"This Fortunate District": Green School History

Welcome to Green School History, a site devoted entirely to the Green School in Middleborough, Massachusetts. Located on East Main Street in the Green section of Middleborough, the school was built in 1871 and was in continual use until June, 1941, when it was closed. Reopened for a short period of time in the 1990s, the Green School in 2009 was threatened with demolition. A group of concerned residents banded together to save this one-room schoolhouse. Thanks to the interest of the community supported by financial contributions by residents and former pupils, the building has been preserved and the exterior restored. A new use for the structure is currently under consideration. This site hopes to convey the immense historical and educational value which the Green School still retains, particularly its ability to speak to the educational history of the community of Middleborough.

The easiest way to navigate through the site is by using the left-hand sidebar. Click on the icons to read about some of the unique aspects of the Green School's history, to view pictures of the school and documents related to its history, or to make a contribution towards its preservation. Also, for a quick reference, you can also click on the chapters underneath each icon to go directly to a topic of interest.

Showing posts with label Studies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Studies. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Curriculum

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In his report for 1891, Middleborough Superintendent of Schools Willard T. Leonard laid out his vision of the role of the local schoolhouse. “The great object of the schools is to prepare the children for future usefulness. While not wholly ignoring the physical and the moral, their main work is a careful and patient training of the mind. All their energies are bent in this direction …." Towards this end, Middleborough’s school curriculum was developed.

The one-room school curriculum, itself, varied greatly, dependent as it was on the differing levels of development within each building, and though patterned upon the curriculum in the central schools, that of the suburban school was typically modified to meet the needs of a mixed grade room.

To assist teachers in ungraded schools like the Green who were confronted with the challenge of teaching a student body of varying ages and abilities, in November, 1895, a curriculum was developed and introduced into the suburban schools, including the Green. Each school was divided into three sections based upon the grades present, and a relatively rigid schedule established.

Until the early 1900s, the elementary school curriculum in Middleborough was established for nine grades, all of which (outside Middleborough center) were housed in a single ungraded school. Superintendent Bates became increasingly dissatisfied with this arrangement and recommended an eight-year course of study for students before entering the high school. “I believe with a shorter course better application on the part of the pupils would be gained and less of dawdling would be noticeable in the schoolrooms.”

With this view in mind, the elementary school curriculum was revised, and in 1911, a further overhaul of the suburban school curriculum was proposed for implementation in the fall of 1912. In September, 1917, a revised course of study in arithmetic, reading, language, grammar and geography was instituted for the entire school system, with the course of study in the primary grades being better outlined. “It is hoped by this systematic outline to be able to carry on the work more uniformly and with a more defnite aim.”

Reading

At the time the Green School was built, reading was a focus of the Middleborough School Committee which believed that it could not be considered enough. “Good reading, and spelling, cover a multitude of deficiencies, in school-days and after life.” The committee was clearly disheartened at the level of reading which it found in the schools in the early 1870s.

The reading in all our schools … is still defective. As a general rule, with the older scholars, it is too rapid. It would seem that the only end to be attained is the end of the paragraph to be read, and that readers, like race-horses and steamboats, are to be prized according to their speed. As a necessary consequence, there is imperfect enunciation, the dropping and clipping of final syllables, the ignoring of accent and sometimes several words are blended into one. For instance, we have heard and pronounced an, and the sentence, “Who is he,” Whizzie!

The committee challenged teachers to establish a high standard in this area.

Some of our teachers are not so good instructors in reading especially, as we wish they were. Some follow simply the old way, allowing about so much time, and so many paragraphs to each, and only aiding in pronunciation, and not closely and accurately in that; whereas, if need be, every paragraph should be repeated, and elaborated, till it be read with as much correctness as is aimed at in the solution of a problem, or the analysis of language. A lazy reading-exercise is of all things, inexcusable and reprehensible.

Despite the School Committees challenge, reading remained a matter of concern, and in 1879 the committee continued to regard the subject as the most neglected and poorly taught. To remedy the situation, the committee suggested the abandonment of the traditional “A B C method” in favor of phonics and word methods. Single words were taught, “one after another, by script from the blackboard, until from one hundred and fifty to two hundred had been learned as wholes, had been analyzed by sounds and spelt be letters.”

