" ________ V n X : A- - iff^ >w «? * -i*^ H * >' >, i * "^w^B Powell's Pay Is in Dis NEW YORK .. The New York Post reported Saturday Rep. Adam Clayton Powell will' not demand $55,000 in back pay if the House of Representatives returns his 22 years of seniori ty- The Post quoted C. Sumner Stone, Powell's administrative assistant before his 1967 ex clusion from the House. Stone denied the report when he was reached in Washington. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled last Monday that the House had no right to deny Powell his seat two years aco. H SIGHTLINES Are You long-Sighted? i Some short-sighted people are ac tually long-sighted, like the man above. As the years roll by they fail to notice that they are holding reading material farther and far ther away. And they fail to have a professional eye examination once A year, as urged by the Better Vision Institute. It doesn't pay to be short-sighted about vour eyesight. Programmed Instruction Courses Prove Valuable Training Technique The education and training of the unskilled unemployed is one of the nation's most serious challenges today. A second se rious problem, differing only in that a lesser number of people are involved, is the education and rehabilitation of prison in mates so that they can re-enter society to begin career jobs, many of them for the first time in their lives. As unrelated as these prob lems appear, Du Pont is helping to solve them in many in stances by making available their own training materials prepared in the form of pro grammed instruction courses. Programmed instruction is a training technique based on the principle of "reinforcement." The learner's responses to questions of gradually increas ing difficulty are confirmed im mediately. This gives reward and encouragement for contin uing the learning cycle until a pre determined level of achievement is reached. This self pacing method of teaching basic mechanical and industrial skills is used fur training thousands of persons in industry, government agen cies, and education. For example, at the Federal Job Corps Center in Morgan field, Ky., Williard Whoberry, Jr.. program director, reports that the Du Pont courses have reduced average training time by 30 per cent and increased proficiency by about 25 per cent. The ultimate payoff is a job in industry, and 75 per cent of the 400 Morganfield grad uates have been placed in jobs. The fact that the courses are being used daily at Du Pont is a big lever in helping job trainees overcome a built-in block against that "desk and pencil stuff." "They feel if the course was 'the real thing' used in in dustry, it had to be worth while," says Clark M. Younger, director for a Federal training "YOUTHMOBILIS" for Inter city youths will be bringing them to the YMCA for the months ahead. Eight van* will transport some 1200 youngsters From Househojc^iea^^^^tem "jlp ■P^MB .. ... . Home owners with a house hold warm air heating plant, are especially fortunate in sum mer, for it is an easy matter to convert this type of heating system into a central air con ditioner to comfort the family when weather gets hot and humid. In wintertime, warm air from the furnace is conveyed through ducts to the various rooms of a house. In summeil time, these ducts can convey cool air to the same rooms if central air conditioning equip ment is added to the system. The General Electric Execu tive model, for instance, is available in 34,000, 48,000 and 63,000 BTUH capacities to match the cooling require ments of any home. Installation is comparatively simple. The condensing unit rests on a concrete base just outside the house. Cooling coils are placed in the heating system near the furnace. These coils are connected to the out door condensing unit with "Quik-Attach" tubing which has been factory-charged with refrigerant. This GE-pioneered development not only insures project in Philadelphia being administered by Philco-Ford. About 800 persons classified as disadvantaged unemployed are enrolled in this program. Du Pont courses also are being used in another training project in Philadelphia. Angel Alba, who advises 60 instruc tors teaching at five locations of the Philadelphia Opportu nities Industrialization Center, said: "The Du Pont material is excellent. It tells the 'what' and the 'how' as industry does it. That's what our people have to know." Meanwhile, programmed in struction courses have been used for more than three years at the Federal prison located at Petersburg, Va., with consider able success, according to Dr. Garland S. Wollard, director of Vocational Training, U. S. Bu reau of Prisons. Other prisons such as the one located at Milan, Mich., also use PI courses, with several others to begin using them in the near future. "Individual inmates felt the program was designed toward self-improvement for them selves rather than the previous attitude which was that they (the inmates) were being 'used' by the institution," Dr. Wollard said. The report indicated that in from outlying areas each week. Roger Jones, program assist ant for the 28th Street "Y" presides over three of the units for that area. i- that the refrigerant is fatjtjjfy t, clean to permit comfort, jd>ol i- ing and long component jife, 0 but also greatly speeds up'the g installation of the system. i- The Executive model is y attractively-styled with a stur d dy polyester cover, designed to withstand all types of outdoor 1 weather. It is finished in a d champagne shade that take* op y nious and unobtrusive part of f the surroundings. This unit is most economi cal to operate, according to - industry rating standards. The s 34,000 BTUH model, for ex -1 ample, produces 9.2 BTUH of > cooling power for every watt - of electrical input, almost 20 percent more economical than ' other cooling units manufpc t tured. _ 3 i ni t Reliability also is realized iq ! the Executive model because of the "matched component" > concept of design wherein GE • makes all of the major parts i that go into the unit. 1 It is still another way in which local merchants can help to keep you from getting hot ■ under the collar. many instances the technical training required was reduced by as much as 50 per cent be cause of the programmed in struction technique. Dr. Wollard stated in the re port that many inmates went on to obtain their high school di plomas through the General Education Development Pro gram as a direct result of suc cessfully completing the pro grammed instruction courses. "Not a single inmate was dropped from the program be cause of disciplinary