{"id":7464,"date":"2023-01-25T23:12:31","date_gmt":"2023-01-25T23:12:31","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.deltastate.edu\/library\/?page_id=7464"},"modified":"2023-03-06T23:20:41","modified_gmt":"2023-03-06T23:20:41","slug":"mose-allison-collection-page","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.deltastate.edu\/library\/mose-allison-collection-page\/","title":{"rendered":"Mose Allison Collection Page"},"content":{"rendered":"[vc_row type=&#8221;in_container&#8221; full_screen_row_position=&#8221;middle&#8221; column_margin=&#8221;default&#8221; column_direction=&#8221;default&#8221; column_direction_tablet=&#8221;default&#8221; column_direction_phone=&#8221;default&#8221; scene_position=&#8221;center&#8221; text_color=&#8221;dark&#8221; text_align=&#8221;left&#8221; row_border_radius=&#8221;none&#8221; row_border_radius_applies=&#8221;bg&#8221; overlay_strength=&#8221;0.3&#8243; gradient_direction=&#8221;left_to_right&#8221; shape_divider_position=&#8221;bottom&#8221; bg_image_animation=&#8221;none&#8221;][vc_column column_padding=&#8221;no-extra-padding&#8221; column_padding_tablet=&#8221;inherit&#8221; column_padding_phone=&#8221;inherit&#8221; column_padding_position=&#8221;all&#8221; column_element_spacing=&#8221;default&#8221; background_color_opacity=&#8221;1&#8243; background_hover_color_opacity=&#8221;1&#8243; column_shadow=&#8221;none&#8221; column_border_radius=&#8221;none&#8221; column_link_target=&#8221;_self&#8221; gradient_direction=&#8221;left_to_right&#8221; overlay_strength=&#8221;0.3&#8243; width=&#8221;1\/1&#8243; tablet_width_inherit=&#8221;default&#8221; tablet_text_alignment=&#8221;default&#8221; phone_text_alignment=&#8221;default&#8221; bg_image_animation=&#8221;none&#8221; border_type=&#8221;simple&#8221; column_border_width=&#8221;none&#8221; column_border_style=&#8221;solid&#8221;][divider line_type=&#8221;No Line&#8221;][vc_column_text]\n<h1 style=\"text-align: center;\"><span style=\"color: #008000;\">Mose Allison Collection<\/span><\/h1>\n[\/vc_column_text][divider line_type=&#8221;No Line&#8221;][page_submenu alignment=&#8221;center&#8221; sticky=&#8221;true&#8221; bg_color=&#8221;#008542&#8243; link_color=&#8221;#ffffff&#8221;][page_link link_url=&#8221;https:\/\/www.deltastate.edu\/library\/manuscripts-and-guides\/&#8221; title=&#8221;<strong>Manuscripts &amp; Subject Guides<\/strong>&#8221; id=&#8221;1678144827696-0&#8243; tab_id=&#8221;1678144827696-6&#8243;] [\/page_link][page_link link_url=&#8221;https:\/\/www.deltastate.edu\/library\/guides-to-the-collection-page\/&#8221; title=&#8221;<strong>Collections Portal<\/strong>&#8221; id=&#8221;1678144827710-4&#8243; tab_id=&#8221;1678144827710-4&#8243;] [\/page_link][page_link title=&#8221;<strong>Visit<\/strong>&#8221; id=&#8221;1678144827720-4&#8243; tab_id=&#8221;1678144827720-0&#8243; link_url=&#8221;https:\/\/www.deltastate.edu\/library\/departments\/archives-museum\/visit\/&#8221;][\/page_link][page_link title=&#8221;<strong>Make a Request<\/strong>&#8221; id=&#8221;1678144827731-2&#8243; tab_id=&#8221;1678144827731-5&#8243; link_url=&#8221;https:\/\/www.deltastate.edu\/library\/departments\/archives-museum\/requests\/&#8221;][\/page_link][page_link title=&#8221;<strong>About Us<\/strong>&#8221; id=&#8221;1678144827743-3&#8243; tab_id=&#8221;1678144827744-9&#8243; link_url=&#8221;https:\/\/www.deltastate.edu\/library\/departments-archives-museum-about-us\/&#8221;][\/page_link][page_link title=&#8221;<strong>Yearbooks Online<\/strong>&#8221; id=&#8221;1678144827753-8&#8243; tab_id=&#8221;1678144827754-4&#8243; link_url=&#8221;https:\/\/www.deltastate.edu\/library\/departments\/archives-museum\/yearbooks-alumni-magazines-delta-state-histories\/&#8221;][\/page_link][\/page_submenu][\/vc_column][\/vc_row][vc_row type=&#8221;in_container&#8221; full_screen_row_position=&#8221;middle&#8221; column_margin=&#8221;default&#8221; column_direction=&#8221;default&#8221; column_direction_tablet=&#8221;default&#8221; column_direction_phone=&#8221;default&#8221; scene_position=&#8221;center&#8221; text_color=&#8221;dark&#8221; text_align=&#8221;left&#8221; row_border_radius=&#8221;none&#8221; row_border_radius_applies=&#8221;bg&#8221; overlay_strength=&#8221;0.3&#8243; gradient_direction=&#8221;left_to_right&#8221; shape_divider_position=&#8221;bottom&#8221; bg_image_animation=&#8221;none&#8221;][vc_column