xt7c862bcm2b https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7c862bcm2b/data/mets.xml Kentucky. Department of Education. Kentucky Kentucky. Department of Education. 1935-12 volumes: illustrations 23-28 cm. call numbers 17-ED83 2 and L152 .B35. bulletins English Frankford, Ky. : Dept. of Education This digital resource may be freely searched and displayed in accordance with U. S. copyright laws. Educational Bulletin (Frankfort, Ky.) Education -- Kentucky Educational Bulletin (Frankfort, Ky.), "Report of the Superintendent of Public Instruction", vol. III, no. 10, December 1935 text Educational Bulletin (Frankfort, Ky.), "Report of the Superintendent of Public Instruction", vol. III, no. 10, December 1935 1935 1935-12 2021 true xt7c862bcm2b section xt7c862bcm2b 27-Ed83 ! g 2:- ' ’tommonwealth of Kentucky 0 REPORT of the ‘ SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION. Published by Order of the STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION JAMES H. RICHMOND Superintendent of Public Instruction ISSUED MONTHLY Entered as second- class matter March 21,1933, at the post office at Frankfort, Kentucky, under the Act of August 24, 1912. Vol Ill 0 December, 1935 O No.10 ?=‘-:‘s*->7:~ffimt'i2t§;: i)“ I\| ‘i‘lliv, BIENNIAL REPORT 0f the SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION oft/26 Commonwealth pf Kentucky FOR THE BIENNIUM ENDED JUNE 30, 1935 Pzzé/z'x/zed 5y order of the , STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION JAMES H. RICHMOND Superintem/Mt of Pufi/z'r Imtmttz'wz C/zzzz’rmm State Board 0f Edi/mum; STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION ‘JAMES H. RICHMOND, Superintendent of Public Instruction SARA W. MAI-IAN, Secretary of State BAILEY P. WOOTTON, Attorney General. . . ELLSWORTH REGENSTEIN. Ky. Home Life Bldg., Louisvzlle, Ky. 0. H. POLLARD, Jackson, Ky. MRS. J. FRED PACE. Marrowbpne, Ky. FRED BESHEARS, Dawson Springs, Ky. F. D. PETERSON, Secretary STATE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION JAMES H. RICHMOND, Superintendent of Public Instruction GORDIE YOUNG, Assistant Superintendent of Public Instruction DIVISION OF FREE TEXTBOOKS H. W. PETERS, Director J. VIRGIL CHAPMAN, Assistant Director DIVISION OF SCHOOL BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS JOHN W. BROOKER. Director HUGH MERIWETHER, Consulting Architect DIVISION OF RESEARCH JAMES W. CAMMACK, JR., Director DIVISION OF VOCATIONAL EDUCATION G. IVAN BARNES, Director F. G. BURD, Supervisor Agricultural Education ATA LEE, Supervisor Home Economics Education A. N. MAY, Supervisor Trade and Industrial Education ' DIVISION OF CENSUS AND ATTENDANCE MOSS WALTON, Director DIVISION OF SPECIAL EDUCATION HOMER W. NICHOLS, Director CLEVELAND MOORE, Supervisor OLNEY M. PATRICK, Supervisor I” 0 J J DIVISION OF SUPERVISION . . ONES. Supervisor MARK GODMAN, Supervisor DIVISION OF TEACHER TRAINING R. E. JAGGERS, Director DIVISION OF CERTIFICATION A. P. TAYLOR. Director L ' DIVISION OF NEGRO EDUCATION - N. TAYLOR, State School Agent \. ‘H. W. Peters after January 6, 1936. / quwamfi 3'2..- v ' put-.1 “an; .fi.},2,‘ r. —-— DIVISION OF FINANCE F. D. PETERSON, Director C. A. MANEY, Assistant Director HAROLD EADES, Member DIVISION OF SCHOOL LIBRARY SERVICE RUTH THEOBALD, Supervisor DIVISION OF INSPECTION AND ACCOUNTING J. C. MILLS, Auditor and Inspector CLERICAL ASSISTANTS CLARA KERSHAW FRANK SORG HALLIE HOWARD LENA ROBERTS KATE McCANN ALICE SEIBERZ MRS. GRACE T. WALTERS CLYDE HOWELL RACHEL BELL JAMIE LUTTRELL ORA MAE MUNDAY ELANDOR MERKLEY LOUISE O’ DONNELL ALICE CLASBY ANN CON LYE CHRISTINE JOHNSON MRS. ESTHER WALSH HUGH CONWAY ADDITIONAL TEMPORARY CLERICAL ASSISTANTS ARE EMPLOYED AS NEEDED ”VT ———-—- ~———-—— 7 LETTER OF TRANSMITTAL COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY DEPARTMENT OF ENDUCATION FRANKFORT To The Governor and the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Kentucky: In compliance with Section 4384-20 of the Kentucky Statutes, I submit herewith the report of the Superintend- ent of Public Instruction for the biennium ended June 30, 1936. The report is given in two parts: Part I, the State- ment of the Superintendent of Public Instruction; Part II, a summary of statistical tables and detailed financial and general school statistics for the individual school districts of. the state. Respectfully