prob lems," Dr. Wollard said. Not one participating inmate had to be referred to the prison chaplain nor to the psycholo gist, he added. With the increased focus on training and retraining, pro grammed or self-tutoring instruction is finding ever wid ening applications in industry, education, and government. Du Pont's courses, which are made available through the com pany's Industrial Training Serv ice, Wilmington, Delaware, are being used by more than 3,000 corporations and 200 vocational schools, as well as by many Federal, state, and local gov ernmental agencies. To date, Du Pont has invested over S3 million in developing about 200 courses, including 25 in safety training. Grades to Merge At Wake Forest The one-room little red achooQwuae is being reborn in northeastern Wake County with soch vigor that you get excited Just hearing its Innovators discuss it Originially doomed to antiquity 25 to 40 years ago, the concept of having many grades under one roof and in one room is to be effected in the first three grades of Wake Forest Elementary School next fall. "The walls must come down," said Principal E. V. Meadows, meaning both physical barriers and grade barriers that have traditionally separted school children according to age. Ungrading the Wake Forest primary unit spells hard work for its principal, teachers and county supervisors as well as for pupils and parents. But most believe that "nongradedness" is a step in meeting the needs of every individual student. Pilot Project Wake Forest will serve as a pilot project by nongrading all subjects in the first three grades in September. All elementary schools in the Wake County system will nongrade their language arts and math and use the multi level approach in the fall. If the experiment in the Wake Forest elementary school, which has an enrollment of 835, proves successful, then grades four, five and six will be ungraded there in 1970-71. Nongraded education is a "system which allows a pupil to progress in a continuous manner in accordance with his ability, •, rather than age, Meadows said. "Kids ages six, seven and eight play together every afternoon," he explained. "They ride together on the school bus. Then a bell rings and for seven hours, each age group is segregated. "The final bell rings and the kids are back together again. We've created a very unnatural situation." In the nongraded approach, students will learn together as well as play together. A typical one-room suite will house three teachers and 90 pupils 3O first graders, 30 second graders and 30 third graders. "How can a child learn at all in such a mob?" was a big concern of some 60 Wake Forest parents who discussed the project during a public meeting. Mrs. Helen Frazelle, Wake County elementary education director, explained: "The typical primary teacher can have only three reading groups. In nongradedness, three teachers with three groups each will mean nine different levels of instruction, instead of the conventional three." In analyzing the first six grades Wake County teachers have discovered 29 different skill levels in language arts (reading, writing, spelling) Phone 682-9295 tM&i srsr: CASH & CARRY OFFICES Corner Roiboro and Holloway Street* Ctiapel HOt St. at Duke University Road Quick As A Wink—Roxboro Rd. at Avondale Dr. Sanitary Office: 2503 Angler Ave. PHOTOGRAPHY BY PUREFOY 124 Yi I. MAIN ST. PHONE 682-7316 NATURAL COLOR Banquets Children Wedding s .. New* Glamou Photos Family-Groups Senior Portraits ID ft PASSPORTS and 28 math levels. Share AbUiUee In nongradeoess, a child could conceivably be in an advanced reading level, a slow math section, and an average science group. Tests show that a student is happier in a group whose members share equal abilities. During the first two weeks of school in September, each child will be tested to determine the appropriate starting level. Each level has its own texts and materials and must be completed before the child moves to the next step. "There is continous progress," said Mrs. Elizabeth Barfield, Wake County primary supervisor. "A child never repeats nor skips a level." If a child completes the three-year program in 2V» years, he is placed in a reinforcement program, where he deepens his understanding and applies his knowledge to new challenges. At the beginning of the succeeding year, the child resumes where he left off. He is not hindered by slower students nor is he pushed along by faster learners. He works at his own pace. The obvious and perhaps most beneficial advantage of nongradedness is that a child never fails, officials say. "Repeating a grade in the old system may label a child a failure just at the time when he may begin to blossom, to accelerate his learning," said Mrs. Frazelle. "Your child's brain operates in spurts, just as his physical growth," Meadows told the parents. "And when he's in a learning spurt, we're going to put the coals on the fire." Meadows believes that readiness, not chronological age, is the key to successful learning. "Some six-year-olds are just not ready to begin the first grade. Others, having a better home life or higher JQ, are ready 10 begin work , the first day. Each will be put in the proper level." When several parents expressed concern about discipline in a large room of 90 children, Meadows said that experiments in other nongraded schools have proved discipline to be better. Eye On Everyone "In the old system when one child monopolized the teach er's time, the other students were often unattended. But in nongradedness, two other teachers are available as •"circulatingsilperviiori, keeping an eye on everyone," he said. "The kids work together better," said Mrs. 1 Barfield. "Pressure to meet deadlines is off the teachers. It's a more flexible system." In the nongraded system, it becomes more of the child's responsibility, along with teacher support, to apply mastered skills in learning new ones. ■ * *** . v jfv.v iM YMCA YOUTHMOBILE PRO JECT—Joseph Montez, left di rector, counts heads with Ken neth Morris, right, executive director, 28th Street branch of YMCA. The new program for the urban areas of Los Angeles utilizes eight vans to transport children from outlying areas to the various activities of the MY M Purchase Farm DURBAN, South Africa —Gary Player, the golfer, and his brother lan, a conservation- I ist, have bought a 213-acre farm i in Natal Province on the Indian | Ocean. V I ®*l!l 111 saijsunou r V'. ANWRAR, RAM W, IM MT CABOUKA. JACQUIN'S A VODKA ROYALE JSpE Charles Jicquin et Ci«.. Inc., Phili., P». Est. 1884 •80 PROOF 3B