Back to Common Sense: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Jump to: Main Page • Micropedia • Macropedia • Icons • Time Line • History • Life Lessons • Links • Help
Chat rooms • What links here • Copyright info • Contact information • Category:Root
(Created page with "{{Page-ok|08/20}}{{Header|Back to Common Sense 08/20}} '''Back to Common Sense''' is a child rearing manual advocating spanking, authored by Beatrice Reinhart and...") |
No edit summary |
||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
The title page describes it as "a treatise on [[discipline]], practically alone, because the author advises the use of [[corporal punishment]] in the [[training]] of young children." | The title page describes it as "a treatise on [[discipline]], practically alone, because the author advises the use of [[corporal punishment]] in the [[training]] of young children." | ||
A main source for ''Back to Common Sense'' is [[Mariam Fredrick]]'s 1925 [[child rearing]] manual ''[[Correction that Corrects]]''. | A main source for ''Back to Common Sense'' is [[Mariam Fredrick]]'s 1925 [[child rearing]] manual ''"[[Correction that Corrects]]"''. | ||
== See also == | == See also == |
Revision as of 22:58, 31 August 2020
Back to Common Sense is a child rearing manual advocating spanking, authored by Beatrice Reinhart and published by Daniel Ryerson Inc. of New York City in 1937.
The title page describes it as "a treatise on discipline, practically alone, because the author advises the use of corporal punishment in the training of young children."
A main source for Back to Common Sense is Mariam Fredrick's 1925 child rearing manual "Correction that Corrects".
See also
Links
- Back to Common Sense (scans of the book posted to a Picasa Web Album)
Chat rooms • What links here • Copyright info • Contact information • Category:Root