USA > Massachusetts > Norfolk County > Norwood > Norwood annual report 1915-1922 > Part 35
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The three new stacks installed a few years ago taking up all of our avail- able floor space will be filled this year or shortly later. The problem facing the trustees will then be to provide more book space, and two plans will be considered which will be covered fully in a future report.
Respectfully submitted,
IRVING S. FOGG, Chairman.
MARIA E. COLBURN, Secretary.
A. AGNES CURTIN, GEORGE W. CUSHING,
WALTER BLAIR,
WILLIAM T. WHEDON,
Trustees.
LIBRARIAN'S REPORT,
To the Board of Trustees:
The following is a report of the Morrill Memorial Library:
The library has been open for the delivery and return of books every week day, except holidays, making in all 304 days.
Circulation.
48,995 volumes
Total issue.
161 volumes
Average daily issue .
351 volumes
Largest issue, March 18.
45 volumes
Smallest issue, December 15.
Per Cent. of Circulation.
Class
Adult
Juvenile
Fiction
84.2
75.8
General Works
.9
.1
Philosophy 7
.1
172
Religion
.6
.2
Sociology
1.8
10.6
Philology
.1
.1
Natural Science .
.8
1.8
Useful Arts
1.3
1.4
Fine Arts.
1.4
2.
Literature
2.2
1.9
History.
2.
2.5
Travel .
2.2
2.3
Biography
1.8
1.2
Of Total Circulation.
54 per cent.
Juvenile.
46 per cent.
Registration.
Number of names registered January 1, 1916,
4,246
Number of new borrowers,
364 .
Number of names withdrawn,
160
204
Net gain,
Number of names registered Jan. 1, 1917,
Respectfully submitted,
JANE A. HEWETT,
Librarian.
January 2, 1917. Gifts.
Massachusetts, Commonwealth of 14 volumes
National City Bank of New York. 1 volume
1 pamphlet
Milton Historical Society
1 pamphlet
Master James H. LeFevre
2 volumes
Master Robert Williamson 1 volume
Mr. Hudson Maxim
1 volume
Anonymous.
4 volumes
4,450
Adult
173
REPORT OF THE SCHOOL COMMITTEE.
ORGANIZATION, 1916.
School Committee.
Harriet W. Lane, 296 Walpole Street, term expires January, 1917.
Ralph E. Bullard, 92 Walpole Street, term expires January, 1917. Alfred N. Ambrose, 12 Vernon Street, term expires January, 1918. Sarah N. Bigelow, 219 Winter Street, term expires January, 1918. Cornelius M. Callahan, 223 Railroad Avenue, term expires January, 1919. Henry I. Everett, 9 Morse Avenue, term expires January, 1919. Cornelius M. Callahan, Chairman.
Mary D. Taylor, Clerk.
Standing Committees.
Schoolbooks and supplies-Mr. Everett, Mr. Bullard, Mrs. Bigelow.
Finance, accounts and claims-Mr. Bullard, Mr. Callahan, Mr. Ambrose. Janitors, schoolhouses and grounds-Mr. Ambrose, Mr. Callahan, Mrs. Lane.
Fuel-Mr. Callahan, Mr. Ambrose, Mr. Everett.
Committee Meetings.
The regular monthly meeting of the School Committee is held at the School Committee rooms, 21 Sanborn Block, at 8 p. m. on the first Thurs- day of each month.
Superintendent of Schools.
Austin H. Fittz, 361 Walpole Street.
Telephone number, Norwood 434-W.
The office of the Superintendent is at 21 Sanborn Block. His office is open from 8 a. m. until 11.45 a. m. and from 1.15 p. m. until 5 p. m. on school days; and from 8 a. m. until 11.45 a. m. on Saturdays.
Telephone number, Norwood 133.
SCHOOL CALENDAR.
1916-1917. Winter Term.
First half: Tuesday, January 2, to Friday, February 16.
Second half : Monday, February 26, to Friday, April 20.
Spring Term.
Monday, April 30, to Friday, June 22.
Fall Term.
Wednesday, September 5, to Friday, December 21.
1917-1918. Winter Term.
First half: Wednesday, January 2, to Friday, February 15. Second half: Monday, February 25, to Thursday, April 18.
174
Holidays.
