AbbottRobert B. “Study of V-12 Colleges Relative to Equipment, Program, and Plans for the Utilization of Audio-Visual Aids to Instruction” (Unpublished manuscript). Washington: Bureau of Naval Personnel, 1945.
2.
Audio-Visual Education in City School Systems.Washington: Educational Research Service, Research Division, National Education Association, December, 1946.
3.
“Audio-Visual Staff and Organization in State Departments of Education.” Washington: Research Division, National Education Association, 1948 (mimeographed).
4.
BrownJames W.The Virginia Plan for Audio-Visual Education.Chicago: Center for the Study of Audio-Visual Instructional Materials, University of Chicago, 1947.
5.
CarpenterC. R. “A Challenge for Research,” Educational Screen, XXVII (March, 1948), 119–21.
6.
CookDorothy E., and BordenBarbara. Educational Film Guide.New York: H. W. Wilson Co., 1947.
7.
CoreyStephen M. “Audio-Visual Aids and Teacher-Training Institutions,” Educational Screen, XXIV (June, 1945), 226.
8.
DaleEdgar. Audio-Visual Methods in Teaching, New York: Dryden Press, 1946.
9.
DeBernardisAmo, and BrownJames W. “A Study of Skills and Knowledges Necessary for Use of Audio-Visual Aids,” Elementary School Journal, XLVI (June, 1946), 550–56.
“Draft for a Convention for Facilitating the International Circulation of Visual and Auditory Materials of an Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Character,” pp. 1–9. Unpublished report of the State Department, Washington, D. C., 1948.
12.
DurrW. H.The School Division Film Library.Richmond, Virginia: Bureau of Teaching Materials, State Department of Education, 1946.
13.
Federal Radio Education Committee.Catalog of Recordings and Transcriptions for Schools.Washington: U. S. Office of Education, 1947.
14.
FloryElizabeth H. (Editor). Films for International Understanding.New York: Curriculum Service Bureau for International Studies, Inc., 1947.
15.
Functions of an Audio-Visual Department in a Teacher-Education Institution.Macomb, Illinois: Western Illinois State Teachers College, 1946.
16.
GoodCarter V. (Editor). Dictionary of Education.New York: McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1945.
17.
GoodCarter V. “Doctor's Dissertations under Way in 1947–48,” Phi Delta Kappan, XXIX (March, 1948), 305–25.
18.
HartleyWilliam H. (Editor). Audio-Visual Materials and Methods in the Social Studies. Eighteenth Yearbook of the National Council for the Social Studies. Washington: National Education Association, 1947.
19.
Handbook of the Audio-Visual Program.Bloomington, Indiana: Audio-Visual Center, University of Indiana, 1948.
20.
HeissElwood D., ObournEllsworth S., and HoffmanC. Wesley. Modern Methods and Materials for Teaching Science.New York: Macmillan Co., 1940.
21.
HobanCharles F.Jr.Focus on Learning.Washington: American Council on Education, 1942.
22.
HobanCharles F.Jr.Movies That Teach.New York: Dryden Press, 1946.
23.
HobanCharles F., HobanCharles F.Jr., and ZismanSamuel. Visualizing the Curriculum.New York: Dryden Press, 1937.
24.
HutchinsonThomas H.Here Is Television.New York: Hastings House, 1946.
25.
KoonCline M.School Use of Visual Aids. U. S. Office of Education Bulletin, 1938, No. 4. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1938.
26.
LemlerFord. “What is Teacher Competency in Audio-Visual Methods?” University of Michigan, School of Education Bulletin, XIX (February, 1948), 70–74.
27.
LevensonWilliam. Teaching through Radio.New York: Farrar & Rinehart, 1945.
28.
LindstromChester. “To 24,000,000 Americans,” See and Hear, II (April, 1947), 20–21, 44.
29.
MeierhenryWesley. “Classroom Movies Are Here to Stay,” Research Report, II (Summer, 1948), 5–7 (University of Nebraska).
30.
MilesJohn R., and SpainCharles R.Audio-Visual Aids in the Armed Services: Implications for American Education.Washington: American Council on Education, 1947.
31.
Multisensory Aids in the Teaching of Mathematics. Eighteenth Yearbook, National Council of Teachers of Mathematics. New York: Bureau of Publications, Teachers College, Columbia University, 1945.
32.
NoelElizabeth G., and LeonardJ. Paul. Foundations for Teacher Education in Audio-Visual Instruction.Washington: American Council on Education, 1947.
33.
PrestonHelen S.Use of Audio-Visual Materials toward International Understanding.Washington: American Council on Education, 1946.
34.
ReidSeerley. “Respondents and Nonrespondents to Mail Questionnaires,” Educational Research Bulletin, XXI, (April, 1942), 87–96.
35.
SeatonHelen Hardt. A Measure for Audio-Visual Programs in Schools.Washington: American Council on Education, 1944.
36.
“Summary Report on UN Film Activities,” Educational Screen, XXVII (March, 1948), 126, 144–45.
37.
“A Symposium: the Correlation of Films with Textbooks,” Educational Screen, XXVI (December, 1947), 543–49, 565.
38.
TablerC. H. “The Next Decade of Audio-Visual Use in One Hundred. School Systems,” See and Hear, II (February, 1947).
39.
TerlouwAdrian L. “Planning for Audio-Visual Education,” Architectural Record, XCVIII (September, 1945), 76–81.
40.
Time, LI (March 29, 1948), 28.
41.
VanderMeerAbram W. “Textbook to Movie to Television,” Elementary School Journal, XLVIII (January, 1948), 276–79.
42.
VanderMeerAbram W. “The Status of Audio-Visual Materials in Fourth-class Districts in Pennsylvania.” State College, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State College (unpublished mimeograph study), 1948.