BackusRamona, BroughAline, and NeedhamIrene Ben nett.Other People's Children.Chicago: Elizabeth McCormick Memorial Fund, 1943.
2.
BowmanLeRoy E.Community Programs for Summer Play Schools.New York: Child Study Association of America, 1935.
3.
Building the Future for Children and Youth. National Commission on Children in Wartime, U. S. Children's Bureau, Publication 310. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1945.
4.
Child Care Programs: A Handbook. Prepared by the Child Care Committee of the State Defense Council, Hartford, Connecticut: State Department of Education, 1942.
5.
Connecticut General Statutes, Section 237-h, “Duties of Boards of Education.” Hartford, Connecticut: State of Connecticut, 1945 (supplement).
6.
Daytime Care: A Partnership of Three Professions.New York: Child Welfare League of America, Inc., 1946.
7.
Educational Services for Young Children.Washington: Educational Policies Commission of the National Education Association, 1945.
8.
Education and the People's Peace.Washington: Educational Policies Commission of the National Education Association, 1943.
9.
EvansEva Knox. Children and You.New York: G. Putnam's Sons. 1943.
10.
Four- and Five-Year-Olds at School.Washington: Association for Childhood Education, 1943.
11.
Goals for Children and Youth. Commission on Children in Wartime, U. S. Children's Bureau, Publication 306. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1944.
12.
Good Education for Young Children.Albany, New York: New York State Association for Childhood Education and New York State Association for Nursery Education, 1946.
13.
LandrethCatherine. Education of the Young Child.New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1943.
14.
MeyerAgnes E.The Rochester, Minnesota, Child Health ProjectWashington: Washington Post, 1945.
15.
Nursery Schools: Their Development and Current Practices in the United States, Office of Education Bulletin 1932, No. 9. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1932.
16.
Our Concern: Every Child. Prepared by Emma O. Lundberg. Children's Bureau, Publication 303. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1944.
17.
Our Co-operative Nursery School.Takoma Park, Maryland: Takoma Park—Silver Spring Co-operative Nursery School, 1942.
18.
Pupil Personnel Services for All Children. Prepared by Katherine M. Cook. “Planning Schools for Tomorrow.” Office of Education Leaflet 72, 1944. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1944.
19.
Regulations for Approval of Nursery-School Groups Caring for Children under Six Years of Age.Hartford, Connecticut: Division of Instruction, State Department of Education, 1946.
20.
RockwellNorman. “Norman Rockwell Visits a Country School,” Saturday Evening Post, (November 2, 1946), 24–25.
21.
Some Ways of Distinguishing a Good Nursery School. Prepared by the Child Development and Parent Education Bureau, Division of Elementary Education. Albany, New York: State Department of Education, 1940.
22.
What Is Happening to the Children?Washington: Association for Childhood Education, 1946.
23.
When Mother's Away: A Guide to the Development of Children's Day-Care Units in Wartime. Prepared by the National Association of Day Nurseries, Inc. New York: Child Welfare League of America, Inc., 1943.