October 12, Thanksgiving Day and the following Friday, Good Friday, April 19, May 30, June 17.
REPORT OF THE SCHOOL COMMITTEE AND SUPERINTENDENT.
This report, prepared by the Superintendent of Schools and submitted to the School Committee for its approval, is presented to the citizens of Nor- wood as the report of the School Department for the year ending December 31, 1916. It is : (A) a statement of receipts and expenditures; (B) a record of progress for 1916; (C) a discussion of specific matters that have to do with the improvement of the schools; (D) appropriations recommended.
(A) Receipts and Expenditures.
Receipts.
Appropriation (exclusive of appropriation for evening school),
$77,450.00 46.40
Sale of schoolbooks and supplies,
Sale of incidentals,
57.48
Sale of school tickets,
48.75
Refund on telephone calls,
30.00
High School English prize money,
20.20
Norwood Civic Association,
87.00
Return of cash advanced,
25.00
$77,764.83
· Tuition from
State for State Wards,
620.25
City of Boston,
$78,620.83
Expenditures.
Teachers salaries,
4,908.19
Janitors,
5,330.63
Heating and lighting,
3,726.00
Incidentals,
4,957.14
Transportation,
1,040.00
$77,820.20
Balance,
800.63
$78,620.83
Evening School.
Receipts.
Appropriation,
$2,000.00
Sale of schoolbooks and supplies,
89.71
Expenditures.
$1,514.25
193.50
51.16
$2,089.71
Teachers, Janitors, Schoolbooks and supplies,
235.75
$57,858.24
Schoolbooks and supplies,
175
Incidentals and repairs, Heating and lighting,
$21.50 133.39
Balance,
$1,913.80 $ 175.91
(B) A Report of Progress for 1916.
Improvement of School Premises. The Shattuck school has been con- nected for gas, and gas lights have been put into the lower corridor and into one of the rooms. This work, done at the request of the Parent-Teachers' Association for the Shattuck school district, is for the purpose of making the Shattuck school a centre for neighborhood gatherings for the welfare of the children of that part of the town. Five rooms at the Winslow school have been wired for electric lights for evening school use. At the New Balch school the old Balch school building has been moved back from the street, the space adjoining graded, and shrubbery set out. The East school has been painted, exterior and interior.
In February an art exhibit at the new Balch school was held under the direction of principal and teachers. This exhibit gave the parents of the Balch district opportunity to see copies of many of the world's masterpieces and resulted in the raising of funds with which needed pictures have been added to the school.
The New High School. During the year the site for the new high school, directly across Washington Street from the Civic Association, has been ac- quired, an architect selected, and plans for the new building, based upon recommendations of the School Committee, prepared. These plans con- template ultimately a building large enough for both high and grammar schools and an auditorium. At present, however, the high school section only will be built. The arrangement of the rooms in the section first to be completed follows: In the basement will be three shops, two rooms for cook- ing, two for sewing, lunch rooms, a room for mechanical drawing and a room for freehand drawing. On the first floor will be the principal's office, a room for the distribution of books and supplies, and the bookkeeping, shorthand and typewriting rooms. On the second floor will be a recitation room and two study rooms, one of which may be used as a study room and library. On the third floor will be three recitation rooms and two laboratories, one for biology and general science and one for physics and chemistry. The arrangement of the rooms is such that related subjects will be in their own parts of the building. Thus, manual arts, freehand drawing, mechanical drawing, sewing and cooking will be in the basement, the commercial branches on the first floor, and the laboratories on the third floor. The ad- ministrative advantages of such a plan are apparent.
Additional Teachers Employed. An increased membership in Sep- tember made necessary the employment of two additional teachers, one at the High school and one at the New Balch school. We are now obliged to have an assistant in manual training one day a week, and the Framingham Normal School is sending us a student on Thursday and Friday of each week to assist in the household arts classes. During part of the year a stu- dent from the Massachusetts Normal Art School has assisted in the draw- ing.
Physical Training. In May a festival was held at which was given an excellent demonstration of the work in physical training in the schools. Through the co-operation of the Civic Association a baseball league was organized in the spring among the boys in the upper grades, and soccer foot- ball was introduced in the fall at the Shattuck and New Balch schools. In- struction in swimming has been added to the work of the High school boys' gymnasium class at the Civic Association.
