About This Book
The work argues that schools must be reorganized to reflect and serve social life, linking education to democratic aims and contemporary industrial changes. It advocates learning by doing—manual training and occupation-based activities—over rote instruction, emphasizes attention development and child-centered curriculum, critiques wasted practices, and applies psychological principles to elementary education. It reviews Froebelian ideas and proposes that history and purposeful activity be used to cultivate habits of inquiry, social cooperation, and practical intelligence suited to changing social conditions.