Fifteen minutes a day of good reading would have given any one of this multitude a really human life. The uplifting of the democratic masses depends on this implanting at school of the taste for good reading. Special Reports on Educational Subjects - Stran 546avtor: Great Britain. Board of Education - 1902Celotni ogled - O knjigi
| 1897 - 404 strani
...education; and that schooling which does not result in implanting this permanent taste has failed. The uplifting of the democratic masses depends on...function of the public school in a democracy is the discovery and development of the gift or capacity of each individual child. This discovery should be... | |
| 1898 - 404 strani
...implanting this permanent taste, has failed. The uplifting of the democratic masses of our country depends on this implanting at school of the taste for good reading." MARGUERITE DALY. Washburn, Wis. OFFICIAL DEPARTMENT. REPORT OF FORTY-FIFTH ANNUAL SESSION, WISCONSIN... | |
| St. Louis Public Library - 1894 - 658 strani
...grows older, he will live in a mental atmosphere which is always growing thinner and emptier. . . . The uplifting of the democratic masses depends on...implanting at school of the taste for good reading." But, since it is a universally accepted maxim that, as John Fiske puts it, "an ounce of Vinland is... | |
| 1910 - 916 strani
...know many people who seem to live in a mental vacuum — to wliom, indeed, we have great dilBculty in attributing immortality, because they apparently have...really human life. The uplifting of the democratic massen depends on this implanting at school of the taste for good reading. — Charles W. Eliot, in... | |
| Albert Leonard, William Henry Metzler, Jacob Richard Street - 1898 - 372 strani
...have great difficulty in attributing immortality, because they apparently have so little lifeexcept that of the body? Fifteen minutes a day of good reading...function of the public school in a democracy is the discovery and development of the gift or capacity of each individual child. This discovery should be... | |
| Charles William Eliot - 1898 - 434 strani
...nany people who seenf to live in a mental vacuum 407 — to whom, indeed, we have great difficulty in attributing immortality, because they apparently have...life. The uplifting of the democratic masses depends _| ^ ( __^ V on this implanting at school of the taste for good reading. % — ">Another important... | |
| Charles William Eliot - 1898 - 440 strani
...know many people who seem to live in a mental vacuum — to whom, indeed, we have great difficulty in attributing immortality, because they apparently have so little life except that of the body T Fifteen minutes a day of good reading would have given any one of this multitude a really human life.... | |
| John Raymond Howard - 1899 - 236 strani
...for interesting and improving reading, which should direct and inspire its subsequent intellectual life. . . . The uplifting of the democratic masses...function of the public school in a democracy is the discovery and development of the gift or capacity of each individual child. ... It is one of the main... | |
| University of the State of New York - 1900 - 804 strani
...he grows older, he will live in a mental atmosphere which is always growing thinner and emptier. . . The uplifting of the democratic masses depends on...implanting at school of the taste for good reading. In Charles Dudley Warner's latest novel, a youth who goes to college from a first-rate preparatory... | |
| Preston Willis Search - 1901 - 398 strani
...President Eliot, in his admirable article on The Function of Education in Democratic Society,* has said: " Another important function of the public school in a democracy is the discovery and development of the gift or capacity of each individual child. This discovery should be... | |
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