>
<p>For instance, suppose you have a
number of pupils who are inclined to
say "The robin isn't so purty as the
bluejay." The reason for this is that
the parents of nearly all these pupils will
make the same error. If early in their
experience with you you are shocked by
their speech and let them know it, you
either lose their respect or make them
feel that they and their parents are
inferior beings with no right to speak.</p>
<p>It will take a few minutes to speak
of something else that is pretty, and
let several of your pupils who speak
the word correctly give some statements
concerning pretty things. Then
call upon one of the offenders, without
his suspecting himself to be such, and
the probability is that he will say
"pretty," as you wish. But suppose
he fail, you must not think he does so
because of dullness, for he may say
"purty" for the sole reason that his
mates are listening and he fears they
may think he is trying to "put on
style." If you pass the matter in
silence that day you will find him
bolder or more acute the next day, and
he will speak the word correctly. In
this way he will seem to himself to
be teaching himself. Self-culture will
begin in him and the credit will be
yours. Another teacher would suppress
that sort of language and compel
the boy to say the word right instanter.
But her pupils speak one language in
school and a different one in places
where they are more comfortable.</p>
<p>Aim to set the child to correcting
his own speech by his own apparent
choice. A single error is easily
repressed, but the habit of looking
after one's own speech is not easily
acquired. It is easy to make a child
feel his inferiority to you, but it is a
great thing to inspire him to do the
good and wise and elegant things which
you are capable of doing in his presence.</p>
<p>The process of unlearning words
has always been a failure with the
majority of pupils, and most of the
English speaking race are ashamed of
their inability to speak. Men most
eloquent and successful in business
conversation, who were by nature fitted
to thrill the world with tongue and
pen, have been confused and repressed
by this process till they believe themselves
vastly inferior to others because
they cannot translate their thoughts
out of the terms of the street or counting
room into the language of the
grammar school, and so they never try
to fill the large places that would have
been open to them if they could but have
learned to think in terms which may
be spoken right out without fear
of opprobrium.</p>
<p>Now since so much of our teaching
psychology and common sense have
shown to be radically wrong, let us
build up our language work on the
high plane of interest in real things,
expressing thought directly without
translation into fitter terms. Let the
thinking be done in terms suitable for
life. And use the color photograph
to insure that enthusiasm necessary to
good thinking; be guarded as to how
you deal with thoughts that come hot
from growing minds, repress never,
advise kindly, and know that by following
the natural method in language
you are not ruining the speech powers
of your best pupils, as has been done
heretofore.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</SPAN></span></p>
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