column_padding=&#8221;no-extra-padding&#8221; column_padding_tablet=&#8221;inherit&#8221; column_padding_phone=&#8221;inherit&#8221; column_padding_position=&#8221;all&#8221; column_element_spacing=&#8221;default&#8221; background_color_opacity=&#8221;1&#8243; background_hover_color_opacity=&#8221;1&#8243; column_shadow=&#8221;none&#8221; column_border_radius=&#8221;none&#8221; column_link_target=&#8221;_self&#8221; gradient_direction=&#8221;left_to_right&#8221; overlay_strength=&#8221;0.3&#8243; width=&#8221;1\/1&#8243; tablet_width_inherit=&#8221;default&#8221; tablet_text_alignment=&#8221;default&#8221; phone_text_alignment=&#8221;default&#8221; bg_image_animation=&#8221;none&#8221; border_type=&#8221;simple&#8221; column_border_width=&#8221;none&#8221; column_border_style=&#8221;solid&#8221;][vc_column_text]\n<h2>Interviewee: Mrs. Mose Allison<\/h2>\n<p>Interviewer: William Tribble<\/p>\n<p>Date: July 17, 1980<\/p>\n<p>WT: This is William Tribble. Today is July 17, 1980. We are interviewing Mrs. Mose<br \/>\nAllison. Mrs. Allison has been a resident of Tippo for several years. Mrs. Allison can you tell<br \/>\nme something about your teaching in the early schools of Tippo, Mississippi?<\/p>\n<p>MA: Well I came to Tippo. My whole life has been determined by a typographical error. I came<br \/>\nto Tippo to teach because when this job was offered the salary was listed as higher than the other<br \/>\nschools. I took it for that reason. When the contract was signed, it turned out that that was a<br \/>\ntypographical error. Had it not been for that I would have never come to the delta. It is ironical<br \/>\nto me that my whole life has been determined by a typographical error.<\/p>\n<p>WT: What was the amount of salary that you were suppose to get?<\/p>\n<p>MA: One-hundred and fifty, but actually it was only one hundred dollars a month, which was<br \/>\ngood then.<\/p>\n<p>WT: What year was this?<\/p>\n<p>MA: It was 1926. I had graduated from MSCW. It was MSCW then. I was only 20. I came<br \/>\ndown here. I came on the railroad and got off at Greenwood. The superintendent here was F. O.<br \/>\nMartin. He met me at the railroad. The first thing he said was \u201cyou look like a little ol\u2019 kid, you<br \/>\nhadn\u2019t 21 years old?\u201d I said, \u201c I will be 21 in December before the year is out.\u201d So at that time,<br \/>\nthere was a high school here. That was in 1926 (coming to Tippo) Just previous before my<br \/>\ncoming to Tippo this high school hadn\u2019t been here long. It was a high school then. Before that,<br \/>\nthe schools in the county had been small neighborhood kind schools. There was a small school<br \/>\nup in Tandy, which is where the Chris house is now. There was another small school up in<br \/>\nNeedmore, up where Needmore Cemetery is now. There was a church and a small school<br \/>\nthere. There is another small school up in Disdo where Canagra Fish Farm is now. These<br \/>\nusually served just the white children who lived in this area. Now, at Needmore where my<br \/>\nhusband\u2019s parents lived they went to this little school. They went in a little buggy. The teacher<br \/>\nstayed with Papa Allison, John Allison. His two younger children went to Needmore school in<br \/>\nthe buggy with the teacher, who was Stewart Clark\u2019s sister, Mrs. Burnet. She drove the buggy<br \/>\nwith the children to school up in Needmore. Water got up and the roads were bad here. This<br \/>\nwas hard to get to these low places. There wasn\u2019t too much educational advantage there, and<br \/>\nsince Tippo was kind of a central area here, they decided the high school. The high school had<br \/>\nbeen here several years when I got here in 1926.<\/p>\n<p>WT: The school here too was 1-12?