Health Department. In March a serious epidemic of scarlet fever broke
176
out in the Balch district. The School Department employed an extra nurse and extra physicians to examine the pupils and to help in preventing the spread of the disease. In September two school nurses were regularly employed. Again, nurses and physicians were kept busy watching for pos- sible cases of infantile paralysis. The School Department now plans to establish a health department in the schools, to include a school physician, an assistant school physician, and two nurses. By the creation of such a department the medical inspection work of the schools can be put on a more efficient basis and the health of the community better safeguarded.
A demonstration given in June of the work accomplished in the High school girls' class in home nursing showed evidence of efficient training for . those home duties that have to do with the care and protection of the ill and the injured. This work was under the direction of the school nurse, as was a similar class in the evening school.
Vacation School. Beginning with Monday, July 10, and closing with Friday, August 18, 1916, a period of six weeks, a vacation school was held at the Guild school. The school was in session five mornings each week, from half past eight until half past eleven o'clock. Attendance was limited to pupils above the fourth grade. It was originally planned to open two rooms and employ two teachers. The demand for the privilege of attend- ing became so great, however, that it was necessary to open four rooms and secure four teachers.
117 pupils were registered. The membership at the close was 89, an ex- cellent record when it is considered that attendance was voluntary. Of these 89 pupils, 42 attended all thirty sessions, 42 gained a year either by overcoming loss of time due to non-promotion, or by skipping a grade; 42 did not gain a year, but were better fitted for the work of the next grade; five who did not receive their grammar school diplomas in June were subse- quently awarded them and are now maintaining good standing in the High school. It was noteworthy that the per cent. of attendance was about the same as is that for the regular school year.
The experience gained during the summer of 1916 justifies the continu- ance of the vacation school as a part of the school system. No pupil ought to be compelled to attend a vacation school, but pupils who are physically fit to stand the strain of additional work during the summer and who need assistance in their studies ought to have the opportunity a vacation school affords.
Evening School. The attendance at the evening school has been lighter than in previous years. The economic value of an evening school course is evidenced by the fact that a number of our students have secured better positions as a direct result of this means of education. The following let- ter received from one of the largest manufacturing businesses in this vicinity indicates that the work carried on in the evening schoo is of value to both employee and employer.
"We were in very urgent need of a girl to work around the office to-day, and by good luck and in a roundabout way we heard that a young girl who has been working for us for some time in another department was taking up typewriting and business in the Norwood evening school. This was the first knowledge that we had of this fact, and upon talking with her we find that she has had quite a little training.
"In all probability there are other girls and young men who are studying in the night school, who are training for better positions and whom we know nothing about. Will you give us a list of these people who work for us, so that we can keep track of them and perhaps give them work along the lines they are taking up, or at least keep them in mind for work that they are taking, and therefore not lose them?"
Twelve pupils, members of the class in citizenship, took out their first natu- ralization papers in March. By vote of the School Committee it is now possible for an evening school student to secure a grammar school diploma.
177
During the fall a class in cooking was organized. In November residents in the vicinity of the Winslow school petitioned that an evening school be opened in the Winslow school. This petition was granted and four rooms at the Winslow school were opened on Monday evening, November 13.
School Savings. The following gratifying results have been secured in the school savings department.
No. of schools in which the system is in operation,
8
No. of rooms in which the system is in operation,
52
No. of enrolled pupils in such schools,
2191
No. of enrolled depositors in such schools,
1045
No. of deposits received during the year, 10508
Amount of such deposits, $3,911.76
No. of pupils to whom savings bank pass books have been issued during the year, 199
Total number of savings bank pass books issued since the in-
700
auguration of the system,
Amount to the credit of those 700 bank books, $7,753.21
An Eight Grade System. Beginning with September the Norwood ele- mentary school system will be changed from a nine grade system to an eight grade system. This change does not mean that all pupils will be able to complete the elementary course in eight years any more than heretofore all pupils have been able to complete the elementary course in nine years. It does mean that all pupils will have the opportunity to complete the el- ementary course in eight years. Pupils unable to do high school work after eight years of preparation in the grades will be given an additional year of special work for such preparation. This change from a nine grade system to an eight grade system is in accord with the best educational practice of the country. Certainly there can be no advantage in longer requiring the pupils of our schools to spend nine years in accomplishing what the pupils in other school systems are doing in eight.
