Pestalozzi: An Account of His Life and WorkLongmans, Green, and Company, 1908 - 322 sider |
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... PRACTICAL TEACHER 283 XV . SOME CRITICISMS ON PESTALOZZI'S THEORIES 291 XVI . WHAT PESTALOZZI DID FOR EDUCATION 307 SOME BOOKS FOR REFERENCE , AND SUGGESTIONS FOR FURTHER READING • 319 INDEX • 321 vii LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS . PESTALOZZI ...
... PRACTICAL TEACHER 283 XV . SOME CRITICISMS ON PESTALOZZI'S THEORIES 291 XVI . WHAT PESTALOZZI DID FOR EDUCATION 307 SOME BOOKS FOR REFERENCE , AND SUGGESTIONS FOR FURTHER READING • 319 INDEX • 321 vii LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS . PESTALOZZI ...
Side 11
... practical mischievous- ness ... it was the match which kindled revolutionary fire in generous breasts throughout Europe . . . . His theory made the native land what it had been to the citizens of earlier date , a true centre of ...
... practical mischievous- ness ... it was the match which kindled revolutionary fire in generous breasts throughout Europe . . . . His theory made the native land what it had been to the citizens of earlier date , a true centre of ...
Side 17
... Practical Institution , " was established . This was for the children of the middle classes in Switzerland . The pupils belonged to the families of men of business , mechanics and professional men ; and they were taught such subjects as ...
... Practical Institution , " was established . This was for the children of the middle classes in Switzerland . The pupils belonged to the families of men of business , mechanics and professional men ; and they were taught such subjects as ...
Side 18
... practical form . In all spheres of thought the principle of following Nature and ` Reason was beginning to become predominant at this period , and it was applied , for the first time , to education . Men were freeing themselves from the ...
... practical form . In all spheres of thought the principle of following Nature and ` Reason was beginning to become predominant at this period , and it was applied , for the first time , to education . Men were freeing themselves from the ...
Side 19
... practical success in life . He died when Pestalozzi was only six years of age , and left the family in very straitened circumstances . The widow , with her two boys and a girl , was helped by members of the Pestalozzi family , and ...
... practical success in life . He died when Pestalozzi was only six years of age , and left the family in very straitened circumstances . The widow , with her two boys and a girl , was helped by members of the Pestalozzi family , and ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
Abbeyleix ability able absolute pitch amongst arithmetic Biber Bonnal Burgdorf called carried castle character Charles Monnard child classes clear connected corporal punishment course drawing educa elementary elements endeavoured exer exercises experience faculties feelings Fichte Fribourg Gertrude Teaches give Guimps gymnastics heart Herbart human ideas impressions Infants influence institution instruction intellectual intuition intuitive knowledge knowledge Krüsi language laws learner Leonard and Gertrude lessons letters living lozzi manner matter means ment method mind Miss Mayo moral mother nature Neuhof never objects observation perceptions Pesta physical poor possible practical principles prisoner's base pupils Ramsauer Raumer schoolmaster sense sense-impressions simple social society soon sound Soyaux speak Stanz success Swan's Song Swiss Switzerland taught teacher tetrachord things thought tion true truth whilst whole words writing Yverdon Zurich
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Side 114 - We cannot look, however imperfectly, upon a great man, without gaining something by him. He is the living light-fountain, which it is good and pleasant to be near.
Side 114 - I take it, universal history, the history of what man has accomplished in this world, is at bottom the history of the great men who have worked here.
Side 278 - I was indefatigable in putting syllables together and arranging them in a graduated series ; I did the same for numbers ; I filled whole note-books with them; I sought by every means to simplify the elements of reading and arithmetic, and by grouping them psychologically, enable the child to pass easily and surely from the first step to the second, from the second to the third, and so on. The pupils no longer drew letters on their slates, but lines, curves, angles, and squares.
Side 48 - Pastors and teachers of the nations, know you man ; is it with you a matter of conscience to understand his nature and destiny ? " All mankind are in their nature alike, they have but one path to contentment. The natural faculties of each one are to be perfected into pure human wisdom. This general education of man must serve as the foundation to every education of a particular rank.
Side 271 - I have now put before you my views as to the family spirit which ought to prevail in an educational establishment, and I have told you of my attempts to carry them out. I have still to explain the essential principles upon which all my teaching was based. I knew no other order, method, or art, but that which resulted naturally from my children's conviction of my love for them, nor did I care to know any other. Thus I subordinated the instruction of my children to a higher aim, which was to arouse...
Side 71 - That is why steady application soon became easy to them, its object being in perfect accordance with their wishes and their hopes. Virtue, my friend, is developed by this agreement, just as the young plant thrives when the soil suits its nature, and supplies the needs of its tender shoots. I witnessed the growth of an inward strength in my children, which, in its general development, far surpassed my expectations, and in its particular manifestations not only often surprised me, but touched me deeply....
Side 18 - At the same time, the wish to be acquainted with some branches of knowledge that took hold on my heart and my imagination, even though I neglected the means of acquiring them, was nevertheless enthusiastically alive within me ; and unfortunately, the tone of public instruction in my native town at this period was in a high degree calculated to foster this visionary fancy of taking an active interest in, and believing one's self capable of, the practice of things in which one had by no means had sufficient...
Side 225 - ... it. We were then told to take some of the clay which lay in beds on one side of the valley, and fill the baskets which we had brought for the purpose. On our return to the Castle, we took our places at the long tables, and reproduced in relief the valley we had just studied, each one doing the part which had been allotted to him. In the course of the next few days more walks and more explorations, each day on higher ground and each time with a further extension of our work. Only when our relief...
Side 245 - I would ask them half in fun to keep their eyes fixed on their middle fingers. It is hardly credible how useful simple things of this sort sometimes are as means to the very highest ends. One young girl, for instance, who had been little better than a savage, by keeping her head and body upright, and not looking about, made more progress in her moral education than any one would have believed possible.
Side 292 - But what does he go on to say? "Therefore I make use of it, and endeavor, by the guidance of its uttered sounds, to reproduce in the child the self-same impressions which, in the human race, have occasioned and formed these sounds. Great is the gift of language. It gives to the child in one moment what nature required thousands of years to give man.