THE VESTIBULE SCHOOL
controlled conditions for a comparatively extensive period
of time.
Vestibule schools may be divided into two general kinds,
the office vestibule and the factory vestibule. Both
schools have the same purpose. However, there are likely
to be considerable differences between them in equipment
and size, and consequently in method. Each of these
types of vestibule schools will therefore be considered
separately.
THE OFFICE VESTIBULE SCHOOL
In describing the office vestibule school, it is unneces
sary to launch out into theory. One need only point to
the office training school of the Larkin Company of
Buffalo, one of the first and most successful schools of
the kind in the country, to see a complete example of the
methods and results of such a school. (See report of the
Committee on Office Training Schools, J. H. Puffer,
chairman, in the fourth and fifth annual Bulletins of the
National Association of Corporation Schools.)
In general, the vestibule school is built around those
classes of work which are most characteristic of the par
ticular office which the school is intended to serve. The
following classes of work are typical of almost all large
offices:
Typing
Correspondence
Counting-machine operating
Filing
Bookkeeping
Messenger service.
Each class of work is taken up separately by a group of
new workers. Let us suppose, now, that a female appli