Increase in Maximum Salaries of Teachers. By vote of the School Committee the maximum salary for grade teachers has been increased from $700 to $800 and of high school teachers from $850 to $950. These changes in the salary schedule are necessary if Norwood schools are to maintain a standard of efficiency equal to that of other school systems where salaries either have been increased or are about to be increased to a figure higher than that heretofore paid in Norwood.
Salaries in other towns have advanced or are advancing, while salaries in Norwood have remained stationary. The cost of living has increased, but the salaries of the teachers of Norwood are about what they were five years ago. The Committee is recommending an increase in the school appropriation this year so that Norwood teachers may be paid more nearly what teachers in other communities are receiving.
In Acknowledgment. Acknowledgment is made of the continued co- operation of the Civic Association: co-operation that has enabled us to broaden our work in physical training and that has been of great help to us in looking after the physical well-being of the children in our schools, co- operation, further, without which it would have been difficult, if not impos- sible, for us to have continued our work in household arts; to the Parent- Teachers' Association for their earnest efforts to bring closer together par- ents and schools, for the very great amount of hard work done in connection with the May Festival, and especially for the efforts now making to equip the Shattuck school grounds with play apparatus; to the Grange for offer- ing prizes and otherwise encouraging children to raise flowers and vege- tables and to care for home gardens; to the Woman's Relief Corps for their continued interest in supplying the schoolrooms with silk flags; to the teach- ers for their splendid spirit of co-operation; and to Mr. H. M. Plimpton for prizes for excellence in drawing awarded as follows:
178
High School Grade 9 Grade 9 (program cover design)
Grade 8 Grade 7
Margaret Jesulaitis Allen Anderson Clara Monetti Walter Landry Ethel Garner
(C) A Discussion of Specific Matters that have to do with the Improve- ment of the Schools.
Parents: the schools need your co-operation. Too many children are absent for trivial reasons. A pupil should not be kept at home to take care of a younger child, to do errands, or for an ailment not serious enough to confine him to the house nor of a nature to justify his absence from school. Too many children are tardy. Too many boys are smoking cigarettes. If any of these remarks apply to your child, will you not help the schools to help your child? If in doubt as to what to do, please confer with the prin- cipal of the school your child attends.
Additional Accommodations Soon to be Needed for the Grades. Accept- ed standards of educational administration are to the effect that a teacher ought not to have over forty pupils and preferably not over thirty-six. Just as a foreman in a manufacturing establishment can effectively direct the work of about only so many men, so a teacher ought not to be expected to have charge of more than the number of pupils stated above. At the present time we have fifty-one schoolrooms below the High school and in seventeen of these rooms the teacher is asked to instruct over forty pupils. This congestion is greatest in the Shattuck, Guild and Winslow schools, and in the primary grades. At the Shattuck school five of the eight rooms have over forty pupils each; and of the six first grade rooms in town five have more than forty pupils. These figures mean that in the course of a very few years, even with the present High school vacated and utilized for grade school purposes, our accommodations for the grades are going to be wholly inadequate. The plan to complete the High school section of the new building makes provision for the immediate future only. The grade school section must soon be added.
(D) Appropriations.
The Committee recommends the following appropriations for the ensuing
$63,600.00
Teachers,
4,900.00
Janitors,
4,500.00
.
Schoolbooks and supplies,
5,000.00
Incidentals and repairs,
5,500.00
Heating and lighting,
1,000.00
School tickets,
1,870.00
Health,
2,000.00
Evening School,
$88,400.00
Respectfully submitted,
AUSTIN H. FITTZ, Superintendent.
REPORT OF THE SCHOOL NURSES.
To the Superintendent of Schools:
We submit our report as school nurses for the year ending December 31, 1916.
1,944
Total number of examinations,
Total number of inspections during epidemics,
28,602
year:
179
Cases needing treatment :
Uncleanliness,
217
Pediculosis,
116
Vision,
94
Hearing,
13
Tonsils and adenoids,
131
Defective teeth,
2,369
Miscellaneous,
1,001
Total,
3,941
Cases treated and cured :
Uncleanliness,
217
Pediculosis,
116
Vision,
75
Hearing,
37
Tonsils and adenoids,
*7,688
Defective teeth,
1,001
Total,
9,141
Home visits,
451
Number examined by school physician at times other than inspections during epidemics,
121
*Estimated. Apparent discrepancy between dental defects needing treat- ment and dental defects treated due to discovery by dentists of defects not found by school nurses.
