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Moonlight Schools for the Emancipation of Adult Illiterates cover

Moonlight Schools for the Emancipation of Adult Illiterates

Chapter 4: ILLUSTRATIONS
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About This Book

The author recounts the creation and expansion of evening classes organized to teach adult illiterates, beginning among mountain communities in Kentucky. She describes practical methods, volunteer teacher training, textbooks developed for adults, and surprising classroom successes illustrated by letters and photographs. Chapters trace growth from a local experiment to statewide and national campaigns, adaptations during wartime and reconstruction, instructional institutes, and outreach to diverse groups including mothers, veterans, and incarcerated men. Emphasis is placed on the teachers' dedication, community cooperation, and the movement's goal to eradicate adult illiteracy through accessible instruction and organized civic effort.

ILLUSTRATIONS

The Spelling MatchFrontispiece
FACING PAGE
They Came Carrying Babes in Arms16
Young Men and Women Whose Chance Had Come18
Arithmetic Was a Popular Study28
A Man Aged 87 Entered and Put to Shame the Record of the Proud School Girl of 86 of the Year Before38
They Were Schoolmates, and That is a Tie That Binds44
Letter From a Home Department Pupil45
A Class of Moonlight School Pupils All Past 50 Years of Age48
Letter Written After Three Lessons80
Letter Written After Six Lessons80
Letter From Pupil After Attending Full Session of Moonlight School80
Letter From Man of Draft Age94
Letter From a War Veteran108
Letter From a Student in Prison118
Letter From an Alabama Pupil124
Letter From an Alabama Pupil125
Letter From a North Carolina Pupil126
A North Carolina Moonlight School128
Oklahoma Moonlight School130
Letter to the State Superintendent of Schools, Oklahoma130
A Class of Mexican Mothers in California Learning to Read and Write132
Letter From New Mexico Moonlight School132
Letter From a Georgia Moonlight School134
Jewish Mothers in New York Improving Their Education140
Mother of Twelve Children Learns to Read and Write190
Alex Webb, Aged 98, Who Learned to Read and Write in the Moonlight Schools192