Essays on Education, Volume 1 |
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Page 66
... lecture - room ought to be associated , as far as possible , with a series of experiments to be performed by the students themselves . As a process of mental training , the study of Chemistry has considerable value ; for it not only ...
... lecture - room ought to be associated , as far as possible , with a series of experiments to be performed by the students themselves . As a process of mental training , the study of Chemistry has considerable value ; for it not only ...
Page 72
... lectures to twenty - five boys of the Borough Road School , in order that we might judge of the importance and practicability of introducing the study of Chemistry into schools . During the lectures , a series of experiments were ...
... lectures to twenty - five boys of the Borough Road School , in order that we might judge of the importance and practicability of introducing the study of Chemistry into schools . During the lectures , a series of experiments were ...
Page 85
... Lectures , chap . vii . ) The absence of such exercise must consequently leave the mind uninformed of much that would tend to excite in it pleasurable emotions ; of much which , while it occu pied the attention , engaged the faculties ...
... Lectures , chap . vii . ) The absence of such exercise must consequently leave the mind uninformed of much that would tend to excite in it pleasurable emotions ; of much which , while it occu pied the attention , engaged the faculties ...
Page 207
... lectures are given upon the art by the founder himself , to which the elder boys are admitted before leaving the institution . Beyond schools for children there are other means for supplying the educational wants of the people in the ...
... lectures are given upon the art by the founder himself , to which the elder boys are admitted before leaving the institution . Beyond schools for children there are other means for supplying the educational wants of the people in the ...
Page 209
... without placing any great burden upon the schoolmaster ; the village school might be the lecture- room , and one of the boys the librarian . Evening schools for adults have been attended with good results in the FOR THE PEASANTRY . 209.
... without placing any great burden upon the schoolmaster ; the village school might be the lecture- room , and one of the boys the librarian . Evening schools for adults have been attended with good results in the FOR THE PEASANTRY . 209.
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Common terms and phrases
acquainted acquire adopted advantages Alcibiades application arithmetic attained attended boys cation character child classes considered course crime cultivation deaf deaf and dumb degree desire districts drawing effect elementary schools established Euclid exer exercise exertions feel garden girls give grammar Greek Greek language habits Harrietsham Hollingbourne ideas important improvement instance institution instruction intellectual kind labour language lectures Lenham lessons Liverpool Manchester Mechanics master mathematics means Mechanics ment metic mind month's rent moral natural philosophy nature number of children objects observed obtained optative moods parents parish persons practical present principles prison progress Prussia punishment pupils purpose racter read and write reason regard Salford scholars Scotland senses sing society Sunday schools taught teacher teaching things tical tion towns whole words young
Popular passages
Page 8 - And that which casts our proficiency therein so much behind is our time lost partly in too oft idle vacancies given both to schools and universities; partly in a preposterous exaction, forcing the empty wits of children to compose themes, verses, and orations, which are the acts of ripest judgment and the final work of a head filled by long reading and observing with elegant maxims and copious invention.
Page 313 - Tis a lesson you should heed — Try, try again. If at first you don't succeed, Try, try again ; Then your courage should appear, For, if you will persevere, You will conquer, never fear : Try, try again...
Page 66 - I am convinced that the method of teaching which approaches most nearly to the method of investigation, is incomparably the best ; since, not content with serving up a few barren and lifeless truths, it leads to the stock on which they grew ; it tends to set the reader himself in the track of invention, and to direct him into those paths in which the author has made his own discoveries, if he should be so happy as to have made any that are valuable.
Page 296 - On a perch, forming a triangle with a corner of the room, sat a cock and two hens ; under a stump bed immediately beneath, was a dog-kennel, in the occupation of three black terriers, whose barking, added to the noise of the children and the cackling of the fowls on the approach of a stranger, was almost deafening.
Page 74 - In doing this, he appeared to be chiefly influenced by the impressions communicated to him by his sense of smell. When a stranger approached him, he eagerly began to touch some part of his body, commonly taking hold of...
Page 312 - May just and righteous laws Uphold the public cause, And bless our isle ! Home of the brave and free, The land of liberty, We pray that still on thee Kind Heaven may smile ! 4 And not this land alone, But be Thy mercies known From- shore to shore.
Page 249 - Sounds which address the ear are lost and die In one short hour ; but that which strikes the eye Lives long upon the mind; the faithful sight Engraves the knowledge with a beam of light.
Page 295 - In the great majority of these schools there seems to be a complete want of order and system.
Page 12 - ... work by being spoken to, or by a little chastisement, to make them jump up. I was sometimes obliged to chastise them when they were almost fainting, and it hurt my feelings; then they would spring up and work pretty well for another hour; but the last two or three hours were my hardest work, for they then got so exhausted.
Page 75 - The knowledge which he has derived from the senses of touch, taste, and smell, seems fully as extensive as what any person of the most perfect faculties might be supposed to acquire, if he could by any contrivance be prevented from using his eyes and ears for the same period of time, from the moment of birth, and in the same retired situation of country.