<\/p>\n<p>MA: I came to teach English and history, although I ended up teaching about everything else. I<br \/>\nremember teaching one pupil here who was older that I was and was really smart, but he hadn\u2019t<br \/>\nbeen to school half the time because the roads had been really bad and hadn\u2019t been able to get to<br \/>\nschool half the time. I taught several children who were about as old as I was. Different grades<br \/>\ntoo and different subjects besides. The high school here only lasted a few years. Then they had<br \/>\nthe school in Charleston. The high school in Tippo was sent to Charleston, from the 9, 10, 11,<br \/>\nand 12 graders. We still had through 8th grade here for about a while. I had one child, and then I<br \/>\ncame back and taught in the lower grades for awhile.<\/p>\n<p>WT: You married while you were down here in Tippo?<\/p>\n<p>MA: Yes. I came in December, and I married in February. Little Jeanie was born the next<br \/>\nNovember. After he was born, Mose\u2019s stepmother kept him. I taught back in the lower school<br \/>\nfor two or three years. Then I didn\u2019t teach for a number of years. Then all the grades were sent<br \/>\nto Charleston. The 7th and 8th grade I taught.<\/p>\n<p>WT: What subjects did you teach while you were at Tippo schools?<\/p>\n<p>MA: I taught mostly English and history, but I always a reading, geography. The first year I<br \/>\ncame down here I taught a class in Latin.<\/p>\n<p>WT: How did you go about teaching you students? What method did you use to teach your<br \/>\nstudents history lets say?<\/p>\n<p>MA: Well, of course we just had textbooks, and not too many directions and things. I had taken<br \/>\neducational courses at MSCW that you would take if you were suppose to take if you were going<br \/>\nto teach school. I had done a year of private teaching there. I always am terribly interested<br \/>\nmyself in English and history. I had had excellent teachers in English and history in high school<br \/>\nat Booneville where I grew up. So, I intended to teach the same way that I had been taught<br \/>\nbecause it had fired my imagination and meant so much to me. I decided to do the same thing to<br \/>\nmy children. When the doing method of education came out when you let children do as they<br \/>\nwant to and what they prefer to do, I never went along with it. I knew what good for me and<br \/>\nworked for me should work well for my students. I had students tell me afterwards that they<br \/>\nlearned more from me than from anybody else. When they were talking about teaching children<br \/>\nsentences instead of phonetics and things that kind, I paid no attention to it. I went right straight<br \/>\non teaching sounds of letters and phonetic of that kind that I had been taught. Later on, I was<br \/>\njustified. At that time I was not, I was sort of a rebel.<\/p>\n<p>WT: Can you tell me of any student that you have had that has become famous in the world?<\/p>\n<p>MA: Well, of course, one of the ones that is best known is my own son, but I never taught my<br \/>\nown son. I did teach Tony, I taught Tony in the 7th and 8th grade here. Some of the students I<br \/>\nhad were the Murphy children. They were smart children and all done well. Some of them made<br \/>\nschool teachers and principles and have done well. One of the smartest children that I have ever<br \/>\ntaught was Ana Heart\u2019s nephew. His name is David. He is with a law office in Clarksdale,<br \/>\nSullivan I think.<\/p>\n<p>WT: Did you ever have any problems with disciplining you students?<\/p>\n<p>MA: Well, not much because I never let them get started. I believed that you could not teach<br \/>\nchildren unless you could get their attention and make them listen. So, I never had much disciple<br \/>\nproblems. I had been known to hold off and spat when it was most needed.<\/p>\n<p>WT: In other words you believe in spat?<\/p>\n<p>MA: yes, it was absolutely necessary when I did it. I have done it in the past.<\/p>\n<p>WT: What advice would you give the schoolteachers today about discipline?<\/p>\n<p>MA: Well I think that in the first place, the children have to respect you. You cannot go in with<br \/>\nthe idea of being buddy buddy with your children. It will not work. They have to respect you as<br \/>\nsomeone who is smarter than they are, and that you have something to offer them to<br \/>\nteach. Furthermore, you cannot teach if you do not have the attention of the pupil. So, discipline<br \/>\nis absolutely necessary.