A Student's History of EducationMacmillan, 1917 - 453 sider |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-5 af 45
Side 12
... appeared considerable regard for individuality . peared among They were the first people whose outlook seems to have been toward the future rather than the past , and they first made a serious attempt to promote human develop- ment in ...
... appeared considerable regard for individuality . peared among They were the first people whose outlook seems to have been toward the future rather than the past , and they first made a serious attempt to promote human develop- ment in ...
Side 13
... appeared physically promising , he was formally adopted by the state and left with his mother for rearing until seven . At that age the boys were placed in charge of a state officer and ate and slept in a kind of public barracks . Here ...
... appeared physically promising , he was formally adopted by the state and left with his mother for rearing until seven . At that age the boys were placed in charge of a state officer and ate and slept in a kind of public barracks . Here ...
Side 60
... appeared in his pupils , and intellectual stagnation never again prevailed . Condition of Education in the Eighth Century . — In the course of the seventh and eighth centuries mediæval education met with considerable retrogression . The ...
... appeared in his pupils , and intellectual stagnation never again prevailed . Condition of Education in the Eighth Century . — In the course of the seventh and eighth centuries mediæval education met with considerable retrogression . The ...
Side 62
... appeared in the course . The schools in the villages , under the care of the parish priests , taught only the rudi- ments , the Lord's Prayer , the Creed , and the Psalms . Tuition was free in all schools for those intending to become ...
... appeared in the course . The schools in the villages , under the care of the parish priests , taught only the rudi- ments , the Lord's Prayer , the Creed , and the Psalms . Tuition was free in all schools for those intending to become ...
Side 64
... appeared . While , owing to the weakness of Charle- magne's successors and the attacks of the Northmen , learning gradually faded once more , intellectual stagna- tion never again prevailed . Through the revival of the great Frankish ...
... appeared . While , owing to the weakness of Charle- magne's successors and the attacks of the Northmen , learning gradually faded once more , intellectual stagna- tion never again prevailed . Through the revival of the great Frankish ...
Indhold
3 | |
11 | |
32 | |
42 | |
53 | |
60 | |
65 | |
74 | |
179 | |
187 | |
203 | |
210 | |
230 | |
251 | |
276 | |
302 | |
83 | |
88 | |
99 | |
124 | |
151 | |
162 | |
333 | |
370 | |
397 | |
418 | |
441 | |
Andre udgaver - Se alle
Almindelige termer og sætninger
academies Alcuin American Aristotle awakening became began boys Burgdorf cation chap Christian Church cities classes classical colleges colonies Comenius common schools Connecticut course curriculum doctrines early educa eighteenth century elementary education elementary schools Emile England English established Europe formal France Froebel furnished German gild gradually greatly Greek Herbart Herbartian History of Education humanism humanistic ideals ideas individual infant schools influence institutions instruction intellectual interest Jesuit kindergarten knowledge largely later Latin learning Massachusetts mediæval ment methods Middle Ages modern monasticism monitorial system Montessori Method moral movement natural nineteenth century normal schools organization period Pestalozzi philosophy physical Plato practical principles Prussia public education public schools pupils realism Realschule reform religious Roman Rousseau scholasticism school system sciences scientific secondary schools social social realism society spread subjects SUPPLEMENTARY READING Graves taught teachers teaching tendency theory tion tional town treatises United universal education various Yverdon