Pestalozzi: His Life and WorkD. Appleton, 1890 - 438 sider |
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Side 45
... result of caprice , or vanity , or a partiality for knowledge which is not essential . To ensure obedience it is most important that children should know exactly what is forbidden . Nothing produces so much bitter feeling as the ...
... result of caprice , or vanity , or a partiality for knowledge which is not essential . To ensure obedience it is most important that children should know exactly what is forbidden . Nothing produces so much bitter feeling as the ...
Side 53
... results ; he found that they seldom worked with a will , that they nearly always had inveterate vices , and hopelessly bad methods ; he hoped more , however , from the children , who , brought up under his own roof , would owe him ...
... results ; he found that they seldom worked with a will , that they nearly always had inveterate vices , and hopelessly bad methods ; he hoped more , however , from the children , who , brought up under his own roof , would owe him ...
Side 59
... results that after the sixth year the establishment would have paid all its expenses and would be making a clear profit . Pestalozzi then goes on to say that in his district , agri- culture alone will not support all the inhabitants ...
... results that after the sixth year the establishment would have paid all its expenses and would be making a clear profit . Pestalozzi then goes on to say that in his district , agri- culture alone will not support all the inhabitants ...
Side 60
... results of his experiment for the past three years ; from which he concludes that success in his enterprise is not at all impossible . For instance , it is possible to make the work of the children pay for their maintenance ; for the ...
... results of his experiment for the past three years ; from which he concludes that success in his enterprise is not at all impossible . For instance , it is possible to make the work of the children pay for their maintenance ; for the ...
Side 68
... result . There are some ruins whose dust is fertile . Pestalozzi was now as poor as the beggars who had excited his pity ; he had absolutely nothing left . He had acted like one who , without thinking whether his strength will suffice ...
... result . There are some ruins whose dust is fertile . Pestalozzi was now as poor as the beggars who had excited his pity ; he had absolutely nothing left . He had acted like one who , without thinking whether his strength will suffice ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
Aargau able activity afterwards already amongst anxious asked Basle Berne Birr Burgdorf canton Castle child devoted discourse doctrine elementary education endeavour entirely establishment everything exercises experience faith father feel Fellenberg Fichte French friends of humanity give Glarus happiness heart hope humanity ideas influence institute instruction Joseph Schmidt knowledge Koenigsfelden Krusi labours Lenzburg Leonard and Gertrude lessons letter living longer looked lozzi masters means ment mind moral mother nature Neuhof never Niederer Niederer's parents Pesta Pestalozzi Pestalozzi's method poor children powers principles Prussia published pupils Ramsauer reform religious result Schmidt seemed sense-impression Seyffarth society soon Soyaux speak spirit spite Stanz strength success Swiss Switzerland taught teaching things thought tion to-day Trogen true truth Unterwalden Vaud views whole words writings young Yverdun Zurich
Populære passager
Side 313 - ... licence, and despotism. The nations of Europe are corrupted by a sensual civilization, which does but stimulate their appetites and their vanity, making those who suffer envious of those who enjoy, and those who enjoy insensible to the troubles of those who suffer. There is none of that real moral civilization which exalts a man and makes him capable of love, commiseration, and abnegation. The first step to this higher civilization is the reform of public education. We have endeavoured to give...
Side 157 - First of all, I had to arouse in them pure, moral, and noble feelings, so that afterwards, in external things, I might be sure of their ready attention, activity, and obedience. I had, in short, to follow the high precept of Jesus Christ, ' Cleanse first that which is within, that the outside may be clean also ' ; and if ever the truth of this precept was made manifest, it was made manifest then.
Side ii - EDUCATION. By SS LAURIE, LL. D., Professor of the Institutes and History of Education in the University of Edinburgh.
Side 338 - Love suffereth long, and is kind; love envieth not; love vaunteth not itself, is not puffed up, doth not behave itself unseemly, seeketh not her own, is not easily provoked, thinketh no evil; rejoiceth not in iniquity, but rejoiceth in the truth; beareth all things, believeth all things, hopeth all things, endureth all things. Love never faileth...
Side 159 - ... men. They felt that, owing to my care, they made more progress in this respect than other children ; they perfectly understood that all they did was but a preparation for their future activity, and they looked forward to happiness as the certain result of their perseverance. 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...
Side 255 - After taking a general view of the valley, we were made to examine the details, until we had obtained an exact and complete idea of 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...
Side 165 - ... by men who have been accustomed for centuries to hear Christian instruction conveyed by question and answer, regardless of result, and who for a generation past have seen the mania of our poor century for empty speech more and more encouraged, alas! by the very people who pretend to enlighten it. "I believe that the first development of thought in the child is very much disturbed by a wordy system of teaching, . which is not adapted either to his faculties or the circumstances of his life.
Side 154 - I was with them in sickness, and in health, and when they slept. I was the last to go to bed, and the first to get up. In the bedroom I prayed with them, and, at their own request, taught them till they fell asleep. Their clothes and bodies were intolerably filthy, but I looked after both myself, and was thus constantly exposed to the risk of contagion. " This is how it was that these children gradually became so attached to me, some indeed so deeply that they contradicted their parents and friends...
Side 123 - In his speeches, in his explanations of his views, and especially in his fables, he is constantly comparing the education of man, even from the intellectual and moral point of view, to the development and growth of a plant. It is evident that, in his eyes, the analogy is complete. He even states it once in these words: ' Man, formed from the dust of the earth, grows and ripens like a plant rooted in the soil.
Side 367 - Here Rests HENRY PESTALOZZI; Born at Zurich, the 12th of January, 1746, Died at Brugg, the 17th of February, 1827. Saviour of the poor at Neuhof, at Stanz the father of orphans, at Burgdorf and Munchenbuchsee founder of the popular school, at Yverdun the educator of humanity ; man. Christian, and citizen. All for others, nothing for himself, Peace to his ashes. To OUR FATHER PESTALOZZI Grateful Aargau.