Twelve Lectures on the History of Pedagogy: Delivered Before the Cincinnati Teachers' AssociationWilson, Hinkle & Company, 1874 - 122 páginas |
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Página 12
... wisdom has gradually pro- cured us the conviction that man is an organic being , subject , in all his manifestations of life , to laws of organic growth or development from within outward ; that society is a similar though more complex ...
... wisdom has gradually pro- cured us the conviction that man is an organic being , subject , in all his manifestations of life , to laws of organic growth or development from within outward ; that society is a similar though more complex ...
Página 23
... wisdom by Thales , Anaximander , and other great men of his time , he undertook extensive travels in Asia and Egypt , in order to perfect himself . After his return , he found so little encouragement among his Samian countrymen , that ...
... wisdom by Thales , Anaximander , and other great men of his time , he undertook extensive travels in Asia and Egypt , in order to perfect himself . After his return , he found so little encouragement among his Samian countrymen , that ...
Página 25
... wisdom , deemed itself infinitely superior to the rest of mankind . Thus it aroused the distrust and hatred of the citizens , and died , not without persecution , about 300 years B. C. It is doubtful whether modern pedagogy has ...
... wisdom , deemed itself infinitely superior to the rest of mankind . Thus it aroused the distrust and hatred of the citizens , and died , not without persecution , about 300 years B. C. It is doubtful whether modern pedagogy has ...
Página 26
... wisdom , his justice and piety , his humanity and patriotism , gained him the affection of the Athenians , and , about the year 594 B. C. , he was elected chief ruler of the commonwealth , and invested with unlimited dictatorial power ...
... wisdom , his justice and piety , his humanity and patriotism , gained him the affection of the Athenians , and , about the year 594 B. C. , he was elected chief ruler of the commonwealth , and invested with unlimited dictatorial power ...
Página 29
... wisdom ; it would make the Athenian patri- otic and brave , a lover of liberty and of virtue , of science and art , of the good and the beautiful . Yet their education had one great fault , suffered from one great falsehood , as it were ...
... wisdom ; it would make the Athenian patri- otic and brave , a lover of liberty and of virtue , of science and art , of the good and the beautiful . Yet their education had one great fault , suffered from one great falsehood , as it were ...
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Términos y frases comunes
aim of education Aristotle Athenian Athens attention basis became become Bohemian Brothers boys branches of instruction cation Caucasian race character child Christian civilization Comenius devoted direct discipline educa efforts elementary schools Emile English Literature exclusive exercise exoteric father faults favored Francke Froebel greatest Greece Greek gymnastic hand happiness harmonious heart Hence highest history of pedagogy human ical ideal ideas important independent individual influence insight institution intellectual culture kindergarten knowledge labors laws learner LECTURE live looked Lycurgus ment methods of instruction mind moral mother Neuhof Numa Pompilius objects Orbis Pictus organic pedagogic perceptions Pestalozzi philosophy physical pietists Plato powers practical principles progress pupil Pythagoras Quintilian race religion respect Roman Rousseau says self-activity sketch skill social society Socrates socratic irony soul Spartan taught teacher teaching things thought tion truth vernacular school vigor virtue wisdom words Yverdon
Pasajes populares
Página 62 - A SOUND mind in a sound body, is a short but full description of a happy state in this world : he that has these two, has little more to wish for ; and he that wants either of them, will be but little the better for any thing else.
Página 63 - As the strength of the body lies chiefly in being able to endure hardships, so also does that of the mind. And the great principle and foundation of all virtue and worth is placed in this, that a man is able to deny himself his own desires, cross his own inclinations, and purely follow what reason directs as best, though the appetite lean the other way.
Página 62 - This consideration should methinks keep busy people (I will not say ignorant nurses and boddice-makers) from meddling in a matter they understand not; and they should be afraid to put nature out of her way, in fashioning the parts, when. they know not how the least and meanest is made. And yet I have seen so many instances of children receiving great harm from...
Página 55 - Pictus" which I shall have occasion to mention again hereafter. Comenius was by no means one of those pedagogues who take up one or another single subject of instruction, or who place all good in a certain method of teaching. He was, in the very best sense of the word, universal; and notwithstanding this universality, he always strove after the most thorough foundation.
Página 75 - ... judgment. All that we have not at our birth, and that we need when grown up, is given us by education. This education comes to us from nature itself, or from other men, or from circumstances. The internal development of our faculties and of our organs is the education nature gives us ; the use we are taught to make of this development is the education we get from other men ; and what we learn, by our own experience, about things that interest us, is the education of circumstances.
Página 123 - JH Gilmore, of the University of Rochester, Rochester, NY: Some of the volumes of the new Series of English Classics for Schools cover works which are prescribed reading for students who apply for admission to our college. I shall be very glad to recommend them to such students. CF MacClumpha, of the University of the City of New...
Página 59 - World; that is, the Pictures and Names of all the Principal Things in the World, and of all the Principal Occupations of Man.
Página 54 - takes more pains with the young than with the full-grown plant, and men commonly find it needful in any undertaking to begin well.' And on the training of teachers he adds, ' We give scarce a thought to our teachers and care little for what they may be ; and yet we are for ever complaining because rulers are rigid in the matter of laws and penalties, but indifferent to the right training of the young.
Página 64 - You will wonder, perhaps, that I put learning last, especially if I tell you I think it the least part. This may seem strange in the mouth of a bookish man; and this making usually the chief if not only bustle and stir about children, this being almost that alone which is thought on when people talk of education, makes it the greater paradox.
Página 124 - Cloth, 12mo. 138 pages, ........... $0.60 It contains a topical abstract of the English Language and its Early Literature, with a brief summary of American Literature.