Swinton’s Primer and Readers were employed at the Green during this period, the better known McGuffey Readers being in use at Middleborough center. Such readers were important in not only advancing the abilities of the students, but in introducing them to a much wider world beyond Middleborough.

In contrast to today, scholars in the late 19th century were taught first to read script, rather than printed words. “After they can read readily at sight simple sentences in script, that is, after the first three or four months, the transition to the printed word and sentence is made, and, if the teaching has been as it should be, no difficulty is experienced in the transition, but after a few days they read as readily in the one form as in the other. The change from script to print has been found much easier than from print to script.”

In the fall of 1890, the Middleborough schools switched to the “sentence method” of teaching reading in hopes of improving standards of reading.

This differs from our previous method essentially in this, - that instead of teaching a single word by itself, that word has been incorporated into a sentence, and the teacher, by skillful questioning, gets the sentence which she wishes from the child, first in an oral expression, then writes it upon the board, and then the written expression is read by the child. To get these oral expressions the teacher brings before the children toys of all sorts, puts them into their hands, talks with them about the objects, and takes such expressions from them as : I have a cow, I see a cow, The cow has two horns, The cow gives milk, It is my cow, etc. From these expressions the word cow is forever fixed in the memory, good expression is being taught in the reading, and intuitively the child is learning “I have,” “I see,” “It is,” and the like, without having his attention called to them especially.

Despite the change, drills in phonics were retained as it was felt that such skills were helpful in aiding students in learning new words when there was no teacher present.

The school committee continued to focus upon improving reading skills among Middleborough pupils , and in 1895 reported what it considered “good progress.” “The pupils now read forty per cent. better than they did two years ago.”

In the late 1930s, after a period of having seen little focus, reading received renewed attention, particularly at the Green which by that time was operating with the first and second grades for East Middleborough only. “Longer time allotments, frequent standardized tests, and modern remedial techniques, have been employed to improve the reading facility and comprehension.” Phonics also saw increasing use in the classroom during this time.

Writing & Grammar

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The method of teaching grammar in Middleborough’s schools, and the inordinate amount of time devoted to the subject, came in for sharp criticism by the school committee in early 1875, undoubtedly to the delight of scholars plagued by the subject.

It seems to us that an immense amount of time is wasted in the study of Grammar, as conducted in schools. The object of English Grammar is said to be to teach one to “speak and write the English language correctly.” Does the usual method of teaching it do this? To some extent, doubtless it does. But not to a degree proportioned to the amount of time and study devoted to it. Our children spend months of precious time in storing away in their minds vast quantities of almost useless verbiage. The old time “parsing” [sentence diagramming] has been mostly supplanted by the more modern “analysis.” But has this innovation, which has been for many years so popular, and from which so much was expected, answered the high hopes which were entertained of it? We think not, and we believe that we are not alone in this opinion, but that it is shared in by many of the best educators. Scholars may learn to talk very glibly of “simple,” “compound,” “complex,” “elements,” “first class,” second class,” and “third class,” and yet not know how to “speak and write the English language correctly.”

For 1877, the town adopted a new grammar for the primary levels, changing to Harvey’s which it favored for the text’s avoidance of theoretical discussions which served “only to confuse and discourage the beginners”. Throughout the period, Harvey’s remained the standard grammar text for Middleborough scholars.

In 1885, Superintendent of Schools Morss concurred that “it is in this branch [written language work] that our schools show the greatest weakness". "Grammar never taught any one to speak and write correctly. It simply tells us the usage which is sanctioned by good writers and speakers. We must learn to use good language by using it,” emphasized Morss. Little is recorded, however, regarding what changes were implemented to improve language study in the schools at this time. In fact, less attention was given in reports of the area to this field of study than to others.

In 1923, Pearson and Kirchwey’s Essentials of English language series was adopted in the Green and other schools following the recommendation of the central school teachers who had used it with success.