<\/p>\n<p>WT: Mrs. Allison, what supplies did you have while you taught school?<\/p>\n<p>MA: Well, I just had mostly what the textbooks were and sometimes I was attracted to things<br \/>\nmyself and I added. For instants, I donated these little books. I have always been an advent<br \/>\nreader. I had one student one time in the fifth grade name Burt Woods. He lived up in the South<br \/>\nCarolina, and was killed a few years ago when people bound him or something. But anyways, he<br \/>\nwas little boy, and I had him the fifth grade once. He was so good that for the first time I quit<br \/>\nsurreptitiously adding on my fingers. I had to learn to add a column\u2019s figures and do it in my<br \/>\nhead because Burt could do that. So I had to not let the kid get ahead of me.<\/p>\n<p>WT: Did you use newspapers?<\/p>\n<p>MA: Yes. I didn\u2019t use newspapers at first when I was teaching high school because this was<br \/>\npretty isolated. We only had one telephone. It was in the store. Of course we just had gravel<br \/>\nroads which water often got on. I learned to drive through water and every kind of road<br \/>\naround. After I came back and later on, I use Weekly Readers. That was one of my favorite<br \/>\nthings I used in the grammar school. I think I was one of the first people here to use the Weekly<br \/>\nReaders. Now they all use them.<\/p>\n<p>WT: Can you tell us why water was a problem of getting over the roads?<\/p>\n<p>MA: Of course you know they had school bus drivers. I remember when I first came here Jim<br \/>\nand Henry Allison were bus drivers. Often times, the school buses would break down and mire<br \/>\nup and water would be on the roads. The kids couldn\u2019t get to school a lot of the times. That<br \/>\ntended to be the problem on the roads going to Greenwood and even around Tippo<br \/>\nsometimes. Tippo itself never got underwater, several times water had us cut off from<br \/>\neverywhere else.<\/p>\n<p>WT: Is that because of the rivers?<\/p>\n<p>MA: It happened because of the heavy rains and rivers. They built the levies here. Occasionally<br \/>\nwe still have the last few years. At that time it was a problem because kids couldn\u2019t get to<br \/>\nschool.<\/p>\n<p>WT: What year did you stop teaching school?<\/p>\n<p>MA: Well, the last time I taught was from \u201954 to \u201957. I always remember that date because I<br \/>\nremember saving all the money I made, which wasn\u2019t much and spending it all on Mediterranean<br \/>\ncruise. Dr. Robinson from the University of Mississippi said it was equal to a four-year<br \/>\neducation any time. I learned more than I\u2019d ever know in my life.<\/p>\n<p>WT: You said the children had school buses to come to school on they were brawling wagons?<\/p>\n<p>MA: Well, none of them were brawling wagons. They all had some sort of bus. Weld and<br \/>\nHampton Lake the kids came from over around Rabbit Ridge and Hampton Lake. Over there<br \/>\nthey had little a little jeep that brought them over here where they would catch the regular school<br \/>\nbus.<\/p>\n<p>WT: Where did the students eat lunch?<\/p>\n<p>MA: Well, at first there was no lunch room. They had to bring their lunch.<\/p>\n<p>WT: Could you tell us some of the times that they would bring to lunch?<\/p>\n<p>MA: They mainly brought sandwiches. I remember that. I was surprised at some of the kinds<br \/>\nof sandwiches that kids brought.<\/p>\n<p>WT: What are the kinds of sandwiches that kids brought?<\/p>\n<p>MA: Well one of the ones of them was an onion sandwich. I had never heard of an onion<br \/>\nsandwich before. A lot of the children brought sausage and biscuits. That was one of the main<br \/>\nitems because they didn\u2019t always have bread, which we called light bread. There is a big<br \/>\nargument ____ in the paper recently about which kind of bread was light bread. Well we called<br \/>\nall store bought bread light bread. The kids often, more than anything, brought sausage and<br \/>\nbiscuit. Sometimes I heard some of the kids say they bore whole in the biscuit and put butter<br \/>\ndown in it and pour sorghum molasses down in it, and they would bring that sometimes. It was<br \/>\nmostly biscuits and sausage and things of that kind cause you didn\u2019t always get light<br \/>\nbread. Sometimes the bread trucks were cut off or didn\u2019t run. So, sausage and biscuit, I would<br \/>\nsay, was one of their favorite lunch things. The last time I was in school from \u201854- \u201957. It was a<br \/>\nlunchroom here. It was a good one.