Circular[s] of InformationU.S. Government Printing Office, 1875 |
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Stran 10
... course of our discussion . Where there is such a vast field and when practical men meet for mutual encouragement and instruction , I apprehend we need have no difficulty in employing our time profitably . Various and vital questions ...
... course of our discussion . Where there is such a vast field and when practical men meet for mutual encouragement and instruction , I apprehend we need have no difficulty in employing our time profitably . Various and vital questions ...
Stran 20
... course not . If we agree on that point , the rest will be easy . I learn that in the great State of New York there are some 225,000 pupils . I look at the attendance and I find it is about 90,000 . The enumeration is made up for a ...
... course not . If we agree on that point , the rest will be easy . I learn that in the great State of New York there are some 225,000 pupils . I look at the attendance and I find it is about 90,000 . The enumeration is made up for a ...
Stran 25
... course we feel badly if we detect mistakes , but there is some satisfaction in know- ing that we are not the only persons who may be mistaken . I was present at a very scientific discussion , conducted by very learned men upon the ...
... course we feel badly if we detect mistakes , but there is some satisfaction in know- ing that we are not the only persons who may be mistaken . I was present at a very scientific discussion , conducted by very learned men upon the ...
Stran 29
... course of education into the same mold , thus preventing the fruitful collision and friction of mind with mind , thus bringing on a stagnant , barren sort of Chinese routine in thought . Happily for us , by leaving these funds to each ...
... course of education into the same mold , thus preventing the fruitful collision and friction of mind with mind , thus bringing on a stagnant , barren sort of Chinese routine in thought . Happily for us , by leaving these funds to each ...
Stran 31
... course in it has great value . It was the remark of a very distinguished statesman that the main thing in agricultural education was to do something to make agricultural pursuits at- tractive . His view was that , whereas in England ...
... course in it has great value . It was the remark of a very distinguished statesman that the main thing in agricultural education was to do something to make agricultural pursuits at- tractive . His view was that , whereas in England ...
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Pogosti izrazi in povedi
Æneid agricultural American ancient annual antique architecture art-education Art-Museum art-schools art-training artists attendance average number Boston Boston Athenæum building casts Centennial classes classical college collection Commissioner of Education committee course of instruction drawing Eaton educa elementary engravings established exhibition Exposition galleries German give grammar Greek gymnasia gymnasium hours per week industrial education inhabitants institutions interest Latin manufactures marble Massachusetts modern Museum non-classical college normal schools number of graduates number of students paintings person Philadelphia Philbrick population present President professors Prussia public schools pupils real-schools regard scholars School of Design schools of art scientific sculpture secondary education secondary schools Sheffield Scientific School South Kensington Museum specimens square miles statistics superintendent taught teachers teaching technical thing tion Total number University University of Cincinnati Vassar College Vienna volumes in libraries Walter Smith whole Würtemberg York
Priljubljeni odlomki
Stran 55 - An Act to provide for celebrating the One Hundredth Anniversary of American Independence, by holding an International Exhibition of Arts and Manufactures, and Products of the Soil and Mine...
Stran 10 - A few of the pupils who have shown most skill and taste are sent to the Superior Art School at Nuremberg. " Thus there have been established in the kingdom of Wurtemberg more than four hundred drawing-schools ; and this organization, which does not date back more than ten years, has already led to very decided improvements in the manufactures of the country. " It is satisfactory to know that the designers trained in these schools, if they evince any considerable degree of taste and invention, easily...
Stran 55 - Domini 1776, the birthday of the nation; and whereas it is deemed fitting that the completion of the first century of our national existence shall be commemorated by an exhibition of the natural resources of the country and their development, and of its progress in those arts which benefit mankind, in comparison with those of older nations...
Stran 8 - Among all the branches of instruction which, in different degrees from the highest to the lowest grade, can contribute to the technical education of either sex, drawing, in all its forms and applications, has been almost •unanimously regarded as the one which it is most important to make common.
Stran 9 - Exhibition of 1867, England stood among the foremost, and in some branches of manufacture distanced the most artistic nations. It was the schools of art, and the great collection of works of industrial art at the South Kensington Museum, that accomplished this result. The United States still held her place at the foot of the column.
Stran 56 - SECT. 7. That no compensation for services shall be paid to the Commissioners or other officers provided by this act from the Treasury of the United States ; and the United States shall not be liable for any expenses attending such exhibition, or by reason of the same.
Stran 14 - Just as libraries are worthless to those who cannot read, so are art collections to those who cannot comprehend them ; just as all literature is open to him who has learned to read, so is all art to him who has learned to draw, whose eye has been trained to see, and his fingers made facile to execute.
Stran 16 - ... After expressing in the strongest terms the importance, in their judgment, to the State of general artistic and technical training, they say, " The special purpose of this school is to train teachers of drawing and the arts of design. It is the first institution of the kind established in this country.
Stran 56 - ... the President shall, through the Department of State, make proclamation of the same, setting forth the time at which the exhibition will open, and the place at which it will be held ; and he shall communicate to the diplomatic representatives of all nations copies of the same, together with such regulations as may be adopted by the commissioners, for publication in their respective countries...
Stran 13 - Indeed, this has already been exemplified in a marked degree in the different developments of the schools of science in the several States, adapting themselves, in their chief courses of instruction, to the industrial demands of their localities. So we may hope to have, in the art-future of this country, as have the different European countries, art-capitals famous for their peculiar developments.