Spelling

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“The ability to spell English words seems to be a gift of which many people are deprived,” remarked Superintendent Fitts in his report for 1889. Deploring the level of spelling skills found in children and adults alike, Fitts sought to improve the teaching of it in Middleborough schools. Throughout the period, local schools grappled with the best tools to employ in teaching spelling. In 1881, the Progressive Speller which was then in use at the Green was labeled by the local School Committee as “being one of the most obsolete text-books we know of.” It was consequently replaced by Worcester’s Speller, which in turn was gradually replaced in the late 1880s by Harrington’s Graded Speller for upper level students.

Oral spelling was emphasized in the first three years. “In the fourth year we begin to write formal lessons in a book which is preserved and used day after day.” Spelling as an educational subject gained increasing visibility during the last decade of the 19th century, so much so that by 1899 “its importance is more generally recognized than at any previous time.” Superintendent Jacoby at this time sought to bring Middleborough’s teaching of spelling in line with the theories of Dr. Edward R. Shaw, Dean of the School of Pedagogy at New York University, who considered learning to spell as a matter largely of association.

Penmanship

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One skill, the loss of which has been greatly lamented in recent years, is that of penmanship. Ironically, the general feeling in the late nineteenth century was also that students wrote poorly, a circumstance attributable to “delaying the beginning of systematic instruction in penmanship till the pupil has formed careless habits by too long use of the pencil.” In 1871, the Middleborough School Committee maintained simply, “we think more attention should be given to writing.”

“Writing” in the context of the nineteenth century meant penmanship. As late as 1920, Middleborough’s Supervisor of Penmanship, somewhat testily took umbrage at what he clearly sensed was an arbitrary distinction:

To state that PENMANSHIP is WRITING would seem like discrediting the intelligence of anyone who has attained the use of reason. Nevertheless PENMANSHIP is understood by some pupils to be a term used to describe the work done in one special recitation period of possibly fifteen minutes each day, while all written work is merely WRITING. Until pupils realize that these two terms are synonymous, and that the same care and intelligent practice should be taken in the preparation of all written work as that of the class devoted entirely to the study of penmanship, satisfactory results can not be obtained.

Children were taught first to write cursively, learning only later how to print. Printing was considered more cumbersome and time-consuming and so was not favored.

“A child begins to write immediately on entering school, at first with slate and pencil, soon with appear, while the third year finds him using pen and ink with regular copybooks. His writing now is quite commendable, for he has had already two years’ practice with slate and paper …." Some schools, apparently following the advice of Superintendent Morss in 1886 began writing with ink in the second grade, including “much practice with finger and arm movements.”

Morss’ successor, Superintendent Fitts concurred with the assessment that writing deserved greater attention and, as a result, a complete course in writing was set forth for the four primary grades, meeting with some initial success. “The children in the lowest Primary are at present capable of making a few letters remarkably well, for the time they have been in school, and can write their names in a very legible hand.”

Penmanship was instructed in the Green School and taught until 1895 by means of the popular Spencer method with its ornate flourishes and prescribed 52-degree slant. “The average results, however, were not satisfactory. The writing in many cases was poor. Illegible writing was too prevalent. The subject was difficult to teach and hard to learn. Besides, eminent medical authorities began to assure us that slanting writing produced deformity and imperfect vision.” Consequently during the 1890s, penmanship as an educational subject received renewed attention. Beginning in 1895 “a system of intermedial penmanship” was introduced into the local schools which sought to eliminate the floridness of Spencerian penmanship as well as the amount of time the Spencer method required.

In 1908, Superintendent Bates recommended the appointment of a Supervisor of Penmanship to oversee the subject throughout the towns schools. Previously, Supervisors of Music and Drawing had been successful in developing those areas and it was thought that a Supervisor of Penmanship would be able to raise the standards in that field as well. In 1911, William A. Harthorne was named to fill this role, and he met with the Green School teacher monthly in order to discuss the progress of the pupils and the direction of penmanship teaching at the school. The object of penmanship education at the time was to train students to write “a neat, swift, and creditable hand.” The following year (1912), the copy book, so long a staple of the training of penmanship, was abandoned in favor of a “course outlined by the supervisor [which was] followed under his direction.” Harthorne was a strong advocate of writing efficiently, and surprisingly announced in 1912 that “A person may write the vertical, the medial, the back hand, Spencerian or some other system, I care not what, but if he uses the arm movement, his efficiency is increased 2 or 3 times. This is our aim.” Of the two methods of writing – finger movement and arm movement – Middleborough’s supervisors like Harthorne would continually favor the latter. Harold C. Sears in 1923, also a proponent of arm movement methods of writing, stated somewhat pedantically in 1923: “in my reports of other years I have endeavored to show just what is meant by arm movement and its advantages over finger movement, and I will not repeat here those advantages except to say that they are obvious to all.”