In March there was a threatened epidemic of scarlet fever and in April and May, diphtheria. In September infantile paralysis was prevalent in surrounding towns and cities. During these times special precautions were taken in all the schools. Pupils were subjected to very frequent inspections by the doctors and nurses, and any child having even slight symptoms was excluded for a few days. In this way others were protected from possible infection.
Respectfully submitted, EDNA C. DAVIES, MARY L. BOWKER, School Nurses.
REPORT OF ATTENDANCE OFFICERS.
To the Superintendent of Schools:
We submit our report as attendance officers for the year ending Decem- ber 31, 1916.
523
To ascertain causes of evening school absences,
76
To ascertain causes of day school absences,
268
Truancy, 68
5
To investigate cases for employment certificates,
13
To secure information for school records,
6
To assist school nurses in follow-up work,
155
Eye cases, Dental cases, 1 62
93
Prosecution for non-attendance,
Respectfully submitted, LEILA E. HUNTON, MARY L. BOWKER, Attendance Officers.
7
Miscellaneous,
Total number of investigations,
To investigate cases where home permits were desired,
180
ENROLMENT AND ATTENDANCE.
TEACHERS
Schools
Grades
Enrolment
Boys
Girls
No. 16 yrs.
old or over
No. Betw'n 7 and 14
1
Nathaniel A. Cutler 66
High 6
11-13
170
74
96
115
0
10.
100
36
64
39
6
2
Flora B. Reed
Everett
9
34
14
20
0
20
3
John L. Flores
9
42
21
21
5
11
4
Minnie G. Feely
9
33
16
17
1
21
5
Wilda L. Vose
9
43
23
20
1
28
6
Eliza M. O'Rourke
66
8
*39
25
14
0
27
7
Mary A. Leamy
Guild
7
47
22
25
1
46
9
M. Agnes McCarthy
66
6
45
22
23
0
45
11
Mary W. O'Brien
66
5
45
25
20
0
45
12
Margarita E. Burns
=
4
48
21
27
0
48
14
Laura H. Baker
66
4
46
21
25
0
46.
15
Julia I. Drummy
3
48
22
26
0
48
16
Estelle M. Mahoney
66
3
48
20
28
0
48
17
Helen F. McCarthy
66
1-2
34
17
17
0
16
19
Gretchen L. Pierce
66
1
46
26
20
0
0
20
George W. Allen
Shattuck
8
*35
16
19
1
27
21
Edith J. Atwood
7
36
20
16
0
30
22
Mabelle A. Douglass
66
6
37
22
15
0
21
23
Esther M. Vance
66
5
41
24
17
0
41
24
Florence Hill
4
45
23
22
0
45
25
Bertha Richardson
66
2
38
16
22
0
20
27
Emma F. Niles
1
54
35
19
0
6
28
Gertrude E. Richardson
Winslow
S
29
15
14
0
18
29
Anna A. Lane
7
44
23
21
0
44
30
Lena M. C. Thompson
66
6
45
24
21
0
41
31
Hannah E. Whelden
66
5
47
25
22
0
47
32
Bertha L. Brown
4
52
27
25
0
52
33
Mary A. Ahern
66
2
33
20
13
0
22
35
Rosa M. Bowker
1
45
27
18
0
5
36
Katharine L. Carbee
Balch
8
28
13
15
0
14
37
Anne F. Gibbons
66
7
41
22
19
1
30
38
Helen L. Hogan
66
5
32
17
15
2
23
40
Julia A. Barrett
66
4
41
22
19
0
40
42
Mary A. Hadley
60
3-4
31
13
18
0
31
43
Charlotte H. Thompson
66
3
40
25
15
39
39
44
Maude E. Dalton
66
2
40
21
19
0
33
45
Christine Buffum
66
1
37
19
18
0
3
46
A. Agnes Curtin
66
1
39
20
19
0
5
48
Julia A. Sheehan®
East
2
28
18
10
0
28
49
Martha B. Parker
66
1
30
17
13
0
5
50
Ethel M. Lindsay
West
2-3
40
18
22
0
34
51
Louise H. Borchers
66
1
26
14
12
0
0
2276 1142 1134
212 1500
8
42
23
19
0
30
8
Julia E. Danahy
6
49
24
25
0
45
10
Katie M. Hunt
66
5
*35
21
14
0
34
13
Marion H. Bartlett
2
48
24
24
0
47
18
Lucy H. Brooks
66
3
47
15
32
0
46
26
Maude A. Woods
66
3
39
23
16
0
39
39
Katherine T. Conley
66
5
32
15
17
1
31
41
Hazel D. Wilson
66
2
43
20
23
0
30
47
E. Louise Ward
6
39
16
23
0
39
66
34
Gladys Huntoon
.
