Essays on Educational ReformersLongmans, Green and Company, 1868 - 328 sider |
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Side 84
... becomes pedantry ; wit , buffoonery ; plain- ness , rusticity ; good - nature , fawning ; and there cannot be a good quality in him which want of breeding will not warp and disfigure to his disad- vantage . ' By means of the tutor's ...
... becomes pedantry ; wit , buffoonery ; plain- ness , rusticity ; good - nature , fawning ; and there cannot be a good quality in him which want of breeding will not warp and disfigure to his disad- vantage . ' By means of the tutor's ...
Side 96
... become commonplace , and usage which is easily confounded with corruptions that disfigure it . So advances are made somewhat after this manner : the reformer , urged on by his enthusiasm , attacks use and wont with more spirit than ...
... become commonplace , and usage which is easily confounded with corruptions that disfigure it . So advances are made somewhat after this manner : the reformer , urged on by his enthusiasm , attacks use and wont with more spirit than ...
Side 100
... become the wisest of men . Thus , by setting out with doing nothing , you would produce a prodigy of education ... becomes necessary for them take care not to give them to - day , if it may be deferred without danger till to - morrow ...
... become the wisest of men . Thus , by setting out with doing nothing , you would produce a prodigy of education ... becomes necessary for them take care not to give them to - day , if it may be deferred without danger till to - morrow ...
Side 106
... become rotten : we shall have young professors and old children . Childhood has its manner of seeing , perceiving , and thinking , peculiar to itself ; nothing is more absurd than our being anxious to substitute our own in its stead ...
... become rotten : we shall have young professors and old children . Childhood has its manner of seeing , perceiving , and thinking , peculiar to itself ; nothing is more absurd than our being anxious to substitute our own in its stead ...
Side 107
... become the companion of his pupil , and gain his confidence by partaking of his amusements . There are not things enough in common between childhood and manhood , to form a solid attachment at so great a distance . Children sometimes ...
... become the companion of his pupil , and gain his confidence by partaking of his amusements . There are not things enough in common between childhood and manhood , to form a solid attachment at so great a distance . Children sometimes ...
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acquired APPENDIX Ascham attention Audi alteram partem Basedow besoin bien boys c'est cation child Comenius connected course cultivate declension deponent verb Dessau docet Émile enfant English Eustachian tubes everything exercises facts faculties feeling German give Göthe grammar heart Heptarchy homme human ideas ignorant important influence instruction intellectual interest Jacotot jamais Jesuits kind knowledge labour language Latin Latin language ledge lesson Leszno master Matthew Arnold means memory method mind moral n'est nature Neuhof never notion object observation opinion Orbis Pictus perhaps Pestalozzi Philanthropin practice principles pupils qu'il qu'on quæ raison Ratich rien Rousseau rules Sacchini says scholars schoolmaster senses soon speak Spencer taught teacher teaching things thought tion tongue tout translation truth understand words writing young youth