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The Founding of the Institute of Child Study
E. A. BOTT
Twenty-five Years of Child Study, 1951, p.13
University of Toronto Press
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Title:
The Founding of the Institute of Child Study
Author:
E. A. BOTT
Subjects:
Armed conflict
;
Behavioral sciences
;
Biological sciences
;
Biology
;
Child growth
;
Child health services
;
Child psychology
;
Children
;
Developmental psychology
;
Education
;
Educational institutions
;
Families
;
Family members
;
Federal health insurance plans
;
Formal education
;
Governance
;
Government
;
Government budgets
;
Government expenditures
;
Government health care finance
;
Human growth
;
Human physiology
;
Human populations
;
Human societies
;
Medicaid
;
Military science
;
Parents
;
Personality psychology
;
Persons
;
Physiology
;
Political science
;
Population studies
;
Psychology
;
School age children
;
Schools
;
Social institutions
;
Social sciences
;
Sociology
;
Universities
;
War
;
War theaters
;
World wars
Is Part Of:
Twenty-five Years of Child Study, 1951, p.13
Description:
When one looks back at developments in fields of physical science, one’s attention naturally turns to outstanding discoveries or achievements that promise to revolutionize existing ideas or to improve current practices. Such highlights of progress are often associated with circumstances of national emergency, or the ravages of some dread disease, which threaten large numbers of persons. The importance to physics, for example, of radar, with its applications for defence and communications, or of the discovery of insulin and of cortisone to medicine, is readily appreciated, and this appreciation stimulates further scientific effort and public support. By contrast, discoveries in the
Publisher:
University of Toronto Press
Language:
English
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