... and yet we profess to think that there is no science in primary education, and that all that there is to it can be learned in a few hours. The simple fact is, however, that within these few years it required a man of absolute genius to discover how... Development Lessons - Page 288by Esmond Vedder De Graff, Margaret Keiver Smith - 1883 - 301 pagesFull view - About this book
| 1881 - 262 pages
...the value of skilled supervision. Mr. Adams says of the result, " This was entirely the work of Supt. Parker. The committee simply gave him a free field...and the result fully justified them in so doing." The simple fact is, that frequently meeting his teachers, and imbuing them with his zeal, he has become... | |
| Charles Francis Adams - Education - 1879 - 62 pages
...required a man of absolute genius to discover how to teach the alphabet. The new departure, therefore, started with the Quincy primaries, and it left little...educational system of Massachusetts, whether school, academic, or university. If there is one thing which may be considered more characteristic of that... | |
| Charles Francis Adams - Education - 1879 - 62 pages
...required a man of absolute genius to discover how to teach the alphabet. The new departure, therefore, started with the Quincy primaries, and it left little...educational system of Massachusetts, whether school, academic, or university. If there is one thing which may be considered more characteristic of that... | |
| American Institute of Instruction - Education - 1880 - 232 pages
...the value of skilled supervision. Mr. Adams says of the result, " This was entirely the work of Supt. Parker. The committee simply gave him a free field...and the result fully justified them in so doing." The simple fact is, that frequently meeting his teachers, and imbuing them with his zeal, he has become... | |
| American Institute of Instruction - 1880 - 236 pages
...the value of skilled supervision. Mr. Adams says of the result, " This was entirely the work of Snpt. Parker. The committee simply gave him a free field...and the result fully justified them in so doing." The simple fact is, that frequently meeting his teachers, and imbuing them with his zeal, he has become... | |
| Charles Francis Adams - Education - 1881 - 90 pages
...required a man of absolute genius to discover how to teach the alphabet. The new departure, therefore, started with the Quincy primaries, and it left little...than an emphatic protest against the whole present tendency»of the educational system of Massachusetts, whether school, academic, or university. If there... | |
| Education - 1881 - 662 pages
...the value of skilled supervision. Mr. Adams says of the result, "This was entirely the work of Supt. Parker. The committee simply gave him a free field...and the result fully justified them in so doing." The simple fact is, that frequently meeting his teachers, and imbuing them with his zeal, he has become... | |
| Connecticut. Board of Education - 1881 - 282 pages
...value of skilled supervision. Mr. Adams say*s of the result, " This was entirely the work of Supt. Parker. The committee simply gave him a free field...and the result fully justified them in so doing." The simple fact is, that frequently meeting his teachers, and imbuing them with his zeal, he has become... | |
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