Report on Education in the Parochial Schools of the Counties of Aberdeen, Banff and Moray: Addressed to the Trustees of the Dick Bequest |
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Page 7
... understanding , and the training of the will , are operations which can- not be conducted without materials , we are bound , in determining the nature of these materials , to allow ourselves to be controlled by the needs and facts of ...
... understanding , and the training of the will , are operations which can- not be conducted without materials , we are bound , in determining the nature of these materials , to allow ourselves to be controlled by the needs and facts of ...
Page 10
... understanding of the manner of its natural operations , the limits of its legitimate exercise , and the objects most readily seized and assimilated at the different stages of its growth . Still more is the moral destiny of the child in ...
... understanding of the manner of its natural operations , the limits of its legitimate exercise , and the objects most readily seized and assimilated at the different stages of its growth . Still more is the moral destiny of the child in ...
Page 19
... understanding and consentaneity between them if the work of education is to be rightly done . It is true that a teacher , himself possessed of a dis- ciplined intelligence and of a will fortified by religion , reason , and experience ...
... understanding and consentaneity between them if the work of education is to be rightly done . It is true that a teacher , himself possessed of a dis- ciplined intelligence and of a will fortified by religion , reason , and experience ...
Page 22
... understanding or the feelings of the pupil , and are utterly barren of any immediate result whatsoever , except the exercise of the memory . Nor is the spontaneous energy of the mind the only auxiliary which the teacher finds ready to ...
... understanding or the feelings of the pupil , and are utterly barren of any immediate result whatsoever , except the exercise of the memory . Nor is the spontaneous energy of the mind the only auxiliary which the teacher finds ready to ...
Page 23
... who is endowed with sympathetic sensibility . Where this is strong , formal philosophic methods are at once superseded , and the qualifications for understanding their organic connexion NATURAL AUXILIARIES OF THE SCHOOLMASTER . 23.
... who is endowed with sympathetic sensibility . Where this is strong , formal philosophic methods are at once superseded , and the qualifications for understanding their organic connexion NATURAL AUXILIARIES OF THE SCHOOLMASTER . 23.
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Report on Education in the Parochial Schools of the Counties of Aberdeen ... Simon Somerville Laurie No preview available - 2017 |
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acquired Alexr allowance amount analysis arithmetic assistant-substitute Asst attained attention average Banff boys character child Church of Scotland clause Composition connexion counties of Aberdeen Dick Bequest dictation exercises direct discipline duty effect Elected schoolmaster elementary examination exer exercise fact fail Geography give given grammar Greek habit heritors higher highest class importance influence initiatory instruction intel intellectual intelligence knowledge labour language Latin Livy master means ment mental method of teaching metic mind minister moral Music nature necessary Number learning objects organization parish Parochial Schoolmasters parochial schools parsing PHILIP KELLAND practical preceptive Presbytery principles Privy Council proportion punishment pupils purpose question reading lesson reading-lessons Report Resigned respect royal burghs rules scholars school discipline school-work schoolroom Scotland sense sentences slate stage taught things thought three counties tion Trustees truth uncon Visitor whole words Writing from dictation καὶ
Popular passages
Page 356 - This was the most unkindest cut of all; For when the noble Caesar saw him stab, Ingratitude, more strong than traitors
Page 356 - O, now you weep; and, I perceive, you feel The dint of pity : these are gracious drops. Kind souls, what ! weep you, when you but behold Our Caesar's vesture wounded ? Look you here, Here is himself, marr'd, as you see, with traitors.
Page 356 - If you have tears, prepare to shed them now. You all do know this mantle : I remember The first time ever Caesar put it on ; 'Twas on a summer's evening, in his tent ; That day he overcame the Nervii : — Look! in this place ran Cassius...
Page 357 - Now is it Rome indeed and room enough, When there is in it but one only man.
Page 102 - It calls in my spirits, composes my thoughts, delights my ear, recreates my mind, and so not only fits me for after business, but fills my heart, at the present, with pure and useful thoughts ; so that when the Music sounds the sweetest in my ears, truth commonly flows the clearest into my mind.
Page 367 - If the square described upon one of the sides of a triangle, be equal to the squares described upon the other two sides of it ; the angle contained by these two sides is a right angle.
Page 368 - If two triangles have one angle of the one equal to one angle of the other and the sides about these equal angles proportional, the triangles are similar.
Page 180 - Do unto others as you would that others should do unto you.
Page 221 - Scotland, and that he will not exercise the functions of his office to the prejudice or subversion of the Church of Scotland as by law established.
Page 367 - If a straight line be divided into two equal, and also into two unequal parts ; the squares on the two unequal parts are together double of the square on half the line, and of the square on the line between the points of section.