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41. OGET and OSAT: The Best Test Prep,
 
42. 1963 Chick-Chat Yearbook Chickasha
 
43. Distribution of grades received
44. Oklahoma City Bombing (Great Disasters:
 
45. Oklahoma
 
46. 1963 Pioneer Yearbook C.E. Donart
 
47. The Van Dean Manual " Professional
 
48. 1964 Chick-Chat Yearbook Chickasha
 
49. 1962 Chick-Chat Yearbook Chickasha
 
50. 1964 Pioneer Yearbook C.E. Donart
$8.99
51. Indian School Days
$15.96
52. The Rapid City Indian School,
53. Mexican Manuscript Painting of
$8.99
54. Roads to Change in Maya Guatemala:
$30.75
55. The Oklahoma Bombing (Crime Scene
$17.99
56. A History of the Oklahoma State
 
57. A History of the Oklahoma State
 
58. The Phoenix Indian School: Forced
 
$9.03
59. One-Room School: Teaching in 1930s
$19.95
60. Medical Education in Oklahoma:

41. OGET and OSAT: The Best Test Prep, Oklahoma General Education and Subject Area Tests (Elementary School Edition)
by The Staff of REA
 Paperback: Pages (2006-01-01)

Asin: B003Q87WTU
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42. 1963 Chick-Chat Yearbook Chickasha High School Chickasha Oklahoma Volume 18 (18)
 Hardcover: Pages (1963)

Asin: B002PYPKO0
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43. Distribution of grades received in general chemistry by the students in the various schools in the Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College
by Otto Mitchell Smith
 Unknown Binding: 1682 Pages (1930)

Asin: B0008AGLX2
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44. Oklahoma City Bombing (Great Disasters: Reforms and Ramifications)
by Hal Marcovitz
School & Library Binding: 114 Pages (2002-08)
list price: US$20.85
Isbn: 061350979X
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45. Oklahoma
by Dennis B. Fradin
 School & Library Binding: Pages (1995-03)
list price: US$18.45
Isbn: 0613542916
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Describes the geography, plants and animals, history, economy, language, culture and people of the state of Oklahoma ... Read more


46. 1963 Pioneer Yearbook C.E. Donart High School Stillwater Oklahoma Volume 31
 Hardcover: Pages (1963)

Asin: B002PYPSJW
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47. The Van Dean Manual " Professional Training for Beauticians (Altus Beauty School Altus,oklahoma)
by Van Dean Staff
 Hardcover: 361 Pages (1965)

Asin: B000M1IRGG
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Editorial Review

Product Description
training for Beauty Culturest or Specialist,Cosmetologist,Hair Stylist or Manicurist ... Read more


48. 1964 Chick-Chat Yearbook Chickasha High School Chickasha Oklahoma Volume 19 (19)
 Hardcover: Pages (1964)

Asin: B002PYTB40
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49. 1962 Chick-Chat Yearbook Chickasha High School Chickasha Oklahoma Volume 17 (17)
 Hardcover: Pages (1962)

Asin: B002PYKDTC
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50. 1964 Pioneer Yearbook C.E. Donart High School Stillwater, Oklahoma Volume 32
 Hardcover: Pages (1964)

Asin: B002PYRCOG
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51. Indian School Days
by Basil H. Johnston
Paperback: 256 Pages (1995-03)
list price: US$19.95 -- used & new: US$8.99
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0806126108
Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Indian School Days is the humorous bittersweet authobiography of Basil Johnston, a native Ojibway, who was taken from his family at age 10 and placed in a "residential" school in northern Ontario The book opens in 1939 when the feared Indian agent visits Johnston`s family and removes him and his four-year-old sister to St. Peter Claver`s School, a boarding school run by Jesuit priests at Spanish, 75 miles from Sudbury, Ontario. In describing the years that follow, Basil Johnston creates marvelous portraits of the young Indian boys as they struggle to adapt to a harsh and strange environment, and of their Jesuit teachers, whose flashes of humour occasionally break through the discipline with which the institution is run. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (5)

5-0 out of 5 stars Great service!Thank you!
The book was in great condition and the shipping was fast!
Thanks a lot!

