Development of Manual Training in the United StatesIntelligencer print, 1914 - 90 sider |
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Side 9
... means likely to stimulate the average child , none will pro- duce a greater desire for activity than physical work . I would desire that various kinds of handicraft work might be intro- duced . " " 3 The story of Pestalozzi's life is a ...
... means likely to stimulate the average child , none will pro- duce a greater desire for activity than physical work . I would desire that various kinds of handicraft work might be intro- duced . " " 3 The story of Pestalozzi's life is a ...
Side 11
... mean time , the same question was being agitated in the United States , but not as extensively as in some of the foreign countries . One of the first , and perhaps the first , of our coun- trymen to give his views on this phase of ...
... mean time , the same question was being agitated in the United States , but not as extensively as in some of the foreign countries . One of the first , and perhaps the first , of our coun- trymen to give his views on this phase of ...
Side 12
... means and methods is to pre- pare for productive efficiency is vocational " . . " and from the standpoint of social necessity , vocational education given by some agency is indispensable . " He goes on to show that this agency should be ...
... means and methods is to pre- pare for productive efficiency is vocational " . . " and from the standpoint of social necessity , vocational education given by some agency is indispensable . " He goes on to show that this agency should be ...
Side 13
... means of useful amusements , which are related to those employments , will be impracticable ; but their amuse- ments may be derived from cultivating a spot of ground ; for where is the lawyer , the physician , the divine , or the ...
... means of useful amusements , which are related to those employments , will be impracticable ; but their amuse- ments may be derived from cultivating a spot of ground ; for where is the lawyer , the physician , the divine , or the ...
Side 19
... means of fitting boys and girls ' as quickly as possible for self - support . ' On June 19 , 1883 , the committee reported that it would be expedient to establish a high school for manual education under the supervision of the board ...
... means of fitting boys and girls ' as quickly as possible for self - support . ' On June 19 , 1883 , the committee reported that it would be expedient to establish a high school for manual education under the supervision of the board ...
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Development of Manual Training, in the United States (Classic Reprint) Hamilton Ross Smith Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2017 |
Almindelige termer og sætninger
academic admission agriculture Algebra believe that manual Benjamin Rush boys and girls cent cities Commissioner's Report committee continuation schools course of study cultural D. C. Heath demand Doctor of Philosophy Domestic Science educa Educational Value established experience fact Fitchburg Fort Wayne Froebel Georg Kerschensteiner girls in school give high school course Hinsdale Horace Mann Ibid increase Industrial Education industrial school institutions instruction instrumental in keeping introduction of manual Manual Arts Manual Labor Academies manual training high Manual Training School Massachusetts mathematics mechanic arts Menominie ment National Society number of boys occupations percentage of boys Pestalozzi prepare present principal Promotion of Industrial public school system public schools Samuel E secondary school statistics subjects teachers tion trade training and domestic training high school United States Commissioner's University Value of Manual visual perception Vocational Education Vocational Training yes no Ind yes no yes yes yes ΙΟ
Populære passager
Side 30 - ... that learning may not be buried in the grave of our fathers in the Church and Commonwealth, the Lord assisting our endeavors, — "It is therefore ordered, That every township in. this jurisdiction, after the Lord hath increased them •to the number of fifty householders, shall then forthwith appoint one within their town to teach all such children as shall resort to him to write and read...
Side 15 - State which may take and claim the benefit of this act, to the endowment, support, and maintenance of at least one college where the leading object shall be, without excluding other scientific and classical studies, and including military tactics, to teach such branches of learning as are related to agriculture and the mechanic arts, in such manner as the legislatures of the States may respectively prescribe, in order to promote the liberal and practical education of the industrial classes in the...
Side 8 - Every child, boy, and youth, whatever his condition or position in life should devote daily at least one or two hours to some serious activity in the production of some definite external piece of work. Lessons through and by work, through and from life, are by far the most impressive and intelligible, and most continuously and intensely progressive both in themselves and in their effect on the learner.
Side 30 - And it is further ordered, that where any town shall increase to the number of one hundred families or householders, they shall set up a grammar school, the master thereof being able to instruct youth so far as they may be fitted for the university...
Side 16 - Its object shall be instruction in mathematics, drawing, and the English branches of a high-school course, and instruction and practice in the use of tools. The tool instruction, as at present contemplated, shall include carpentry, wood-turning, patternmaking, iron...
Side 8 - ... in life, that educational institutions should make it one of their most constant endeavors to dispel this delusion. The domestic and scholastic education of our time leads children to indolence and laziness; a vast amount of human power thereby remains undeveloped and is lost. It would be a most wholesome arrangement in schools to establish actual working hours similar to the existing study hours ; and it will surely come to this.
Side 71 - The wide indifference to manual training as a school subject may be due to the narrow view which has prevailed among its chief advocates. It has been urged as a cultural subject, mainly useful as a stimulus to other forms of intellectual effort — a sort of mustard relish, an appetizer — to be conducted without reference to any industrial end. It has been severed from real life as completely as have other school activities. Thus it has come about that the overmastering influences of school traditions...
Side 37 - The secondary schools of the United States, taken as a whole, do not exist for the purpose of preparing boys and girls for colleges. Only an insignificant percentage of the graduates of these schools go to colleges or scientific schools. Their main function is to prepare for the duties of life...
Side 14 - ... of labor performed, the same pupil has excelled the other, in equal ratio, in his intellectual studies. Fourth, That manual labor institutions tend to break down the distinctions between rich and poor which exist in society, inasmuch as they give an almost equal opportunity of education to the poor by labor, as is afforded to the rich by the possession of wealth...
Side 6 - That in no case the Art of Drawing and designing be omitted, to what course of Life soever those children are to be applied, since the use thereof for expressing the conceptions of the mind, seemes ( at least to us ) to be little inf eriour to that of Writing, and in many cases performeth what by words is impossible.
Henvisninger til denne bog
Manual and Industrial Education at Girard College, 1831-1965: An Era in ... Louis A. Romano Ingen forhåndsvisning - 1980 |