In 1914, the nearly ubiquitous Palmer Method (an arm movement method) was finally adopted for use by the elementary classes under Louise H. Scott, the new Supervisor of Penmanship. “This method is meeting with excellent success and already 13 of the teaching force have been awarded diplomas [Palmer Teachers’ Certificates] by the Palmer Co. signifying their ability to teach their system of writing.”

While previously a metronome had occasionally been utilized in penmanship work in order to help students in their movement drills, music was also suggested as helping teach rhythm and correlating work in penmanship and music. Pupils were encouraged to practice their penmanship skills and those in the fourth grade or above were recognized by the Palmer Company for doing so. Following approval of the first 25 drills by the teacher and Supervisor of Penmanship, students could have them submitted to the Palmer Company’s Boston office. “If the work is up to their standard, the pupil is awarded a Palmer Button.” Similarly, the first 100 drills could be awarded a Palmer Progress Pin and satisfactory completion of all 172 drills resulted in the Pupil’s Final Certificate. Later, the Ayres Scale for the Measurement of Handwriting was introduced to aid students.

Scott’s successor as Supervisor of Penmanship, Raymond S. Dower, however, was less impressed with the results in the schools. “The actual written work [was] not of a very high standard when measured by the standard established by commercial educators.” Penmanship, perhaps, received a seemingly inordinate amount of attention, perhaps because, as Dower contended, “without exception, writing, correct writing, is the most difficult subject that a grade teacher has to teach”. Dower questioned whether parents expected “too much of teachers in the matter of penmanship” and maintained that “psychologists emphasize the fact that, by nature, the child is not old enough to learn to write rightly until about ten years of age.”

Suburban schools like the Green clearly struggled in teaching penmanship of an acceptable standard and it was not until 1923 that suburban school pupils received awards for the penmanship abilities. This latter fact, however, was a testament to the tenacity of suburban school teachers in elevating the quality of their pupils’ work. Little assistance was received from the Supervisor of Penmanship whose “only contact with the teacher of these schools is through the Teachers’ Institute held every term.”

To help guide students, in 1924 Blackboard Wall Charts were placed in a conspicuous location at the Green “where pupils may see at all times the perfect forms of all the capitals, small letter, and numerals.”

Each teacher has for her own guidance, a scientifically arranged list of the successive steps to be taken in teaching the subject of penmanship. This list is also posted where it may be referred to constantly by the teacher.

In addition, books containing stories illustrating the forms of letters have been obtained for use of the teacher so that she may make her work interesting for the pupils.

I have prepared, for the use of the theachers, an analysis of all the letters, showing not only the proper strokes used in making the letters, but also special drills and constructive criticism.

With the devotion of the Green School to grades 1 and 2 following 1929, the focus of penmanship studies was the proper formation of letters and development of a “free easy writing movement.”

Arithmetic

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In the late 1800s, a modified version of the Grube Method of teaching arithmetic was employed in Middleborough schools, including the Green. “By this method the four fundamental rules, together with fractions, are simultaneously taught....All the combinations and separations are taught simultaneously by the use of objects, instead of dwelling on addition till it is mastered, then proceeding to subtraction.”

All instruction in arithmetic was strictly oral until the 5th grade when the first text – White’s Elementary Arithmetic – was introduced. This same text was utilized for 6th grade students as well. Scholars in the subsequent three levels used White’s Complete Arithmetic. While White’s comprised the standard arithmetic text for Middleborough pupils, in 1884, the school committee noted that “there is a new and much better edition of White’s Arithmetic, issued since their introduction into town. The change must come sooner or later….” Textbook work was supplemented by “extra work upon the black-board taken from different arithmetics and original work by the teachers."

