| Education - 1854 - 480 pages
...prevent them from acquiringlrhign" order of education, amTwEb" caînrotrbe expected to overcome" tTie difficulties of a foreign language, — ^can only...through one or other of these vernacular ..languages."" 14. In any general system of education, the English language should be taught where there is a demand... | |
| Great Britain - 1878 - 890 pages
...has hitherto been necessary, owing to the want of translations or adaptations of European works iu the vernacular languages of India, and to the very...becoming unfit to be converted into vehicles of European science. It would not appoint any one to superintend educational work as a director of public instruction,... | |
| Sir Roper Lethbridge - Education - 1882 - 502 pages
...therefore, that in any general system of education the study of them should be assiduously attended to. And any acquaintance with improved European knowledge...through one or other of these vernacular languages. 14. In any general system of education, the English language should be taught where there is a demand... | |
| Manibhai Jasbhai - Education - 1899 - 250 pages
...therefore, that, in any general system of education, the study of them should be assiduously attended to, and any acquaintance with improved European knowledge...through one or other of these vernacular languages. 14. In any general system of education, the English language should be taught where there is a demand... | |
| George Anderson - 1921 - 196 pages
...acquaintance with improved European knowledge which is to be communicated to the great mass of the people can only be conveyed to them through one or other of these vernacular languages. §§ 17 and 18.—Educational Administration.—We have determined to create an Educational Department... | |
| William Paton - Missionaries - 1923 - 258 pages
...acquaintance with improved European knowledge which is to be communicated to the great mass of the people can only be conveyed to them through one or other of these vernacular languages. 1 Ibid., pp. 243, 244. In many ways the " grant-in-aid " system begun by this Dispatch is the most... | |
| Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons - Bills, Legislative - 1854 - 498 pages
...therefore, that in any general system of education the study of them should be assiduously attended to. And any acquaintance with improved European knowledge...through one or other of these vernacular languages. 14. In any general system of education, the English language should be taught where there is a demand... | |
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