Word: teachings
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Though not allowed to teach, a number of college juniors will be allowed to attend the summer school as observers...
...first group of about 100 trainees, known as "interns," all already having received Bachelor of Arts or Sciences degrees, will teach courses at the summer school in Newton. At the same time they will take seminar courses, discussing their work, from a nationwide group of 20 "master" teachers which the School of Education has recruited...
When the summer school ends, the "interns" will split into two additional groups. Approximately half of them, while taking seminar courses here will continue to teach in Newton, Concord, Weston, and Winchester public schools; the remainder will be full time students at the School of Education. At midyears they will exchange positions and those in the School of Education will assume their partners' teaching duties. All "interns" will receive Master of Education or Teaching degrees...
Another group of college graduates at the summer school will teach and take similar classes, but they will not enroll in the School of Education in the fall. Instead they will apply directly for positions in the public schools. These students further differ from the "interns" in that the School of Education expects them to have had an equivalent to three half courses in Education prior to teaching at the summer school. They also will not receive a master's degree...
...called "proletariat writers," who denounced the Futurists as being "intellectual-bourgeois," and not fit for the new proletariat society. They felt that literature should be written by the class in power; since Russia was now proletarian, only the proletariats should write. Large "writing schools" were soon established to teach the workers to create poems, novels...