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- Music Box Teaching Clock, 1968-1972 - Educational toys oriented toward young children taught concepts like learning letters and numbers as well as telling time. This music box teaching clock, manufactured by Fisher-Price, is shaped like a schoolhouse and has school-related images at top and bottom. There are twelve pictures of children's activities inside the clock dials, each pointing to different times of the day.

- 1968-1972
- Collections - Artifact
Music Box Teaching Clock, 1968-1972
Educational toys oriented toward young children taught concepts like learning letters and numbers as well as telling time. This music box teaching clock, manufactured by Fisher-Price, is shaped like a schoolhouse and has school-related images at top and bottom. There are twelve pictures of children's activities inside the clock dials, each pointing to different times of the day.
- Teaching Community Technology Handbook, 2015 -

- 2015
- Collections - Artifact
Teaching Community Technology Handbook, 2015
- Magazine, Emigre No. 22, "Teach," 1992 - Emigre is a digital type foundry established by Rudy VanderLans and Zuzana Licko. The company's history is linked with the introduction of the 1984 Macintosh computer, used to design their early bitmapped typefaces. Emigre's digital work gained notoriety -- defying visual communication standards with fractured, layered combinations of text and image. <em>Emigre</em> magazine showcased their fonts and promoted groundbreaking designers.

- 1992
- Collections - Artifact
Magazine, Emigre No. 22, "Teach," 1992
Emigre is a digital type foundry established by Rudy VanderLans and Zuzana Licko. The company's history is linked with the introduction of the 1984 Macintosh computer, used to design their early bitmapped typefaces. Emigre's digital work gained notoriety -- defying visual communication standards with fractured, layered combinations of text and image. Emigre magazine showcased their fonts and promoted groundbreaking designers.
- Lyn St. James Teaching a Class, 2008 - Lyn St. James, the first woman to win the Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year Award in 1992, founded the Women in the Winner's Circle Foundation (formerly the Lyn St. James Foundation) in 1994. She is pictured at the head of the class speaking to young women at the Complete Driver Academy, a core activity of the foundation.

- November 01, 2008
- Collections - Artifact
Lyn St. James Teaching a Class, 2008
Lyn St. James, the first woman to win the Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year Award in 1992, founded the Women in the Winner's Circle Foundation (formerly the Lyn St. James Foundation) in 1994. She is pictured at the head of the class speaking to young women at the Complete Driver Academy, a core activity of the foundation.
- Teaching Driver and Traffic Safety Education, circa 1965 - This textbook doesn't teach driver education -- it teaches how to teach driver education. It was produced by the American Automobile Association, which had moral and monetary interests in reducing auto accidents. Driver education was a standard part of American high schools from the 1930s through the 1990s, until public school budget and curriculum concerns shifted training to private schools.

- circa 1965
- Collections - Artifact
Teaching Driver and Traffic Safety Education, circa 1965
This textbook doesn't teach driver education -- it teaches how to teach driver education. It was produced by the American Automobile Association, which had moral and monetary interests in reducing auto accidents. Driver education was a standard part of American high schools from the 1930s through the 1990s, until public school budget and curriculum concerns shifted training to private schools.
- Benjamin Lovett Teaching Dance Class, Lovett Hall, 1944 - Students attending Henry Ford's Edison Institute Schools received instruction in old-fashioned dancing from Benjamin Lovett. Lovett not only taught them dance steps, but also good manners--the dance classes were exercises in social training as well. This photograph was taken just a few months before Lovett retired--after serving as Henry Ford's dancing master for over two decades.

- April 05, 1944
- Collections - Artifact
Benjamin Lovett Teaching Dance Class, Lovett Hall, 1944
Students attending Henry Ford's Edison Institute Schools received instruction in old-fashioned dancing from Benjamin Lovett. Lovett not only taught them dance steps, but also good manners--the dance classes were exercises in social training as well. This photograph was taken just a few months before Lovett retired--after serving as Henry Ford's dancing master for over two decades.
- Images of Unimate Industrial Robot Teach Control, 1962-1975 - George Devol revolutionized manufacturing with his invention of the Unimate -- the world's first industrial robot. These rugged programmable units were designed to perform repetitive, arduous and hazardous tasks. The first Unimate was installed in a General Motors plant in 1961. This photograph, part of a larger archival collection documenting Devol's work, illustrates the functions and uses of his innovative idea.

- 1962-1975
- Collections - Artifact
Images of Unimate Industrial Robot Teach Control, 1962-1975
George Devol revolutionized manufacturing with his invention of the Unimate -- the world's first industrial robot. These rugged programmable units were designed to perform repetitive, arduous and hazardous tasks. The first Unimate was installed in a General Motors plant in 1961. This photograph, part of a larger archival collection documenting Devol's work, illustrates the functions and uses of his innovative idea.
- "Teaching Black, an Evaluation of Methods and Resources," 1971 -

- 1971
- Collections - Artifact
"Teaching Black, an Evaluation of Methods and Resources," 1971
- Benjamin Lovett Teaching Dance Classes in Recently Completed Lovett Hall, April 1938 - After Henry Ford built the Lovett Hall ballroom in 1937, dance classes for the students of his Edison Institute schools moved from the dance room at Ford Motor Company Engineering Lab to this gracious ballroom setting. Students not only learned the steps to traditional American dances like the reel, schottische, and quadrille--but also the etiquette that went along with them.

- April 07, 1938
- Collections - Artifact
Benjamin Lovett Teaching Dance Classes in Recently Completed Lovett Hall, April 1938
After Henry Ford built the Lovett Hall ballroom in 1937, dance classes for the students of his Edison Institute schools moved from the dance room at Ford Motor Company Engineering Lab to this gracious ballroom setting. Students not only learned the steps to traditional American dances like the reel, schottische, and quadrille--but also the etiquette that went along with them.
- Woman Teaching Class for New Employees, Willow Run Bomber Plant, November 1943 - Women represented approximately one-third of the workers at Ford Motor Company's Willow Run plant, where they did everything from clerical work in the offices to riveting and welding on the assembly line. During World War II, women joined the workforce in record numbers to take on essential jobs traditionally held by men who had joined the armed forces.

- November 05, 1943
- Collections - Artifact
Woman Teaching Class for New Employees, Willow Run Bomber Plant, November 1943
Women represented approximately one-third of the workers at Ford Motor Company's Willow Run plant, where they did everything from clerical work in the offices to riveting and welding on the assembly line. During World War II, women joined the workforce in record numbers to take on essential jobs traditionally held by men who had joined the armed forces.