Success in arithmetic at the time was measured how rapidly and how accurately students could calculate. In this regard, Superintendent Fitts in 1887 felt that local schools lagged behind those elsewhere and consequently sought an improvement in this area.

In January, 1898, the school department formalized a “Course of Study in Arithmetic” for the elementary schools which urged that “accuracy and rapidity should be thoroughly cultivated” while “long and complicated problems should be avoided”. Students were introduced to simple multiplication, division and fractions as early as the first grade, while simple geometric problems such as calculating surfaces and volumes was introduced in the 5th grade.

The intention of the school committee that the course prove of practical use was indicated by the fact that 5th graders also learned simple business forms such as bills, receipts and promissory notes, and would continue to study these items through the remaining grades when accounting principles were added. Algebra was studied in the 9th grade until 1904 when it was dropped from the grammar school curriculum in order to provide more time for arithmetic. Typical arithmetic problems taken from White's New Complete Arithmetic (1883) indicate the practicality of the subject:

A dairy of 10 cows yielded in one season 120 Hl of milk and 450 Kg of butter; the milk was sold at an average of 6 1/2 cts. per liter; and the butter, at 56 cts. per kilo: what were the season's receipts in money?

How many yards of Brussels carpeting will carpet a flight of stairs consisting of 18 steps, including the landing, each step being 10 in. wide and 8 in. high, if 1 1/4 yards be allowed for turnings? What will be the cost at $2.25 per yard?

Smith & Jones bought $500 worth of goods on 4 months' credit, $700 on 6 months' credit, and $1000 worth on 5 months' credit: what is the equated time for the payment of the whole?

In 1906, Superintendent Bates recommended that arithmetic no longer be taught in the first grade in order that more time could be devoted to reading, writing, language, music and drawing. Such a recommendation was consistent with educational practice in a large number of schools. 1910 saw the reduction of abstract arithmetical work in the lower grades.

In 1940, a new course of arithmetic study was approved for the first three grades and introduced into the local schools including the Green.

Geography

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Geography was one of the requirements which Green School pupils had in order to be promoted to Middleborough High School. “Of Geography we would say particularly, that whatever concerns our own country should be most familiarly known by every scholar”, opined the 1872-73 School Committee.

Warren’s Geography was the favored text in the 1880s for teaching the subject. Superintendent Fitts characterized this area of study in 1886: “Excellent work has been done in geography, in modeling at the moulding board, and with outline maps drawn upon the slate and board.” With changes in technology, the printing of detailed colored maps became affordable and leant themselves admirably to this field of study. Wall maps were an important learning tool for pupils, though the rapidity with which the country grew during the period, was noted at the time as quickly making such maps out of date. Because of Superintendent Fitts’ pointed reminder regarding these maps, each school including the Green was “supplied with some good maps up to the present date."

Similarly, rapid changes in the world also quickly made redundant the geography texts used by pupils, and 1887 witnessed the gradual changeover from older to newer texts which also had the advantage of being “written in a more pleasing style.”

In 1904, the 4th grade geography text was dispensed with and “a new course treating more fully with the geography of the town, county and state substituted.” At the time, a map of Plymouth County was installed in the school.

With the changes in grading at the Green which housed grades one and two only after 1929, came a drastic reduction in the amount of time devoted to the subject, perhaps a fortunate circumstance as geography became an increasingly challenging topic to teach given the accelerating changes of the early twentieth century.

History & Civics

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In 1885, Superintendent Morss remarked upon the disconnect between the study of geography and history. “These two subjects, as too commonly taught, seem to have no connection with each other; but taught as they should be, they really belong together, and should form a part of the supplementary reading.”

History remained an important topic of study, and each grade from 4 through nine had its own texts for American and New England history. Added to this were “poems and prose selections of a historical nature” which were studied. Among these were “America: and the “Star- Spangled Banner”, "The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere" and “Barbara Frietche."

Later, American History was removed from the 4th and 5th grade curriculum and not introduced until the 6th grade, when it was taught “by means of readings and talks.” The text adopted was Goodrich’s Child’s History and the Eclectic Primary History. The subject was repeated each year in increasingly greater detail.