<\/p>\n<p>WT: How many months during the year?<\/p>\n<p>MA: eight<\/p>\n<p>WT: Could you tell us how long a date you attended school?<\/p>\n<p>MA: We usually started at eight and got out at three.<\/p>\n<p>WT: Can you describe the earliest school building that you taught school in, in Tippo?<\/p>\n<p>MA: The school at Tippo was just a framed building. It was just recently torn down. It was torn<br \/>\naway not very long ago. It was just a plain frame building, but it was large. It had two<br \/>\nbathrooms in it. It was entirely adequate.<\/p>\n<p>WT: Could you tell us how many rooms this building had?<\/p>\n<p>MA: It had 4 big rooms and an auditorium and two bathrooms.<\/p>\n<p>WT: What did you do in the auditorium?<\/p>\n<p>MA: When I first came out there we had chapel every morning in it. We had what we called a<br \/>\nfew minute chapel in the auditorium. Of course we had all kinds of programs in it\u2014<br \/>\nThanksgiving, Christmas, and Halloween for all the things like that. After the high school was<br \/>\nsent away, we often used it like a music building and cake walks. It was a music house when the<br \/>\ntore it away.<\/p>\n<p>WT: The chapel that you had every morning was it added to your school day?<\/p>\n<p>MA: Oh yes. I definitely think that it did. I had it myself in high school, and I think it worked<br \/>\nreal well here. I think we had different ways in charge of chapel programs. They worked with<br \/>\neach other. It wasn\u2019t very long, but you got every body in the whole school combined. I think it<br \/>\nwas very rewarding.<\/p>\n<p>WT: What type heating and cooling system did you have?<\/p>\n<p>MA: We had butane gas I suppose.<\/p>\n<p>WT: Did you have air condition?<\/p>\n<p>MA: Oh, heavens no. We never had air conditioning until they made lines later on. I just<br \/>\nwasn\u2019t in school.<\/p>\n<p>WT: Did you have any type of playground equipment?<\/p>\n<p>MA: Yes, we had swings and a flying ____.<\/p>\n<p>WT: I was told yesterday that Payne\u2019s school had a real good basketball team. Did the Tippo<br \/>\nSchool have any sports activities?<\/p>\n<p>MA: Yes, we did. We always had basketball. . I remember the first year I came we use have<br \/>\nwhere they had competitions, field day we use to call it. I remember going to several at Payne\u2019s,<br \/>\nand our basketball team would play. We use to be in competition with them on field day. If I<br \/>\nremember well Payne\u2019s usually won.<\/p>\n<p>WT: Do you remember approximately how many teachers were teaching in the schools when<br \/>\nyou were teaching at Tippo?<\/p>\n<p>MA: Well, every teacher taught two grades at first. Of course when I first came I was teaching<br \/>\nhigh school. The superintendent, who was Eckle Mark for awhile, and later on it was W. W.<br \/>\nJewel, he was an excellent schoolman. He had been down in Charleston, but had come down<br \/>\nhere. He is the one that I taught under, and I had a lot of respect for. He usually taught the<br \/>\nscience and the math. We took care of the other- reading, spelling, history and what else there<br \/>\nwas. I remember Ethmore teaching reading and spelling too. It must have been no more than 10<br \/>\nteachers even when we had a high school. I don\u2019t think it was that many.<\/p>\n<p>WT: Could you give me an estimate of how many students attended the Tippo school when you<br \/>\nfirst came to Tippo?<\/p>\n<p>MA: When I first came, it would have to be a rough estimate. Each classroom had around<br \/>\ntwenty-five to thirty children in a classroom. It must not have been more than 100. First, in the<br \/>\nhigh school, when we had the grammar school there wasn\u2019t a great deal of difference b\/c we still<br \/>\nhad the four grades. Each room had 25 \u2013 30.