Report of the Committee of Council on Education (England and Wales), with Appendix, Bind 2H.M. Stationery Office, 1845 |
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Side 10
... parents in some respects better than no school , for by sending the children to it in the summer their clothes will be less spoiled and torn than in the lanes and hedges , and in the winter it will offer a refuge against their being ...
... parents in some respects better than no school , for by sending the children to it in the summer their clothes will be less spoiled and torn than in the lanes and hedges , and in the winter it will offer a refuge against their being ...
Side 13
... parents are , some will be found to make sacrifices to procure education for their children , if only the means for such education as is really precious be within reach . - With all the aid now offered from public bodies , there are ...
... parents are , some will be found to make sacrifices to procure education for their children , if only the means for such education as is really precious be within reach . - With all the aid now offered from public bodies , there are ...
Side 35
... parents send in writing a request that it may not be required of their children ; the consequence is , that the catechism is not taught to about one - third of the children ; all that I saw or heard with reference to the working of this ...
... parents send in writing a request that it may not be required of their children ; the consequence is , that the catechism is not taught to about one - third of the children ; all that I saw or heard with reference to the working of this ...
Side 40
... parents are decided Dissenters , they are expected to go with their parents to the chapel , and to the chapel - school . If Dissenters are careless about the religious welfare of their children , we then strive to bring them to school ...
... parents are decided Dissenters , they are expected to go with their parents to the chapel , and to the chapel - school . If Dissenters are careless about the religious welfare of their children , we then strive to bring them to school ...
Side 41
... parents will not allow to come to church altogether without education ? God forbid ! God forbid that we should usurp the awful prerogative of making the children suffer in this manner for the fault of their parents ! Let it not be ...
... parents will not allow to come to church altogether without education ? God forbid ! God forbid that we should usurp the awful prerogative of making the children suffer in this manner for the fault of their parents ! Let it not be ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
able acquainted Allonby amount annual appears arithmetic arrangement average attendance Barnard Castle Bedfordshire Berwick-upon-Tweed Boys Girls Boys British Schools building Catechism character child Church circumstances Cleckheaton clergyman Compound Rules conduct daily schools day-schools discipline district Ditto duties East Ord efficient elementary endowment erected examination exercise Fees Geography Girls Boys Girls Grammar grant Hainworth HENRY MOSELEY History Holbeck Huntingdonshire improvement Infant infant-school Inspec inspection instances intelligence knowledge labour Lancashire lessons Lordships master means ment Mental Arithmetic metic Milnrow mistress monitorial system monitors months moral Morpeth NAME OF SCHOOL National School Northowram number of children Numbers Present pains parents parish parochial pleasing population prayers principles pupils question received religious instruction remarkable Report respect Rochdale Salford satisfactory school-room schoolmaster Scripture Slates Society Sunday-school taught teachers teaching Tintwistle tion week whole Wigton words workhouse writing
Populære passager
Side 601 - If a straight line be divided into any two parts, the squares of the whole line, and of one of the parts, are equal to twice the rectangle contained by the whole and that part, together with the square of the other part. Let the straight line AB be divided into any two parts in the point C ; the squares of AB, BC are equal to twice the rectangle AB, BC, together with the square of AC.
Side 216 - The usual, lazy, and short Way by Chastisement, and the Rod, which is the only Instrument of Government that Tutors generally know, or ever think of, is the most unfit of any to be used in Education...
Side 601 - To divide a given straight line into two parts, so that the rectangle contained by the whole and one of the parts, shall be equal to the square of the other part.
Side 601 - If, from the ends of the side of a triangle, there be drawn two straight lines to a point within the triangle, these shall be less than, the other two sides of the triangle, but shall contain a greater angle. Let...
Side 103 - Venus a pea, on a circle 284 feet in diameter; the Earth also a pea, on a circle of 430 feet; Mars a rather large pin's head, on a circle of...
Side 230 - In 1811 the National Society for Educating the Poor in the Principles of the Established Church was founded; in 1814 the British and Foreign School Society for non-denominational Biblereading. Admiral Cornwallis, the "Billy-go-tight...
Side 596 - St. Peter therefore asserts these three things of Jesus : that he was Christ, — that he was the Son of Man, — and that he was the Son of God. The Son of Man, and the Son of God, are distinct titles of the Messiah.
Side 103 - To imitate the motions of the planets, in the above-mentioned orbits, Mercury must describe its own diameter in 41 seconds ; Venus, in 4 minutes 14 seconds ; the earth, in 7 minutes ; Mars, in 4 minutes, 48 seconds ; Jupiter, in 2 hours 56 minutes ; Saturn, in 3 hours 13 minutes; and Uranus, in 2 hours 16 minutes."— pp.
Side 103 - ... 430 feet; Mars a rather large pin's head, on a circle of 654 feet; Juno, Ceres, Vesta, and Pallas, grains of sand, in orbits of from 1000 to 1200 feet; Jupiter a moderate-sized orange, in a circle nearly half a mile across; Saturn a small orange, on a circle of four-fifths of a mile...
Side 642 - Parallelograms upon the same base and between the same parallels, are equal to one another.