All lessons to be given by topics and a more minute study of what has been taken during the two preceding years [6th and 7th grades]. We hope and expect by this method to have the general facts of history in mind at the end of the sixth and seventh grades, and to be thoroughly conversant with United States History at the close of the Grammar school course.

Progress in the teaching of history (as well as geography) was considered hampered by the lack of suitable supplementary reading, and Superintendent Fitts in 1887 urged this matter be considered.

Local history was taught beginning in 1909, when the schools were given copies of Thomas Weston’s History of the Town of Middleboro, Massachusetts and a course of study for 7th, 8th and 9th graders in local history was developed. The course quickly proved “one of the most interesting in our school curriculum” and would be maintained for years at various grade levels.

As with geography, history saw less attention given it once the Green School became devoted to the first two primary grades.

One important accompaniment of history studies was the teaching of civics. For years, civics would remain a strong component of local schoolwork as required by state law which required that the last school day preceding Memorial Day be devoted to "exercises of a patriotic nature." Washington's Birthday and Flag Day also became key days when civics were emphasized and frequent student pageants were held.

Physiology & Hygiene

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In 1885, Massachusetts law made compulsory the teaching of these two subjects in all schools, including “special instruction as to the effects of alcoholic drinks, stimulants and narcotics on the human system”, this last stipulation promoted by the Women’s Christian Temperance Union. All schools, including the Green, were subsequently supplied with “two books bearing the date 1885, one containing four hundred fifteen pages devoted to Anatomy, Physiology and Hygiene, the other of one hundred fifty-seven pages of ‘Practical Work in the School Room,’ one quarter of which is devoted to Alcohol, Tobacco, Opium, and other narcotics.”

It appears that a curriculum, however, was not formalized in Middleborough until 1893 under the guidance of Superintendent Jacoby. Green School pupils were to use the Child’s Book of Health (grades 1-4), How to Keep Well (grades 5-6) and Our Bodies and How We Live (grades 7-9). The subject was to be studied during the fall term of the school year, with three required lessons of not less than 20 minutes (above the third grade) weekly. Like much else in the Middleborough schools, physiology and hygiene was taught with an emphasis upon its practical application.

Whatever is taught should be so taught that it will lead to further study and to the observance of hygienic laws in daily practice. The teacher who allows her pupils to sit in drafts, and to take all kinds of improper postures in sitting, standing, and walking, who neglects the ventilation of the room and the arrangement of light, and who is herself a living example of the consequences of an habitual disregard of hygienic laws, will teach physiology to little purpose.

In November, 1897, the physiology and hygiene curriculum was revised and formalized. Grades 1 and 2 focused upon the basics as outlined in the State Course of Study, while the remaining grades continued to utilize the texts prescribed four years earlier in 1893. Each grade was provided with a specific area of study, while all were taught the “effects of alcohol and tobacco”. This course of study remained the basis for health education at the Green School through 1941 when it closed.

Drawing & Music

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Massachusetts required drawing be taught in all schools. In 1874-75, it was introduced into the High School and following that introduced into the remaining schools, including the Green, in 1882. Its adoption as a curricular subject was frequently misunderstood at the time, so much so that in 1885, the Middleborough Superintendent of Schools had to explain the rationale for including it as a school subject: “The aim is not to teach children to make pretty pictures, but to train the hand and the eye, and through them the mind, to accuracy.”

Initially, the Green School employed White’s Graded System of Drawing to instruct pupils. Apparently, though was some trepidation on the part of a number of teachers who felt unqualified to teach the subject, the local school committee assured that “any one who is competent to teach school can teach Drawing.” Probably because of this apprehension on the part of teachers, drawing appears to have gotten off to a slow start, the school committee in 1877 admitting that the subject “received less attention than its importance would seem to require.” Such remained the case nearly a decade later when it was remarked that “the work in drawing was found to be done in a very desultory manner, some schools doing nothing whatever in that line, although it is required by law.” While continual improvement was made in developing this branch of study, particularly helpful was the attention of Henry T. Bailey, Agent of the Massachusetts Board of Education who in 1888 helped the town revise its curricula. Under the revised scheme clay work was performed by the first grade, while drawing lines was performed by the higher grades.