<\/p>\n<p>WT: I notice this is a farming area here in Tippo. Was there any allowances made for the<br \/>\nstudents getting out and working on the farm during the school year?<\/p>\n<p>MA: I do not think that we had that where they go a little while and then go out a little while. I<br \/>\nthink we had regular school terms. I could be wrong about that, but I don\u2019t remember it. Some<br \/>\nof the children didn\u2019t start in till later, and they were always a little disadvantaged. Some of<br \/>\nthem wouldn\u2019t start in till October or sometimes November. I don\u2019t ever remember any of them<br \/>\ngetting out in the spring.<\/p>\n<p>WT: Well, most of the students that went to Tippo, would you call them average students?<\/p>\n<p>MA: Yes, I think they were average. Most of the time they were a little above average. There<br \/>\nare just about 4 or 5 families here now, but at that time there weren\u2019t but two or three families<br \/>\nhere. Most by and large, the children were above and beyond. Of course we had others come in<br \/>\nand out there were sometimes below average. When I was teaching, of course you always get a<br \/>\nchild somewhere that cannot learn but so far- you know, a retarded child. The way I always did<br \/>\nmine in my room, and every time I usually had one in a grade. I would hold them two years. I<br \/>\nwould do what I could for two years, and after that I would send them on. They usually held two<br \/>\nyears, and after that they were big enough to be out.<\/p>\n<p>WT: Did you have any students that could not speak English?<\/p>\n<p>MA: No, I had some little Mexicans one-year. Of course we had only white children, of<br \/>\ncourse. I remember these little Mexicans came here in the fall of one year. I think they lived in<br \/>\nDisdo as migrant workers. I was a little startled when a little dark hand would go up in<br \/>\nclass. About that time, I remember a survey came out saying would you be willing to teach in a<br \/>\nschool if you had black children. I remember it saying that if it wasn\u2019t over a \u00bc of the class I<br \/>\nwould be glad to teach it.<\/p>\n<p>WT: Do you remember anything about the black schools in this area?<\/p>\n<p>MA: Yes, I can. I always thought it was simply awful. Right down here below Tippo going<br \/>\ntowards Swan Lake, Bessie Vance, who is still living here as a retired schoolteacher had one<br \/>\nroom full of about 50 black children. She taught everything. Any grade they came up with she<br \/>\nwas teaching. I always thought it was awful because up here we were struggling to have enough<br \/>\nchildren to get state aid. You had to have so many to be able to do it. We were struggling to<br \/>\nhave that and do that. Here we were with all these little black children, who couldn\u2019t go up<br \/>\nhere. It was almost terrible to have between 50- 100 down there in one room, when we couldn\u2019t<br \/>\neven keep enough kids to keep state aid.<\/p>\n<p>WT: can you name some of the black schools in this area?<\/p>\n<p>MA: The only one I know is the one close to Tippo. I guess it was Tippo School, of course,<br \/>\nlater on they got rid of it. It was right at first.<\/p>\n<p>WT: The way you were paid, did the county pay you or did you get some state funds?<\/p>\n<p>MA: Yes, well I know the first year I was here and especially during the depression it was really<br \/>\nbad because you didn\u2019t get very much. You would have to take it in script. It wouldn\u2019t come<br \/>\nthrough and you would have to take it in scripts. I remember one time I had charged a small bill<br \/>\nat Fountains in Greenville, which was the ultra store of the delta at that time and that the check of<br \/>\nmy certificate didn\u2019t come in on time, and I got a threatening note or bill from Fountains in<br \/>\nGreenville.<\/p>\n<p>WT: In closing, is there some story you would like to relate to us or some advice you would like<br \/>\nto give to teachers teaching in the public schools today?