American Annals of Education and Instruction, Volume 7Allen & Ticknor, 1837 |
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Página 2
... give it under other circumstances . On the other hand , he trusts that the friends of the work will still adhere to the resolution which has preserved it hitherto , that " one American periodical on Education shall be sustained . " He ...
... give it under other circumstances . On the other hand , he trusts that the friends of the work will still adhere to the resolution which has preserved it hitherto , that " one American periodical on Education shall be sustained . " He ...
Página 4
... give to the eye , and to the ear , and to the hand , something which approaches to omnipresence and omni- potence . It is by this course of vibrations and imperfections only , that any art , or any science attains its perfection , nay ...
... give to the eye , and to the ear , and to the hand , something which approaches to omnipresence and omni- potence . It is by this course of vibrations and imperfections only , that any art , or any science attains its perfection , nay ...
Página 6
... give to the eye , and to the ear , and to the hand , something which approaches to omnipresence and omni- potence . It is by this course of vibrations and imperfections only , that any art , or any science attains its perfection , — nay ...
... give to the eye , and to the ear , and to the hand , something which approaches to omnipresence and omni- potence . It is by this course of vibrations and imperfections only , that any art , or any science attains its perfection , — nay ...
Página 9
... give the best occasion for it . 8. Pestalozzi , as well as Basedow , attached great importance to Arithmetic , particularly to Mental Arithmetic . He valued it , however , not merely in the limited view of its practical usefulness , but ...
... give the best occasion for it . 8. Pestalozzi , as well as Basedow , attached great importance to Arithmetic , particularly to Mental Arithmetic . He valued it , however , not merely in the limited view of its practical usefulness , but ...
Página 10
... give this branch of instruction a better form . * 11. He opposed the abuse which was made of the Socratic method in ... gives out the problems in a proper order and leaves them to be solved by the pupils , by the exertion of their own ...
... give this branch of instruction a better form . * 11. He opposed the abuse which was made of the Socratic method in ... gives out the problems in a proper order and leaves them to be solved by the pupils , by the exertion of their own ...
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Palavras e frases frequentes
annual attend believe better Boston boys canton cation character child Committee common schools corporal punishment course discipline district school duty effect efforts especially Essex county evil exercise feel female Fribourg friends of education furnish give grammar habits Hackney Wick happy human importance improvement infant schools influence institutions instruction interest knowledge labor language least lectures less lessons Lyceum manner Massachusetts master means ment method mind missionary of education Monitorial System moral nature never ninetynine Notices of Books object observed opinion parents perhaps persons Pestalozzi physical education practice present principles punishment pupils received regard religious render respect scholars school house school room schoolmaster Seminary society spirit taught teach teachers thing tion town VITTORINO DA FELTRE vocal music whole Worcester County words writing young youth
Passagens conhecidas
Página 422 - Behold, the nations are as a drop of a bucket, And are counted as the small dust of the balance: Behold, he taketh up the isles as a very little thing.
Página 234 - August of each year, the total number of children in the state between the ages of five and seventeen years, as shown by the latest reports of the county and city and county superintendents on file in his office.
Página 189 - Annual Report of the Trustees of the New England Institution for the Education of the Blind.
Página 166 - A verb is a word which signifies to be, to do, or to suffer ; as, I am — I rule — I am ruled.
Página 11 - ... preserved a child-like character in this respect even to old age. It was probably this temperament, which led him to estimate at a low rate the importance of positive religious truth in the education of children, and to maintain that the mere habit of faith and love, if cultivated toward earthly friends and benefactors, would, of course, be transferred to our Heavenly Father, whenever his character should be exhibited to the mind of the child.
Página 137 - There should be a professor or professors, of piety, of irreproachable character and good education, and of tried ability and skill in teaching. 2. A library, not necessarily large, but well chosen, of books on subjects to be taught, and on the art of teaching. 3. School-rooms, well situated, and arranged, heated, ventilated, and furnished, in the manner best approved by experienced teachers. 4. A select apparatus of globes, maps, and other instruments most useful for illustration. 5. A situation...
Página 333 - NATURAL THEOLOGY ; or the Testimony of Nature to the Being, Perfections, and Government of God. By the Rev. HENRY FERGUS.
Página 12 - These circumstances, combined with the want of tact in reference to the affairs of common life, materially impaired his powers of usefulness as a practical instructor of youth. The rapid progress of his ideas rarely allowed...
Página 43 - Aye, for the honor of the thing, I had rather have it said of me, that I was, by choice, the humblest citizen of the state, making the best provision for the education of all its children, and that I had the heart to appreciate this blessing, than sit on a throne of ivory and gold, the monarch of an empire on which the sun never sets. Husbandmen, sow the seed of instruction in your sons and daughters
Página 375 - At a General Assembly of the State of Connecticut, holden at Hartford in said State, on the first Wednesday of May, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and thirty-one.