*Apparent discrepancy between enrolment and membership, due to en- rolments of several children in another school.
-
181
STATISTICS FOR SCHOOL YEAR 1916-1917.
Average Member-
ship
Average At-
tendance
Per Cent. of
Attendance
No. Tardi-
nesses
Pro Rata of
Tardinesses
No. Days in
Session
At. Days. At. All
Pupils
157.20
152.10
97.40
234
1.50
180
27372.0
90.70
93.90
96.60
52
60
177
16061.0
33.94
32.90
96.93
15
44
178
5856.5
34.99
33.89
96.85
39
1.11
178
6033.0
29.95
28.76
96.02
16
. 53
178
5120.5
35.92
34.82
96.74
44
1.22
178
6198.0
40.34
32.44
80.41
60
1.48
179
6808.5
41.04
39.13
95.34
18
.43
179
7006.0
46.51
43.30
93.09
34
.73
179
7751.5
46.31
43.58
94.10
44
.95
179
7802.5
42.88
40.46
94.35
66
1.53
179
7244.0
39.57
37.24
94.10
29
.73
179
6666.0
36.00
34.41
95.56
20
.55
179
6159.5
41.50
39.79
95.88
58
1.39
179
7121.0
43.75
41.05
93.82
40
.91
179
7438.5
42.98
40.45
94.11
47
1.09
176
7119.5
44.61
41.85
93.81
24
.53
176
7367.0
39.94
37.52
93.94
29
.72
176
6604.0
31.81
30.50
95.88
24
.75
176
5369.0
40.55
37.49
92.45
29
.71
176
6599.0
35.90
34.90
97.00
45
1.50
182
6296.0
32.60
31.09
95.36
90
2.76
179
5566.5
34.61
32.69
94.45
23
.66
179
5853.0
40.43
35.53
87.00
41
1.01
179
6360.0
44.13
43.10
97.70
42
.90
180
7764.0
44.00
41.86
95.11
45
1.02
174
7305.5
35.07
33.22
94.75
64
1.82
176
5847.5
50.99
48.25
94.64
56
1.09
178
8493.0
27.96
26.70
95.48
31
1.10
178
4753.0
40.84
38.91
95.37
11
.28
178
6927.0
42.14
39.63
94.00
31
.73
178
7055.5
44.85
41.95
93.53
11
.24
178
7468.5
46.32
44.27
95.55
49
1.05
178
7880.0
37.50
36.02
96.00
28
.74
174
6286.5
30.28
28.68
94.71
34
1.12
174
5005.0
41.83
39.48
94.38
37
.88
175
6910.5
26.51
24.38
91.96
27
.98
175
4279.0
38.03
35.22
92.05
121
3.20
175
6182.0
34.40
31.43
91.36
31
.90
173
5554.5
30.70
28.34
91.12
60
1.95
175
4975.5
30.90
28.48
92.15
78
2.50
175
4984.0
36.80
34.20
88.00
97
2.30
173
5917.5
27.18
25.37
93.33
79
2.80
173
4395.5
34.20
31.80
93.00
62
1.80
171
5432.5
36.55
34.00
93.02
36
.98
172
5865.0
35.60
33.20
93.00
96
2.60
172
5734.5
33.63
31.39
93.33
24
.71
172
5400.0
33.62
30.40
90.42
88
2.61
172
5228.0
25.54
24.40
95.54
55
.22
175
4321.0
24.51
22.73
92.78
21
.85
175
3988.5
35.00
33.34
95.26
8
.23
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