Annual 1940-41 Report of Student Council, Cleveland, Ohio, Collinwood High School.
2.
Baker, G.E., "Student Councils in Illinois" School ReviewXLVIII, December 1940, pp. 771-80. A statistical analysis of replies from sponsors in 175 junior and senior high schools.
3.
Blayney, C.O. and Tanke, Carl, "Where Youth Can Discuss Its Problems" California Journal of Secondary EducationXV January, 1940, pp. 48-51. Twenty-five California secondary schools hold a one-day conference.
4.
Cody, H.K. "Hands Off the Student Council" Clearing House, LX, August 1941, p. 16-17.
5.
Edmondson, J.B., Roemer, J., and Bacon, F.L., The Administration of the Modern Secondary School, New York, Macmillan Company, 1941 , pp. 64-66, 211-219.
6.
Educational Policies Commission, Learning the Ways of Democracy, Washington, D. C. The National Education Association, 1940. Describes democratic procedures in some forty secondary schools. The operation of the Student Councils in a number of these schools is included in the descriptions.
7.
Fretwell, Elbert K., Extra-Curricular Activities in Secondary Schools. Boston , Houghton Mifflin, 1931, Chapters IV to VIII.
8.
Meyer, F., "You Want to Establish a Student Council?" School Activities , XIII, September 1941, p. 5-6.
9.
National Association of Secondary-School Principals, The Student Council Handbook, Bulletin No. 89, March 1940. A description of the work of 361 Student Councils and of student activity management.
10.
Stratton, B.E. "Students Can Govern Themselves" Educational Administration and Supervision. XXVII April 1941 , pp. 291-5. How one school has worked out a successful plan of student participation in government.
11.
Teeter, V.A. and Norris, W.W. "Organizing The Student Council" School Activities , XIII, September 1941, p. 9.