submitted, JAMES H. RICHMOND Superintendent of Public Instruction January 1, 1936 S T N E T N O C F O E L B A T Statement of the Superintendent ,of Public Instruction.................... Letter of Transmittal Statistical T‘ables :, y .3; a (..mdxifixmv1~1 .uuflflwxflfittflu URI 2 PART I STATEMENT OF THE SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION INTRODUCTION In this report an effort has been made to record briefly the progress of public education in Kentucky during the biennium be- ginning July 1, 1933, and ending June- 30, 1935. The separate sections, reflecting the activities of the different divisions of the State Depart- ment of Education, will speak for themselves. Although the bien- nium just closed represents a period of great distress in social and economic affairs generally, the record of public education in Ken- tucky Within that same interval is one of real achievement. The citizenry of Kentucky may well be proud of this chapter in the history of educational progress in the Commonwealth. It is believed that at least two facts will stand out as this record is read section by section: The first has to do With the great and significant changes in the direction of educational progress already taking place, which have been made possible by the provisions of the New School Code; the second, the devotion to service in’ the cause of public education on the part of the educational leadership of the state reflected by a recital of the accomplishments brought about in the brief period of time of this biennium. The friends of public education in the Commonwealth join With me in expressing the earnest hope that the New School Code shall be left intact until ample time has passed to reveal any minor defects. The General Assembly of 1934 advanced the cause of education in Kentucky immeasurably when they enacted the New School Code, and the educational leadership of the state is confident that the General Assembly of 1936 will protect this code from any ill-advised attacks that may be made upon it. RESEARCH ACTI‘VITI ES Although the bulk of the work of. the Kentucky Educational Com- mission was completed durin’g the preceding biennium, there remained the task of editing the Report and other work incidental to its prepara- tion for the printer and its subsequent distribution. The Report of the Kentucky Educational Commission was published as Bulletin Number 8, Volume I, of the Educational Bulletin for October, 1933. The preparation of the New School Code took place in' the fall 0f 1933. This work represented the translation of the major recom- mendations of the Commission into proposed legislation, as Well as the revision, simplification, and rewording of many of the sections carried over from the old codes. Assistance was rendered on' the Code by other Divisions and by the Bureau of School Service of the UniVBFSity of Kentucky, but formal responsibility for the work rested with the Division of Research. Educational Bulletin Number 11 of E 1.57,,” I”, U, 7V1”, 10 SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION Volume I for January, 1934, contains the “School Code Submitted to the Kentucky General Assembly Session, 1934.” The New Code as adopted by the General Assembly in' March, 1934, was published as “Kentucky Common School Laws” in Number 4 of Volume II of the Educational Bulletin for June, 1934. The New School Code greatly increased the responsibilities of the new State Board of Education. On July 30, 1934, the Director of the Division of Research was elected to serve as Secretary of the State Board. A large part of the work of setting up the machinery for carrying out the provisions of the Code cleared through the Division. In December, 1933, the Director of Research was asked to serve on an advisory committee of the Tennessee Valley Authority in planning and directing certain CWA—TVA projects. Actual responsibility was assumed for the direction of some of these projects in the Kentucky State Department of Education. Approximately thirty previously un- employed persons were used in the work of assembling data for these projects during December, 1933, and the first four months of 1934. The projects under the immediate supervision of the Division of Re- search included the following: (1) Collection and Management of School Funds and the Relation of the Handling of School and