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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (July 2, 1969)
Elementary Teachers At Play Page 4 College Station, Texas What do rubbing hands smear ed with lotion, putting marbles under a book and turning a piece of chalk to dust on sand paper have in common ? One answer is elementary school instruction, through an activity - centered approach as taught in a science education course at Texas A&M. More than two dozen prospec tive and practicing elementary teachers are checking out the method in the course instructed by Mrs. Helen Weekes. "The objective,” she says, “is to let the child learn by his own experience.” Mrs. Weekes noted the ap proach is characteristic today of Elementary science instruction. Teachers in the class havE taken unusual routes to produce learning experiences through projects handled individually by other class members, serving in this case as the “elementary students.” Before the six-week course ends July 11, each teacher will have set up three projects and instructed the “c 1 a s s.” Four youngsters will meet with them during the last week to provide a more realistic elementary class. Demonstrating how burrowing animals breathe, one teacher packed earth in jars and poured on water that forced air in the dirt to bubble to the top. An other showed increased buoyancy in salt water by floating an egg in a container of water to which salt was added. “Many teachers don't want to do these things in class,” Mrs. Weekes pointed out. “They can be messy. And most classrooms do not have storage space for paraphernalia involved.” Once a teacher has tried the activity-centered approach and seen the child’s response, worth while aspects of the method can be discerned, the A&M instruc tor added. “We’re seeking a behavioral objective, a measurable result in the way a child goes about doing something after such a lesson,” She noted the instructional ap proach induces in the child self- reliance, resourcefulness and ability to recognize and solve problems on his own. “Science is observing a basic process, drawing inferences, mak ing measurements and predict ing results,” she defined. “A lot of us were brought up through a system of being taught facts. Being able to remember facts still provides the measure of success in learning,” Mrs. Weekes commented. “We want these teachers to see the activity-centered ap proach side of the coin too,” she explained. Mrs. Cheryl Mackin used hand lotion, marbles, book, chalk, and sandpaper so her “youngsters” could observe one form of en ergy, friction. FriEtion produces heat, wears rubbing objects down and can be reduced by lubrication or insert ing “ball bearing" marbles. Savings Certificates Of $1,000 or more Now Earn Per Annum Dividends Payable Or Compounded Quarterly Clip this coupon now! Start earning 5 l ^°/° a year on BB&L Savings Certificates. TT 1 #>■***> K 1/ irckot* r\r\ ‘R'R^rT. .Qaxrino’c Earn 5 1 /4% a year on BB&L Savings Certificates of $1,000 or more, six months maturity. Automatically renewable. Dividends payable or compounded quarterly. Or — you can open a con venient Passbook Account with any amount — earn 4 % % a year, compounded quarterly. Passbook Savings compounded quarterly for one year will yield 4.83%. S&H Green Stamps Given with Deposits • One Stamp per Dollar Invested • 800 Stamps Maximum per Account per Day Open my account with check for $ ...enclosed. ( ) Savings Passbook ( ) Savings Certificate ( ) Joint Account ( ) In My Name Only My Soc. Sec. No. is ; Name(s) Address Phone . City Zip BRYAN BJ3l3)I^cfe& LOAN m** year*** 2800 To. A*. Jl», 8/2 0181 Brr.u aw- • v. •; ‘-.r. ‘ v». \ »Ui... t ^ MARBLE ‘BALL BEARINGS’ An elementary classroom technique of explaining friction is demonstrated in a Texas A&M education course by Mrs. Cheryl Mackin. Her “students” used marbles, a bottle cap and heavy book to individually discover that friction, a form of energy, can be reduced between a sliding book and table top by inserting “ball bearings”. NS A Prexy Announces B-CS Secretaries 9 Plans “Plans for the 1969-70 Chap ter Year are already well for mulated for the Bryan-College Station Chapter of the National Secretaries Association (Inter national), although the year has just begun,” according to Chap ter President Bettye Kahan. “Miss Lee Synam, administra tive assistant to General A. R. Luedecke, was initiated as a new member into the Chapter at the June 17 meeting at the Ramada Inn/’ added the president. Plans for July include the ini tiation of at least three addi tional local secretaries who are being accepted into the Associa tion, according to Mrs. Kahan, who is administrative secretary to Texas A&M Vice