5-0 out of 5 stars Read everything this author writes.
From this book to Crazy Dave...we learn that a hard life breeds knowledge..and what you do with it depends on the individual. Mr Johnson was our teacher at Earl Haig and we were on the edge of our seats every day. He honored us with his presence at our reunions in 2002 and 2007...a really special man. Thank you Mr Johnson...

4-0 out of 5 stars Indian Residential Schools in CANADA
During the past few years, many books have been written by former boarders of Canadian Residential Schools for natives. Most, if not all, were a means for their author to live through the anger that churned inside because of ill treatment and sexual abuse by the staff. Much to my delight, though, the author of INDIAN SCHOOL DAYS does not write of such events. He describes his educational experience under the tutorship of Jesuit priests and brothers whose purpose was to teach their native boarders the white man's ways and thus make good Christians of them. Throughout the book, the author describes the daily schedule of the school, the teachers' attitudes, the children's reactions, etc. all eye-opening for readers, who were expecting a "tell all tale," a scandal. All considering, the author did benefit from the discipline of the school to the extent that he freely decided to return the Residential School in Spanish, Ontario as a highs chool student after having etched out a living as a trapper for a short while. By that time, the highs chool had been approved by the Canadian government, and many native boys matriculated on a voluntary basis, contrary to their forced entry into the Residential School as small children, who had been "kidnapped" from their parents by order of Canadian Law.
Times have changed since the 1940's and 50's and "conversion" of the natives is no longer part of 20th and 21st century standards. Natives are now rediscovering their culture and, as the author has done, are healing their wounds and that of their parents' generation.

4-0 out of 5 stars BOARDING SCHOOL
As a daughter of one who attended this very school prior to the author,it brings to light how schooling still affects how my father deals with situations (he is now in his 80s).

As an educator, this chapter of Indian Schools is not taught as part of history class -- not for the children or at the university for upcoming teachers.It should be mandatory reading for anyone searching for historical educational processes/pedagogy.

J.Montour, educator

5-0 out of 5 stars A page of history no one wants to see
When most kids skip school they don't get shipped off to a Residential School where they are treated less than human and have to learn quickly to get a long. From the opening sentence you are hooked as the boys armed with slingshots decide not to waste the day in school but go hunting instead. Trouble brews and soon the Indian agent shows up to take little Basil away to Spanish - a small town on the North Shore north of Manitoulin Island. The only problem is the Indian agent - (heartless white men who loved to play God) wanted a "pay" load and up and took the five year old sister of Basil too. Nobody got to say yes or no it was a done deal.To say this book is all serious - well it isn't. Humour comes through again and again these are surviors here people - not victims. Basil was gratefull for the education he got and where it lead him but the out come always depends on the person. What would challenge one person who drive someone else to the edge and over it. The boys rise to the challenge of chicken farming at the school - collecting eggs they'll never get to eat. A page turner for sure, take a closer look at Canada's dirty little secert that is just now being dealt with in court. A follow up list is in the back of the book to tell you what happened to these boys. Excellent read not to be missed ... Read more


52. The Rapid City Indian School, 1898-1933
by Scott Riney
Hardcover: 278 Pages (1999-10)
list price: US$19.95 -- used & new: US$15.96
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0806131624
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53. Mexican Manuscript Painting of the Early Colonial Period: The Metropolitan Schools
by Donald Robertson
Paperback: 234 Pages (1994-08)
list price: US$34.95
Isbn: 0806126752
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54. Roads to Change in Maya Guatemala: A Field School Approach to Understanding the K'iche'
by John Palmer Hawkins
Paperback: 249 Pages (2005-12-31)
list price: US$19.95 -- used & new: US$8.99
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0806137304
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Between 1995 and 1997, three groups of college students each spent two months in K'iche' Maya villages in Guatemala. Led by Professors John P. Hawkins and Walter Randolph Adams, they participated in an ongoing field school designed to foster undergraduate research and documentation of K'iche' Maya culture in Guatemala.

In this enlightening book, Hawkins and Adams first describe their field-school method of involving undergraduate students in primary research and ethnographic writing, and then present the best of the student essays, which examine the effects of modernization on K'iche' Maya religion, courtship, marriage, gender relations, education, and community development.

