details fromThe Young Readers Press First Dictionary by John Trevaskis & Robin Hyman, illustrated by John Seares Riley, Young Readers Press, NY, 1967 (1973)---I'm looking for anything else John Seares Riley may have illustrated. Google has let me down so far.
Time, Ourselves, Minibeasts, Early experiences, Structures and forces, and Coloured Things, Macdonald Educational (A Unit For Teachers), published for the Schools Council by MacDonald Educational Ltd., London, 1972-1973 (For me, the contents don't quite live up to the covers, but I'll try to post the best of in the near future.)
Play and Playthings for the Preschool Child by E.M.Matterson, Penguin, 1965 (previously) Creative Play for the Developing Child by Clare Cherry, Fearon-Pitman Publishers, 1976
Transformation of Surface Texture through Illumination
Student work from the Studies in Light and Color course at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Professor Gyorgy Kepes in charge; Nishan Bichajian, instructor. These courses were first organized in 1946 by Kepes. from Education and Vision, edited by Gyorgy Kepes, George Baziller, NY, 1965 (Vision + Value Series)
stills from A Touch of Greatness (1964), Literature Au-Go-Go! (1966), From Sea To Shining Sea (1966), all produced and directed by Albert Cullum, shot and edited by Robert Downey (Putney Swope), music by Tom O'Horgan (with students)
audio excerpts from A Touch Of Greatness and Literature Au-Go-Go
These films are included (as DVD bonus features) with the documentary A Touch Of Greatness, a film by Leslie Sullivan, PBS/First Run Films, 2004
Albert Cullum was an elementary school teacher in Rye, NY, from 1956-66. Cullum believed that children should have early exposure to literary classics, and together with his fifth graders, he produced plays by Shakespeare, Sophocles and Shaw. His friend Robert Downey filmed these events in and out of the classroom, making three incredible short films.
More here. Documentary trailer here. "Every child should have the chance to play the part of St. Joan before the age of twelve, because the older you get, the more difficult it is to hear the voices of St. Margaret and St. Catherine calling you." -A.Cullum thanks to Burgin at VKBMKL for her post that sent me off to find this. Ben, this one's for you.