President for Programs, Dr. John C. Calhoun. “The programs for the year will include the traditional Sec retaries Seminar, annual Secre taries Week, and Program of the Year,” said Mrs. Pat Batten, Chapter Program Chairman. “In addition to these annual events, the NSA Chapter is also plan ning to have top speakers from Oceanography, Management, and Education Departments during 1969-70,” she added. Mrs. Batten For Your Convenience Safeway Stores OPEN IZT ™«/.July 4th Safetvay Special! *Great to Barbecue! L Spareribs Lean & Meaty. ± Fresh Pork. V 3 to 5>Lb. Avg. —Lb. Pork Chops 7*5* Ouartwr Sliced Lein. Family Fak —Lb. ■ %ir SoriTesi# ScotTissue Q *1 CP Rolls JL ★White or ★Assorted Colors. Safeway Special! style* Beans Safetvay Special! Picnic Favorite Vienna Sausage 5..‘1 Cans A Libby's. Picnic Favorite SAFEWAY is secretary to Mr. Bookman Peters, President of the City National Bank of Bryan. Mrs. Kahan advised that all local secretaries who are eagtr to broaden their professional education, whose educational background and secretarial ex perience qualify them for mem bership in the National Secretar ies Association, may contact her or any other Chapter member for information about applying for membership. “This year will be a great one for a secretary ia Bryan-College Station who want! to be inspired in her career,” ski said. Cont Potato Salad 29* Lucerne. Saeclal! (2-Lb. Carton 57t) —-1-Lb. Carton Lucerne. Special! (2-Lb. Carton 57#) —-1-Lb. Carton Orange Drink i....... 2&r 49f Hot Dog Buns IQ* or ★Hamburaer. Mn. Wrlaht's. Sneclal! —8-Ct. Pka. •r'ArHambvrger. Mr*. Wright'*. 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Plar with a cility 36,000 a com erete Loa< forms Lewis drill fi bonfir Ada take v area u VN Vets Enroll At A&M In Fall 2 patterns TH | S WEEK GET YOUR MELAMINE DINNERWARE DINNER PLATE i sA I UJt FPvxluet ... < Dox Dexani! I — — — ' Mellorine Joyett. Assorted Flavors, special! Q Vz-Gai. $1 Cartons Strawberries Orange Juice Bel-air. Sliced. Speclall Scotch Treat i-oz. Regular Can Banquet Dinners Assorted. Prices Effective Thurs., Fri. and Sat.. July 3. 4 and 5. in We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities. No Sales to Dealers. 4 ^,"*1 19c 38* Reg. Pkg. SAFEWAY ©Copyright I960, Safeway Stores, Incorporated. Texas A&M should have about 700 Vietnam war veterans en rolled at the university this fall, estimates Bennie A. Zinn, asso ciate dean of students and Stu dent affairs director. Zinn said there were 555 vet erans attending A&M during the spring semester and 300 are at tending the first session of sum mer school. He expects the fall enrollment of veterans to increase by about 160. Under the June, 1966, cold war GI Bill, veterans receive a check from the Veterans Administn- tion on the 10th of each month, The amount of the check depends on the number of dependents,’ 1 Zinn explained. A&M also has 11 veterans en rolled under the disability bill, The disabled vets get all fees, books and supplies paid, plus $120 a month. Vietnam veterans taking a full academic schedule and having no dependents receive $130 a month, Zinn said. A married veteran receives $155 a month and a married veteran with one child receives $175 a month. Veterans with more than one child receive $10 a month for each additional child, Zinn re ported. Veterans not taking a full load receive less money. For example, a single man taking a three- quarter load receives $95 a month. Zinn noted that there were not as many veterans going to school as the government thought would take advantage of the benefits. He said there.are approximate ly 10,000 Vietnam veterans at tending college in Texas, and about one million throughout the nation. additic vated Food i cated ROT ities \ the gr sagew area s field. Ban of Ag E. V. end oi The fe Lici Incr some tonigh Theati The Exams Star 3 Days After Holiday Ends The July 4 holiday break will serve as the calm before a storm at Texas A&M. A&M’s 5,970 first summer ses sion students will have only three class days after the three-day weekend before taking final ex aminations for the first six weeks of summer study. July 4 also is a faculty-staff holiday. Classes and regular working hours resume at 8 a.m. Monday, July 7. First session finals are sched uled July 10 and 11. Second sum mer registration for classes July 15 through August 22 will be held Monday, July 14, at Sbisa Hall, Registrar Robert A. Lacey announced. come Never about early ‘Tv Aggie and s terest tions A flickei thousi “We’v deals gies, prof’s plot 1 result Yell steps, Field, site i Cente: ably r the U It s Beery Marth filmec Fess pearai Firs “We’v shows “Spin son, 1 lands Gro of Da ater ■ Satun holida with 1 taring Forsy / AL