The Schoolmaster: Essays on Practical Education, Selected from the Works of Ascham, Milton, Locke, and Butler; from the Quarterly Journal of Education; and from Lectures Delivered Before the American Institute of Instruction, Volumen 1C. Knight, 1836 |
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Página 6
... natural habits of children , so to speak , must be the key to their first instruction . A child begins to observe very soon after its birth ; for the first two or three years its knowledge is almost ... nature and art ON TEACHING READING .
... natural habits of children , so to speak , must be the key to their first instruction . A child begins to observe very soon after its birth ; for the first two or three years its knowledge is almost ... nature and art ON TEACHING READING .
Página 29
... nature . Organization , we have heard , bespeaks a design for action . * This should not be forgotten , even in those employments which are purely mental ; and perhaps we should find less injury resulting to health from school education ...
... nature . Organization , we have heard , bespeaks a design for action . * This should not be forgotten , even in those employments which are purely mental ; and perhaps we should find less injury resulting to health from school education ...
Página 52
... nature , nearer the use of its powers than the body ? If not , let parents consider how many efforts are unsuccessfully made before a single articulate sound is produced , and how imperfectly it is done after all ; and let them extend ...
... nature , nearer the use of its powers than the body ? If not , let parents consider how many efforts are unsuccessfully made before a single articulate sound is produced , and how imperfectly it is done after all ; and let them extend ...
Página 72
... nature of general expressions , and the use of reasoning upon them . It would also teach the pupil to look forward to a higher science , and would relieve what the taste and constitution of most lead them to call the drudgery of ...
... nature of general expressions , and the use of reasoning upon them . It would also teach the pupil to look forward to a higher science , and would relieve what the taste and constitution of most lead them to call the drudgery of ...
Página 115
... nature of the connexion which exists between one part of a syllogism and another . 6 If we were to propose to ten students who , as times go , have read the first four books of Euclid , the follow- ing argument , ' Every equilateral ...
... nature of the connexion which exists between one part of a syllogism and another . 6 If we were to propose to ten students who , as times go , have read the first four books of Euclid , the follow- ing argument , ' Every equilateral ...
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acquainted acquired angles animals Apennines applied arithmetic assert better branch child common comprehend connexion contain course deaf and dumb dialects dialects of Italy difficulty Dino Compagni distinct equal Euclid example exercise explained expression facts fractions French geography geometry give given Gothic archi grammar Greek language guage habits ideas improvement instances institution instruction instructor Italian Italian language Italy Journal of Education knowledge labour language Latin and Greek Latin language learner lessons Lombardy matter means memory ment method metical mind mode mon language names Natural History natural philosophy natural signs necessary notion object observe Petrarch principles pronunciation propositions pupil question racter reading reason remarks rules sentences simple sound speaking spelling student suppose taught teacher teaching tences thing tion triangle Tuscan understand various verbs whole numbers words writing written
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Página 96 - This is useful in fortification ; ' ' you cannot play at billiards without this.' ' You only look through a telescope like a Hottentot until this proposition is read,' with many such powerful strokes of rhetoric to the same purpose. And upon such terms, and with such inducements, who would not be a mathematician? Who would go to work with all that apparatus which I have described as necessary for understanding Euclid, when he has only to take a pleasant walk with Clairaut upon the flowery banks of...
Página 149 - A person has two horses, and a saddle worth £50 ; now, if the saddle be put on the back of the first horse, it will make his value double that of the second ; but if it be put on the back of the second, it will make his value triple that of the first ; what is the value of each horse ? Ans.
Página 246 - Above me are the Alps, The palaces of Nature, whose vast walls Have pinnacled in clouds their snowy scalps, And throned Eternity in icy halls Of cold sublimity, where forms and falls The avalanche — the thunderbolt of snow ! All that expands the spirit, yet appals, Gather around these summits, as to show How Earth may pierce to Heaven, yet leave vain man below.
Página 258 - Tarsus held ; or that seabeast Leviathan, which God of all his works Created hugest that swim the ocean stream...
Página 127 - The angle at the centre of a circle is double of the angle at the circumference upon the same base, that is, upon the same part of the circumference.
Página 252 - ... interest in after life : he who loves a flower in youth will love it when he is old. The taste for nature must be planted early in life, to enable its possessor to enjoy a ripened harvest. Every thing which the Deity has created is worthy of our attention. " Nature has nothing made so base, but can Read some instruction to the wisest man.
Página 127 - To prove that the exterior angle of a triangle is equal to the sum of the two interior opposite angles (see fig.
Página 232 - When we have amassed a great store of such general facts, they become the objects of another and higher species of classification, and are themselves included in laws which, as they dispose of groups, not individuals, have a far superior degree of generality, till at length, by continuing the process, we arrive at axioms of the highest degree of generality of which science is capable. This process is what we mean by induction.
Página 292 - Tuscan poets of the same age. But Tuscany had this advantage over the rest, that its familiar spoken language was more generally polished, so as to resemble the poetical and select language of the other Italians, and the Tuscan poets had the benefit of writing in a living dialect, ' lingua volgare,' and their poems were understood by the generality of their country-1 men.
Página 53 - ... deserve to succeed. Irritated or wearied by this failure, little manifestations of temper often take the place of the gentle tone with which the lesson commenced, by which the child, whose perception of such a change is very acute, is thoroughly cowed and discouraged, and left to believe that the fault was his own, when it really was that of his instructor.