Every teacher on starting with a new class or in a new locality, to make sure that his efforts along some lines are not utterly lost, should undertake to explore carefully section by section children's minds... The Pedagogical Seminary - Side 3771907Fuld visning - Om denne bog
| United States. Bureau of Education - 1899 - 1394 sider
...pedagogic value the knowledge of which it is safe to assume at the beginning of school life». II. The best preparation parents can give their children for good school training is to rnako them acquainted with natural objects, especially with sights and sounds of tbe country, and send... | |
| 1883 - 372 sider
...primary-school work. II. The best preparation parents can give their children for good school-training is to make them acquainted with natural objects, especially with the sights and sounds of the country and talk about them, and send them to good and hygienic as distinct from most fashionable kindergartens.... | |
| Albert Shaw - 1892 - 790 sider
...primary-school work. II. The best preparation parents can give their children for good school-training is to make them acquainted with natural objects, especially...the country, and send them to good and hygienic, as distinct from the most fashionable, kindergartens. III. Every teacher on starting with a new class... | |
| William Otterbein Krohn - 1894 - 416 sider
...rote learning. 2. The best preparation parents can give children for real valuable school learning is to make them acquainted with natural objects, especially...and sounds of the country, and send them to good, common-sense kindergartens. "A country barn or a forest is a great school at that age." In a recent... | |
| Reuben Post Halleck - 1896 - 286 sider
...expect to have well-cultivated senses in children who live in crowded tenements. Dr. Hall says : " The best preparation parents can give their children...especially with the sights and sounds of the country. . . . " As our methods of teaching grow natural, we realize that city life is unnatural, and that those... | |
| Russell B. Smith, Everett C. Willard - 1897 - 292 sider
...senses as to fail to teach him to read."—RP Halleck, MA, Education of the Central Nervous System. " The best preparation parents can give their children...objects, especially with the sights and sounds of the country."—President G. Stanley Hall. Though the sense of touch is the simplest of all the senses,... | |
| Arthur MacDonald - 1899 - 348 sider
...of pedagogic value the knowledge of which it is safe to assume at the beginning of school life. II. The best preparation parents can give their children...them acquainted with natural objects, especially with sights and sounds of the country, and send them to hygienic rather than to fashionable kindergartens.... | |
| Arthur MacDonald - 1899 - 378 sider
...pedagogic value the knowledge of which it is safe to assume at tho begiuniug of school life. II. Tho best preparation parents can give their children for...them acquainted with natural objects, especially with sights and sounds of the country, and send them to hygienic rather than to fashionable kindergartens.... | |
| Edwin Asbury Kirkpatrick - 1903 - 414 sider
...study, Dr. Hall concludes: (1) "There is next to nothing of pedagogic value, the knowledge of which is safe to assume, at the outset of school life. (2)...them acquainted with natural objects, especially with sights and sounds of the country. (3) Every teacher, on starting with a new class, or in a new locality,... | |
| Edwin Asbury Kirkpatrick - 1903 - 404 sider
...is safe to assume, at the outset of school life. (2) The best preparation parents can give their T children for good school training is to make them acquainted with natural objects, especially with sights and sounds of the country. (3) Every teacher, on starting with a new class, or in a new locality,... | |
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