An Introduction to the Study of Education and to TeachingHoughton Mifflin, 1925 - 476 sider |
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Side 6
... interest in education among our people to continue for more than a generation after the War for In- dependence was over and the new Federal Government had been established . The simple agricultural life of the time , the homogeneous ...
... interest in education among our people to continue for more than a generation after the War for In- dependence was over and the new Federal Government had been established . The simple agricultural life of the time , the homogeneous ...
Side 7
... interest for doing so , that we turned our attention to the creation of a democratic system of education for our people . So far as any real interest in education existed before about 1820 it was in the Latin grammar schools , the new ...
... interest for doing so , that we turned our attention to the creation of a democratic system of education for our people . So far as any real interest in education existed before about 1820 it was in the Latin grammar schools , the new ...
Side 8
... interest in the education of the masses . They made the school of the people common and much talked of , and they awakened thought and provoked dis- cussion on the question of public education . The growth of cities and the rise of ...
... interest in the education of the masses . They made the school of the people common and much talked of , and they awakened thought and provoked dis- cussion on the question of public education . The growth of cities and the rise of ...
Side 10
... interests , which felt that their " vested rights " were being taken away from them ; and at times of referenda in which the people were asked to advise their legislatures as to what to do in the matter . It was a time of acrimonious ...
... interests , which felt that their " vested rights " were being taken away from them ; and at times of referenda in which the people were asked to advise their legislatures as to what to do in the matter . It was a time of acrimonious ...
Side 11
... interests of both public and private welfare ; to convince legislators that it was safe to vote for free - school bills ; and to overcome the opposition due to apathy , re- ligious jealousies , and private interests . In time , though ...
... interests of both public and private welfare ; to convince legislators that it was safe to vote for free - school bills ; and to overcome the opposition due to apathy , re- ligious jealousies , and private interests . In time , though ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
ability attention become better Board of Education calls cent chaps chapter character child citizenship city school civic conception coöperation costs county-unit courses of study educa educational process Educational Psychology elementary school England towns give given grade growth high school important increased individual instinct institutions instruction Intelligence Quotient intelligence testing interest junior knowledge large number larger learning ment mental method modern moral National Education Association nature needs normal schools one-room schools period philosophy physical political preparation principal procedures professional psychology public education public school pupils recent reorganization school administration school board school buildings school discipline school district School Law school supervision School Survey school system Show skill social subjects superintendent of schools taxation teacher teaching tendency thinking tion to-day town township type of school United youth
Populære passager
Side 356 - God's worship, and settled the civil government, one of the next things we longed for and looked after was to advance learning and perpetuate it to posterity; dreading to leave an illiterate ministry to the churches, when our present ministers shall lie in the dust.
Side 159 - Consequently, education in a democracy, both within and without the school, should develop in each individual the knowledge, interests, ideals, habits, and powers whereby he will find his place and use that place to shape both himself and society toward ever nobler ends .... This commission, therefore, regards the following as the main objectives of education: 1.
Side 145 - Harvard College pays me for doing what I would gladly pay it for allowing me to do. No professional man, then, thinks of giving according to measure. Once engaged, he gives his best, gives his personal interest, himself. His heart is in his work, and for this no equivalent is possible...
Side 231 - The two ideas of science and art differ from one another as the understanding differs from the will, and as the indicative mode in Grammar differs from the imperative. The one deals in facts, and the other in precepts. Science is a collection of truths ; art is a body of rules, or directions for the conduct. The language of science is, This is, or This is not ; This does 'or does not happen. The language of art is, Do this ; Avoid that.
Side 447 - That it (the public school) will be endangered within a comparatively short time is evident, unless the cost of public education shall be brought within a limit of expense which the public can bear . . .", p.
Side 199 - Educational significance of intelligence measurements. The educational significance of this new means of determining the mental ability of school children is very large. Questions relating to proper classification in school, grading, promotion, choice of studies, amount of work, schoolroom procedure, vocational guidance, and the proper handling of sub-normal children on the one hand and gifted children on the other, all acquire new meaning in the light of intelligence measurements.
Side 61 - State to formulate a constructive policy for the development of the education of the people of the State, and to change this policy from time to time as the changing needs of the State may seem to require. This may involve more than the mere regulation of schools, and may properly include such educational agencies and efforts as libraries, playgrounds, health supervision, and adult education. Instead of being a passive tax-gatherer and lawgiver, the State should become an active, energetic agent,...
Side 159 - Education in the United States should be guided by a clear conception of the meaning of democracy. It is the ideal of democracy that the individual and society may find fulfillment each in the other.
Side 451 - ... and the embarrassments hitherto found in this country, from the financing of education, will come to an end.
Side 56 - ... Conclusions of the different chapters summarized 250 BIBLIOGRAPHY 254 PART I CHANGES; INEQUALITIES EXISTING; PROVISIONS FOR RELIEF CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION : THE PROBLEM STATED THE first half century of our Republic, from an educational point of view, was largely given over to the establishment of the principle that " the whole state is interested in the education of the children of the state.