The process of actively involving undergraduate students in research is one of the most effective methods of enhancing education. Indeed, there is growing interest in this idea--currently the Council on Undergraduate Research, a national organization, boasts members from more than 870 colleges and universities.

For educators of all fields interested in learning how to organize a field school that fosters research and publication, Hawkins and Adams discuss the methods they used and the problems they encountered. Anthropologists and sociologists will find this demonstration of undergraduates' achievements useful for introductory and field methods courses. Finally, the book's portrayal of the K'iche' Maya culture in transition will appeal to Mesoamericanists and Latinamericanists of any discipline. ... Read more


55. The Oklahoma Bombing (Crime Scene Investigations)
by Richard Brownell
Hardcover: 104 Pages (2007-04-27)
list price: US$33.45 -- used & new: US$30.75
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1590188438
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56. A History of the Oklahoma State University College of Arts and Sciences (Centennial Histories Series)
by Adelia N. Hanson, Joseph Allen Stout
Hardcover: 567 Pages (1992-08)
list price: US$18.95 -- used & new: US$17.99
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0914956515
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57. A History of the Oklahoma State University College of Veterinary Medicine (Centennial Histories Series)
by Eric I. Williams
 Hardcover: 285 Pages (1986-11)
list price: US$14.95
Isbn: 0914956299
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58. The Phoenix Indian School: Forced Assimilation in Arizona, 1891-1935
by Robert A. Trennert
 Hardcover: 256 Pages (1988-05)
list price: US$29.95
Isbn: 0806121041
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59. One-Room School: Teaching in 1930s Western Oklahoma (Western Frontier Library)
by Donna M., Ph.D. Stephens
 Hardcover: 176 Pages (1990-11)
list price: US$23.95 -- used & new: US$9.03
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0806123133
Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
A brief introduction to Oklahoma history and Indian Lands becomes personal in this memoir of the author's mother, Helen Hussman Morris.It presents a description of the evolution of Oklahoma's educational system through the early part of the twentieth century, as well as a memorable reflection on rural American life in the early 1930s.

Helen Hussman was born on Indian land near Fonda, Oklahoma, in 1910.She was the daughter of a German farmer from Iowa who had been hired to farm and raise cattle for members of the Cheyenne and Arapaho Indian tribe.Within a few years, her parents were able to purchase a farm near Seiling and begin to apply their energies to their own property.As a young child, Helen helped her father in the fields, spending long hours plowing, planting and harvesting with teams of horses.Meanwhile, her mother and sisters ran the house: cooking, sewing, washing, ironing, without the luxury of electricity or running water. Their hard life had its cheerful side: during the winter, Helen and her two sisters and brother helped their dad run his traps and hunt rabbits; in the summer after harvest, they joined other families in camping outings, cooking over campfires, fishing, and gossiping.

Although Helen wanted to be a nurse, her father didn't want her to enter that line of work.During her junior year at Seiling High School, she was given the opportunity to do some substitute teaching.She discovered that she enjoyed working with small children and decided to become a teacher.In the late 1920s, it was possible for a high school student to take a county exam and earn a certificate to teach for one or two years, and that is what she did.

Helen was interviewed by the three school board members of Orion School about fifteen miles from her home, and by the time she graduated high school in 1929, she had a teaching job earning $80.00 per month.During that summer, she still helped out on the farm, but her mind was filled with plans for her first teaching job with pupils in all eight grades.Helen's sister made her some new clothes for her first job, and she began to gather the materials she would need, including a teacher's bell.When Helen went to see the building before school started, she was temporarily astounded to find it isolated on a sand hill in an area unsuitable for farming or ranching.For $20.00 per month, she had arranged to board with a school board member and shared a two-room cabin, two miles from the school, with the widow and her three older sons.Helen's father picked her up on Fridays, so she could spend the weekends at home on the farm.