<\/p>\n<p>MA: The only advice I would say is to reiterate what I said at the beginning. You must have<br \/>\nchildren\u2019s respect. They have to respect you and then they will love you. You cannot do<br \/>\nanything without discipline. Furthermore, do not pay attention to everything you read in the<br \/>\npapers. Do it what you find out and what has work well for you. You use it to work on<br \/>\nsomebody else. That is what I have practiced all the time, and it has proven true.<\/p>\n<p>WT: What is the most memorable experience while you were teaching school? Well probably<br \/>\nthis child that I told you was a nephew. I am trying to think of his name, David? He was an<br \/>\nunusually smart child that you never forget. This child stopped me from counting on my<br \/>\nfingers. Also, we use to give IQ test. Ever once in awhile I would get a child that would be<br \/>\nthree or four years above his grade. This child was ahead. I had this child in the 5th grade and he<br \/>\nwas 9th grade on the IQ. I just gave him books, books, books, and he read overly. I just think<br \/>\nsomething like that is a thrill to you. Then this other child that I taught in the eight grade was so<br \/>\nvery bright. He was way above his age too. It is the same thing. When I found someone that is<br \/>\nan advent learner like that then I would specially reveal it. I think it is worth a lot of bad things<br \/>\nwhen there are one or two that are so bright and so easy to learn. The people that are like that are<br \/>\nusually worried about children besides. I am lucky here that we did have children above normal<br \/>\nto teach.<\/p>\n<p>WT: Mrs. Allison, thank you for relating some of the things that you did while you were in the<br \/>\npublic schools of the past.<\/p>\n<p><strong>END OF DOCUMENT<\/strong>[\/vc_column_text][\/vc_column][\/vc_row]\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>[vc_row type=&#8221;in_container&#8221; full_screen_row_position=&#8221;middle&#8221; column_margin=&#8221;default&#8221; column_direction=&#8221;default&#8221; column_direction_tablet=&#8221;default&#8221; column_direction_phone=&#8221;default&#8221; scene_position=&#8221;center&#8221; text_color=&#8221;dark&#8221; text_align=&#8221;left&#8221; row_border_radius=&#8221;none&#8221; row_border_radius_applies=&#8221;bg&#8221; overlay_strength=&#8221;0.3&#8243; gradient_direction=&#8221;left_to_right&#8221; shape_divider_position=&#8221;bottom&#8221; bg_image_animation=&#8221;none&#8221;][vc_column column_padding=&#8221;no-extra-padding&#8221; column_padding_tablet=&#8221;inherit&#8221; column_padding_phone=&#8221;inherit&#8221; column_padding_position=&#8221;all&#8221; column_element_spacing=&#8221;default&#8221; background_color_opacity=&#8221;1&#8243; background_hover_color_opacity=&#8221;1&#8243; column_shadow=&#8221;none&#8221; column_border_radius=&#8221;none&#8221; column_link_target=&#8221;_self&#8221; gradient_direction=&#8221;left_to_right&#8221; overlay_strength=&#8221;0.3&#8243; width=&#8221;1\/1&#8243; tablet_width_inherit=&#8221;default&#8221;&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":637,"featured_media":0,"parent":0,"menu_order":99,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-7464","page","type-page","status-publish"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.deltastate.edu\/library\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/7464","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.deltastate.edu\/library\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.deltastate.edu\/library\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.deltastate.edu\/library\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/637"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.deltastate.edu\/library\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=7464"}],"version-history":[{"count":10,"href":"https:\/\/www.deltastate.edu\/library\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/7464\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":8169,"href":"https:\/\/www.deltastate.edu\/library\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/7464\/revisions\/8169"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.deltastate.edu\/library\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=7464"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}