| Willard Walcott Beatty - 1953 - 522 Seiten
...introduction to this second volume of selections from lndian Education. "The first and foremost need in lndian education is a change in point of view. Whatever may...official governmental attitude, education for the lndian in the past has proceeded largely on the theory that it is necessary to remove the lndian child... | |
| 1943 - 846 Seiten
...-8OQftlgi!?ft-lo^f^2 Service — it seems appropriate to reprint the educational recommendations at this time. "The first and foremost need in Indian Education is...point of view. Whatever may have been the official goverrtmental attitude, education for the Indian in the past has proceeded largely on the theory that... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Labor and Public Welfare - 1969 - 1174 Seiten
...commissioned by the Interior Department itself, the substance of which is echoed in our remarks this morning : The first and foremost need in Indian education is...been the official governmental attitude, education t«r the Indian in the past has proceeded largely on the theory that it is necesary to remove the Indian... | |
| N. Ray Hiner, Joseph M. Hawes - 1985 - 340 Seiten
...known as the Meriam Report. In the area of Indian education, the Meriam Report drew harsh conclusions. "The first and foremost need in Indian education is a change in point of view," it observed. Indian education should be "less concerned with a conventional school system and more... | |
| 2001 - 228 Seiten
...by the Brookings Institution in 1926. Its report, The Problem of Indian Administration, concluded: The first and foremost need in Indian education is...point of view. Whatever may have been the official government attitude, education for the Indian in the past has proceeded on the theory that it is necessary... | |
| Laurence French - 2003 - 266 Seiten
...exclusively with Indian education, arguing for cultural-specific progressive principles: The most fundamental need in Indian education is a change in point of view. Whatever may have been the official government attitude, education for the Indian in the past has proceeded largely on the theory that... | |
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