Other Governmental Funds (‘2) Development and Present Status of Library Service in Ken- tucky Schools (3) Influence of Court of Appeals' Decisions and Attorney Gen- eral’s Opinions upon the School Law of Kentucky (4) School Costs in Kentucky A series of studies having to do with the handling of school funds in Kentucky was made through the Division of Research and brought together in a report entitled “Protecting Public School Funds in Kentucky.” This report was published as the June, 1935, Bulletin of the Bureau of School Service of the University or Kentucky. The bulletin contains some 216 pages, including appendices. This study shows that Kentucky school districts have done a better job in DI‘O'. tecting the school funds during the past three years than those of practically any other state in the Union. ‘ National Program for Federal Emergency Aid to Education The Superintendent of Public Instruction of Kentucky was drafted as Chairman of the National Committee for Federal Emergency Aid to Education in the school year 1933-34. From January, 1934, to April 1935, the Director of Research served as Secretary of this Committee- While the Director continued to carry on his work in the State De- partment, it was necessary that he spend most of his time in Wash’ ington in the interest of the work of the Federal Aid Committee dur- ing the first six months of 1934 and the first three and one-half monthS of 1935. One of the functions of this Committee was to 91385611t to BIENNIAL REPQRT 11 Congress an emergency program which had been prepared by a national committee representing thirty-two national organizations. This program called for considerable legislative contact work as well as the coordination of the emergency educational plans of the co- operating agencies. As a result of the activities of this Committee, a total of more than $17,000,000 was made available to some thirty states by the Federal Government in 1934. Public education in Kentucky shared in these Federal emergency appropriations. During the school year 1933-34 public school districts in Kentucky received $316,000 from the government for the extension of school term to normal length for that year. Other liberal Federal Emergency Aid received for education in Kentucky during the biennium includes the provision of funds for the Emergency Education program administered by the Division of Special Education; the financial assistance from the PWA and the WPA for the purpose of schoolhouse construction; and the FERA aid for stu~ dents in the colleges and universities. THE FINANCIAL ADMINISTRATION OF PUBLIC SCHOOL DISTRICTS The public school indebtedness of Kentucky, exclusive of the city of Louisville, was reduced from $10,969,000, as of June 30, 1932, to $9,542,000, as of June 30, 1934. The net decrease was $1,427,000, or almost exactly 13 per cent. This percentage decline in school debt becomes the more impressive when it is noted that between the same two dates the decrease in the public school indebtedness of the United States as a whole was less than 1 per cent. Moreover, the substantial lightening of the burden of the indebtedness of school districts of the state was achieved in spite of the fact that public school revenues in‘ Kentucky from local, state, and federal sources combined, declined from a total of $21,840,000 for the school year 1931-32 to $17,816,759 in 1933-34, a decrease of income within the biennium of more than $4,000,000. A comparison of the amounts budgeted each year by the county school districts with the amounts expended reveals figures that show great improvement since 1930. For the year 1930-31 the actual ex- penditures of county school districts exceeded budgeted figures by $1,526,239. In 1931-32 the total expenditures exceeded the total budget provisions by $831,688. Two years later a check was made which showed that the total budget provisions of the county school districts actually exceeded the total expenditures by $79,599. In other words, a situation has been brought about in the financial administration of the county public school systems throughout the state wherein sound buageting procedures have replaced relatively uncontrolled practices in school district expenditures. To say the least, the above figures reflect credit upon the financial / _: :4; l WEE???» fl3?¥.§m@ ya: «1 a}: #_ TWH .. 2(1<;-,