Report of the Committee of Council on Education (England and Wales), with Appendix, Issue 1H.M. Stationery Office, 1846 - Education |
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Alresford Annual answer apparatus arithmetic assistant attendance Battersea boys and girls Boys Girls Boys building Catechism character child Church ciphering clergy clergyman Committee of Council Devizes Diocesan discipline district Ditto East Farleigh efficient elementary Endow erected examined excellent exercise Expenses fair favourable fees feet funds geography Girls are taught Girls Boys Girls HENRY MOSELEY higher Rules History of England Ickleford income infant school intelligence July June knowledge of Scripture labour last inspection Leckhampstead lesson lower classes Mark's College master and mistress Mental Arithmetic ments mistress monitorial system monitors NAME OF SCHOOL National school National Society number of children orderly pains parents parish pence Petersfield population present proportion pupil teachers religious instruction remarkable respect Room for improvement Rotherhithe satisfactory school-house school-room schoolmaster Scripture Southbroom Stipend subjects subscriptions teaching tion training colleges trustees
Popular passages
Page 326 - Exulting in this hope, the prophet touched the sacred harp of prophecy, and sang of " the sufferings of Christ, and of the glory that should follow," when he would see of the travail of his soul and be satisfied.
Page 330 - If, at a point in a straight line, two other straight lines, upon the opposite sides of it, make the adjacent angles together equal to two right angles, these two straight lines shall be in one and the same straight line.
Page 355 - Almighty and most merciful Father ; We have erred, and strayed from thy ways like lost sheep. We have followed too much the devices and desires of our own hearts. We have offended against thy holy laws. We have left undone those things which we ought to have done ; And we have done those things which we ought not to have done; And there is no health in us.
Page 207 - ... verses, he left them to write out the sentiment and the story in prose, to be produced in school the next morning. All this was done without the slightest break or hesitation, and evidently proceeded from a mind full of the subject, and having a ready command of all its resources.
Page 308 - ... and finally, if the little wrestler with difficulty triumphs, the teacher felicitates him upon his success, perhaps seizes and shakes him by the hand in token of congratulation ; and when the difficulty has been really formidable, and the effort triumphant, I have seen the teacher catch up the child in his arms and embrace him, as though he were not able to contain his joy. At another time, I have seen a teacher actually clap his hands with delight at a bright reply ; and all...
Page 212 - But the Prussian teacher has no book. He needs none. He teaches from a full mind. He cumbers and darkens the subject with no technical phraseology. He observes what proficiency the child has made, and then adapts his instructions, both in quality and amount, to the nccessity of the case.
Page 228 - Arithmetic. 3rd. Reading, be represented respectively by the letters A., B., C., and the three equal divisions of the school by the symbols I., II., III., the following time-table will represent compendiously the arrangements which I have described in detail...
Page 357 - Christian ought to know and believe to his soul's health; and that this child may be virtuously brought up to lead a godly and a Christian life; remembering always, that Baptism doth represent unto us our profession; which is, to follow the example of our Saviour Christ, and to be made like unto him, that, as he died, and rose again for us, so should we...
Page 206 - It was then taken up verse by verse, and the pupils were required to give equivalent expressions in prose. The teacher then entered into an explanation of every part of it, in a sort of oral lecture, accompanied with occasional questions. This was done with the greatest minuteness. Where there was a geographical reference, he entered at large into geography; where a reference to a foreign custom, he compared it with their customs at home ; and thus he explained every...
Page 228 - ... the reading lesson which the children have just been practising, and which always commences with an examination as to the extent to which they have acquired the power to read it mechanically. For the results of this examination, the monitors who have been employed in teaching it, are supposed to be held, in some degree, responsible. The teaching of that lesson to each child in his subdivision, being understood to be assigned to the monitor as his task ; the due performance of which is afterwards...