Word: surveyed
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Data for Dyer's research comes from five principle sources, including Kuder Preference Tests and College Board Aptitude Survey Tests, which freshmen will be asked to take on a voluntary basis shortly...
...survey predicted keener competition in law, civil engineering, chemistry, and personnel relations...
...survey has determined that the demand for health service is outstripping the supply of newly graduated doctors and dentists, while the need for psychologists remains still great, and that in the next ten years 1,000,000 teachers must be trained if goals of educational loaders...
Nobody knows better than the schoolteachers that they have been losing position on the economic ladder (as compared with other jobholders) even though their wages have recently been going up a little. Last week, in a careful survey of nationwide education trends, the New York Times proved it, with figures. In 1940, reported Education Editor Benjamin Fine, the average U.S. public schoolteacher got only $1,441. Scant though this was, it was nearly $150 above the norm for all wage and salary people. This year, the teacher averages $2,644-slightly better than 1947-48's figure...
Gordon W. Allport, professor of Psychology, made the survey to see how social and financial background affect a student's future hopes and outlooks. He intends to compare the results with surveys in other countries and cultures...