In 1903, a Drawing Supervisor was appointed to oversee the course. In this role Isabel Sewall met with mixed grade school teachers “when the work of the month is outlined, suggestions given, and criticisms on work submitted made.” The Green School was divided into primary and grammar levels for drawing instruction, and in 1903 the grammar level was focused upon the task of creating a wastepaper basket involving “three processes – working drawing, construction and decoration.”

To assist suburban school teachers in their work, meetings continued to be held for them with the supervisors. One typical meeting, Spetember 13, 1907, featured the Drawing Supervisor, Mary L. Cook: "A meeting of the suburban teachers was held in the High school building, Friday evening. Miss Cook outlined the work in drawing for the coming month and the superintendent spoke in regard to the necessary clerical work required in the school management."

Periodic visits by the Supervisor also helped guide teachers in ably instructing their pupils. Odessa M. Long, the Supervisor of Drawing, remarked of the suburban schools in 1922, that they were “doing the usual work, and with the short time given to drawing, are accomplishing very good results. I enjoy visiting these schools and find a very deep interest on the part of both teachers and pupils in the work.” Sylvia C. Matheson continued the practice of providing supervision to the suburban schools through once-monthly visits.

In 1877, the school committee first broached the possibility of teaching music in local schools, looking to the model of Germany where “almost every child at school, is instructed in singing.” Initially, Massachusetts state law provided that vocal music be taught in all public schools where the school committee deemed it “expedient.” For years, informal signing had formed a recreation in schools of ten to fifteen minutes daily. “We have at present no instruction in music other than a few pretty little songs taught by rote for specific occasions”, remarked the Middleborough School Committee in 1882. Three years later in 1885, however, music – essentially singing – was formalized by the Middleborough School Committee as a specific requirement for local schools. “The methods used are those suggested by Mr. H. E. Holt, the eminent teacher of music in Boston schools.”

Progress in the subject was facilitated by the acquisition by the schools of books and charts in the mid-1880s. The Green, along with other one-room schools were furnished with first readers and four charts in 1887, and plans called for the introduction of two subsequent music readers “as soon as they shall be ready for them.” Music education at the time consisted of “systematic drill adapted to the ability of the pupils.”

Like drawing, music was a subject some teachers felt unqualified to teach, and a number made efforts to correct this deficiency. “Particular mention ought to be made of those teachers who, feeling their inability to teach this branch successfully, have availed themselves of the assistance of private teachers and the public singing school in order to do good work.” By 1894, Superintendent Jacoby was able to relate that “these subjects are now taught as regular subjects in our schools”

In September, 1900, H. J. and H. E. Whittemore were engaged to provide specialized instruction in music in the local schools, and time was devoted each Thursday morning at the Green School to musical instruction. The focus was principally upon vocal music and during 1901 each student was assigned their “proper place with reference to range of voice” by the Whittemores. In June, 1902, the Whittemores were succeeded by Austin M. Howard who devoted a half-hour each Tuesday at 11 a. m. at the Green School for musical instruction. In 1903, musical instruction was being provided at the Green every two weeks, no doubt in conjunction with the organ which was donated to the school that year.

Increasingly less time was devoted by the music supervisor to the Green, which was visited only four times each term in 1905, prompting Superintendent Bates to call for more attention for these schools in the field of music. Under the direction of a new Supervisor of Music, H. O. Wetherell in 1912, a new course of study, The Modern Music Course, was introduced into the schools in November. Each pupil above the third grade at the Green received a music textbook and followed a simplified version of the course as carried out in the central schools. Wetherell’s enthusiasm was apparent in his report for that year. “The purpose of music in the Public Schools is to teach the children to sing, to love to sing and to appreciate good music.”

