[3] By 1903 she was one of twelve teachers chosen to serve on an advisory board on elementary education in her county.
Moreover, she believed that the final creation should not be judged by adult concepts of how good the production was but through the eyes of the participants.
[4] Johnson's achievement's became well known and although she was only the headmistress of a small Sussex school her work had wide interest.
Johnson had to leave the profession and one source says this was due to the scandal of marrying a former younger pupil.
[1] Her work was built on by Henry Caldwell Cook at The Perse School and popularised in his book "The Play Way".