The New TeachingJohn Adams |
From inside the book
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Page 27
... given a demonstration of the probable line of development of the text - book . Each teacher with initiative wants to make a sort of subsidiary text - book of his own . He selects the book that contains the greatest amount of matter ...
... given a demonstration of the probable line of development of the text - book . Each teacher with initiative wants to make a sort of subsidiary text - book of his own . He selects the book that contains the greatest amount of matter ...
Page 30
... given piece of handwriting may be appraised , we have grave doubts . There is first of all the difficulty of determining the standard specimens ; and then there is the difficulty of saying to which of these specimens a given sample of ...
... given piece of handwriting may be appraised , we have grave doubts . There is first of all the difficulty of determining the standard specimens ; and then there is the difficulty of saying to which of these specimens a given sample of ...
Page 32
... given piece of com- position into its proper place among the ten . There are far too many elements to be taken into account , and if each specimen to be tested must be analysed so as to make the necessary comparison with the standard at ...
... given piece of com- position into its proper place among the ten . There are far too many elements to be taken into account , and if each specimen to be tested must be analysed so as to make the necessary comparison with the standard at ...
Page 35
... Given certain data we can rely upon the results . The state of mind produced by this certainty induces a new attitude to school problems , and imparts to the new teaching a tone that clearly marks it off from the old . Hitherto we have ...
... Given certain data we can rely upon the results . The state of mind produced by this certainty induces a new attitude to school problems , and imparts to the new teaching a tone that clearly marks it off from the old . Hitherto we have ...
Page 38
... given to English as a sort of auxiliary . As time went on , the claims of English to a firsthand treatment began to be generally recognized . But the resulting methods were dominated by those that already held the field in Latin and ...
... given to English as a sort of auxiliary . As time went on , the claims of English to a firsthand treatment began to be generally recognized . But the resulting methods were dominated by those that already held the field in Latin and ...
Common terms and phrases
apparatus Arithmetic arranged begin better boys child class-room colour Commercial Education contour lines Cookery copies course curriculum deal definite difficulty direction discovery sounds Domestic Subjects drawing Elementary Schools English essential Euclid Eurhythmics exercises experience fact foreign language Free Composition geography geometry girls give given grammar Greek hand handwork Housecraft idea important individual instruction interest kind knowledge Latin less lessons lines material Mathematics matter means ment mental methods modern natural necessary nomic object period Perse School phonetic physical training play possible practical present principles problem progress pupils question reading realize reason recognized region scheme scientific Secondary Schools simple stage Stanley Weyman student suggested symbols taught teacher teaching text-book things Thomas Mun tion Tonic Sol-fa Trigonometry vocabulary W. H. D. Rouse whole words writing
Popular passages
Page 191 - In obtuse-angled triangles, if a perpendicular be drawn from either of the acute angles to the opposite side produced, the square on the side subtending the obtuse angle is greater than the squares on the sides containing the obtuse angle, by twice the rectangle contained by the side on which, when produced, the perpendicular falls, and the straight line intercepted without the triangle, between the perpendicular and the obtuse angle.
Page 146 - ... ministering to the rest, she has been kept in the background, that her haughty sisters might flaunt their fripperies in the eyes of the world. The parallel holds yet further. For we are fast coming to the denouement, when the positions, will be changed; and while these haughty sisters sink into merited neglect, Science, proclaimed as highest alike in worth and beauty, will reign supreme.
Page 42 - Non licet in bello bis peccare," &c. And here the poor lad, who wants knowledge of .those things he is to speak of, which is to be had only from time and observation, must set his invention on the rack, to say something where he knows nothing, which is a sort of Egyptian tyranny, to bid them make bricks who have not yet any of the materials. And therefore it is usual, in such cases, for the poor children to go to those of higher forms with this petition, " Pray give me a little sense;" which whether...
Page 152 - The prime contribution of the heroes of science to the world's cultural wealth is not the scientific method but the scientific life. Our business, then, is to teach the realisation of the life, not the mastery of the method.
Page 35 - ... over and look at them, and seek to generalize about them, we shall begin to see that the most persistently present, and the living reality of it all, is this: to expand, to add to and organize and supplement that apparatus of understanding and expression the savage possesses in colloquial speech. The pressing business of the school is to widen the range of intercourse} It is only secondarily — so far as schooling goes — or, at any rate, subsequently, that the idea of shaping, or, at least,...
Page 348 - Mind and body should be viewed as the two fitting halves of a perfect whole, designed in true accord mutually to sustain and support each other, and each worthy of our unwearied care and unstinted attention...
Page 389 - Stock, by way of Commerce with other Nations; a work of no less Reputation than Trust, which ought to be performed with great skill and conscience, that so the private gain may ever accompany the publique good.
Page 35 - The route was recognized then, as it is now, as one of the most important, if not the most important, of those affording easy transit from the Pacific to the Atlantic by way of the Isthmus.
Page 50 - The sections taking the combined course were better at the end of the semester in thought — vigor, freedom, interest — than the others; they were better in point of grammatical and rhetorical structure; they were no worse in spelling and punctuation and better in handwriting — indeed, the writing sections showed marked degeneration in all matters of mechanics.
Page 152 - ... feel what it is to be, so to speak, inside the skin of the physicist, sharing his interests, ideals and outlook on the world, learning in a simple way to use his tools, and tasting .something of his sense of joyous intellectual adventure.