Abstract
The National Council for the Social Studies, a department of the National Education Association, last fall invited I0I representative leaders in the field of social studies teaching to serve as a Commission on War-time Policy "to analyze the problems faced by social education in wartime, and to suggest the framework of a desirable program in social studies for the immediate future." The Commission, of which Howard E. Wilson was chairman, presented its report to the annual meeting of the National Coun cil, where it was discussed, revised, and officially adopted at the business meeting on November 28, I943. Subsequently, the report was published as a sixteen-page pamphlet, entitled "The Social Studies Mobilize for Victory." Copies may be secured at ten cents each (discounts for quantities) from the National Council for the Social Studies, I20I Sixteenth Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.—Editor.
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