[1] Address of the President before the American Psychological Association, New Haven, 1899.
[2] I owe this point specifically (as well as others more generally) to my friend and colleague, Mrs. Ella Flagg Young.
[3] That some teachers get their psychology by instinct more effectively than others by any amount of reflective study may be unreservedly stated. It is not a question of manufacturing teachers, but of reinforcing and enlightening those who have a right to teach.
CORRECTIONS:
| page | original text | correction |
| 34 | II | II. |
| 40 | influence | influence. |
| The following sentence on page 26 is left unchanged: "... he gets only misleading from taking the psychical point of view," A reprint of the essay in Educational Essays by John Dewey (edited by J. J. Finlay) has "... he is only misled by taking the psychical point of view," | ||