To the sixteen pupils in all eight grades, Helen was required to teach agriculture, orthography, reading, penmanship, English grammar, physiology and hygiene, geography, U.S. history and civics, and arithmetic, as well as the evils of alcohol, morals, human kindness, and reverence for the flag.She organized games for recess and lunch time and devised special programs for the holidays.It was also her responsibility to provide monthly programs for the community, when they tried to raise extra money for the school with box- and pie-suppers and some kind of entertainment.During the winter, Helen had to arrive early to get the fire going and heat the building before the first pupils arrived.After school was out, she had to clean the building and lock it before walking two miles back to the house in which she stayed.All of this was a tremendous responsibility for a young girl just out of high school.

Helen was basically on her own with no real assistance from the county school superintendent or anyone else, except a teacher friend of her sister who became Helen's mentor.She soon discovered that the teacher's meetings were a disappointment.No one offered any real advice on how to teach seven or eight subjects to all eight grades in the same room.However, all teachers knew that their jobs d ... Read more

Customer Reviews (1)

3-0 out of 5 stars Good Complement to My Grandmother's Memoirs
Full of tough times & amazing (or appalling!) revelations. Fills in the many blanks and background assumptions about early rural Oklahoma school teaching that my grandmother somehow thought everyone would remember in the 21st century. Tone is exactly that of my grandmother, as well -- everything is tedious and hard, "but we enjoyed it." I don't believe it for a minute, but everybody must have pretended they did back then.

The book relates facts in chronological order, without much attention to telling a story or building an argument. Nevertheless useful for research into period. ... Read more


60. Medical Education in Oklahoma: The University of Oklahoma College of Medicine and Health Sciences Center, 1964-1996
by Mark Allen, M.D. Everett, Howard Dean Everett
Hardcover: 448 Pages (2000-11)
list price: US$19.95 -- used & new: US$19.95
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 080613268X
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Medical Education in Oklahoma Volume III chronicles the development of the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center (HSC) from 1964 to 1996--a tempestuous period at the University of Oklahoma School of Medicine. During these three decades college and hospital administrators and physicians witnessed conflicts, challenges, and restructuring. Mark Allen Everett and Howard Dean Everett examine the changing face of medicine and the transformation of the HSC, including:

* The Medical School deanship.Originally an office that represented the faculty, the deanship evolved into an administrative position, similar to a "CEO" of managed care. * Expanding enrollments.A sudden increase in the size of the student body eroded a sense of esprit de corps among the HSC students and the faculty. * Changing focus.More students were "ushered through" the program in order to meet a growing need for physicians in Oklahoma. * Philosophical conflicts.The change from a "medical center" to * "health science center" created a dual mission--training medical * students and providing patient services--that competed for limited * funds and resources.

Based on newspaper accounts, interviews, Regents' meetings minutes, and the authors' personal recollections, Medical Education in Oklahoma Volume III,, traces the metamorphosis of the University of Oklahoma College of Medicine and Health Sciences Center from an enterprise dedicated solely to scholarship and education into a multi-million dollar medical and research complex. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (2)

5-0 out of 5 stars Great School, Great Book
I attended the University of Oklahoma College of Medicine longer ago than I care to recall, but I am personally familiar with many of the doctors and incidents depicted in this well-researched and interestingly written book. It contains more facts per page than anything I have ever read (with the possible exception of the Yellow Pages), but that's the way it should be in a history that documents the key years of an institution that changed from a small medical outpost on the prairie to--as the authors brand Oklahoma taxpayers' expectations--a "Harvard on the plains" medical complex. While the school perhaps never achieved that level of academic excellence, it certainly rose far higher than the Oklahoma state legislature and it's turf-protecting politicians had any right to expect, given their meager level of support both financial and political. Politics aside, the 50's and 60's were great times to be living in Oklahoma City, and this book brings back many of my fondest memories--and reminds me of the many brilliant and industrious men and women I met and worked with at the Medical Center. The book captures it all beautifully, and I highly recommend it for anybody interested in the subject.

5-0 out of 5 stars A "Must Read" for Med Students, Educators, History Buffs
I found the book to be extremely interesting, and even humorous at times.The book offers a play by play event listing of the establishment of the medical school and tells a candid story of the founders and individuals that were ultimately responsible for what kind of medical facilities, Oklahoma has today. A "must-read" for Medical Students, Educators and generally any History Buff that would enjoy the "inside" story behind the Oklahoma Medical Center.The photographs are a plus. ... Read more


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