In 1912, in order to better meet the needs of the suburban school students in special subjects (drawing, music and penmanship), half-day institutes were inaugurated monthly at which “the supervisors outline and explain to the teachers the work to be done for that month.” Eventually, however, these institutes appear to have been conducted once per term. Additionally, the special work in the schools, such as music, had to be “necessarily simplified on account of so many grades in a school.” Nonetheless, visits to the suburban schools continued to occur. In 1918, Supervisor Nellie M. Wicher visited the Green School every third Wednesday of the month to monitor the progress of musical education in the building. In 1924, Supervisor Wirt B. Phillips was able to visit the Green “regularly” through use of an automobile, where he noticed as well as in other suburban schools the music “going on in the even tenor of its way, part singing being the procedure in several instances.”

With the changes in school grading in East Middleborough, musical education at the Green School focused upon the development of rhythm as “the foundation and basis of future training in Music.” To forward this development, the Green was equipped with a number of percussion instruments to cultivate manipulation and ear-training. “This activity makes for recreation, socialization, citizenship, and concentration.” Mrs. Ray F. Guidaboni, the supervisor of this work, visited the Green monthly to oversee its progress, and as part of the course, music was incorporated into various school exercises including those performed at Christmas, 1936.

Physical Education

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In 1922, Massachusetts state law required physical training be taught in public schools and the subject was accordingly introduced into the elementary levels in February, 1922. As with the other specialized topics – drawing, music and penmanship – the suburban schools were left to their own devices and had no benefit of the Supervisor of Physical Education, Frank A. Crozier, who was appointed to oversee the development of the course. Schools like the Green typically followed a modified version of the central school program of study, “although no supervision is given at the present time.” To help promote physical education, the Putnam P. T. A. in 1926 equipped the Green schoolyard with "apparatus for physical exercises."

Text Books & Study Aids

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Throughout its operation, the Green School relied upon a number of sources for textbooks, including Ginn & Co.; American Book Co.; Thompson, Brown & Co.; George F. King & Merrill, and several others. Textbooks were employed by the older students only. “Books are not needed” for younger pupils, wrote Middleborough Superintendent of Schools Willard T. Leonard in 1891, “for all teaching is from the blackboard.”

Initially, students were required to purchase the books which the town was required to make available to them. By 1880, “all the common school books used in the schools are now provided by the town, as required, and are kept for sale at as near the wholesale prices as can be, without incurring actual loss. These books are sold at the stores of John Shaw, and Shaw & Childs.” While the school committee recognized by the mid-1880s its obligation to ultimately purchase textbooks, “one for each scholar”, as per the law requiring free textbooks which was implemented in August, 1884, it also sought to keep school expenses to a minimum and “furnished only what we were absolutely obliged to provide by law, requiring pupils to use whatever supplies they might have on hand.” When the School Committee replaced the “obsolete” Progressive Speller in 1881 with Worcester’s Speller, it boasted that it had “been able to do [so] without any expense whatever, either to the town or pupils”, a frequent rationale behind the local committee's decisions. Increasingly, however, the town recognized the benefits of purchasing and furnishing its own books to students, despite the expected lifetime of each book was estimated in 1885 at only three years.

Occasionally, students could make use of worn and out-dated textbooks. During the First World War due to the scarcity of paper, Green School students were able to sell worn out and discarded textbooks to a junk dealer for enough money to purchase a large dictionary for the school.

In combination with text books, various study aids were helpful in instructing students and over time, the Green schoolhouse came to be filled with these aids which were acquired from the town, donated by generous residents within the district, purchased by the students through fund-raising efforts, or won in various contests. One of the earliest aids mentioned in the Green School was a globe acquired from Ginn, Heath & Company in 1881, when similar globes were supplied to all the local schools. The globe was considered invaluable in providing “a more exact understanding of geography.” In 1887, the school was also furnished with "good" maps which were up to date.

In 1905, the Green was equipped with an outfit “for busy work for pupils of the primary grades" and the following year in 1906 acquired a Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary and a Twentieth Century Atlas. By 1924, the town was able to pride itself on the amount of supplementary materials to which suburban school teachers had access. “Out-of-town teachers visiting our schools comment on the amount of material the teachers have to work with. It is essential for good schools that they be thus equipped. It is doubtful if any system of one-romm schools in the state is so well supplied with educational aids as the rural schools of our town. The past year maps, charts, supplementary educational work for self-supervised study have been placed in these schools.” Among these last mentioned aids were blackboard charts for penmanship.