| Great Britain. Council on Education - Education - 1848 - 596 pages
...under its most elementary form to the mind of tlie child, he must himself have gone to the root of it. That he may exhaust it of all that it is capable of...instruction, he must have compassed the whole of it. In his preparation for the discharge of functions such as these, even with respect to that limited... | |
| Great Britain. Committee on Education - 1848 - 606 pages
...under its most elementary form to the mind of the child, he must himself have gone to the root of it. That he may exhaust it of all that it is capable of...instruction, he must have compassed the whole of it. In his preparation for the discharge of functions such as these, even with respect to that limited... | |
| Home and colonial school society - 1849 - 448 pages
...under its most elementary form to the mind of the child, he must himself have gone to the root of it. That he may exhaust it of all that it is capable of...instruction, he must have compassed the whole of it." — P. 440. Mr. M. adds : — One cannot be at all surprised that Mr. M. should continue : — " It... | |
| Henry Barnard - Teachers - 1851 - 496 pages
...mind of the child, he must himself have gone to the root of it. That he may exhaust it of all that is capable of yielding for the child's instruction, he must have compassed the whole of it. In his preparation for the discharge of functions such as these, even with respect to that limited... | |
| Education - 1852 - 348 pages
...under its most elementary form to the mind of the child, he must himself have gone to the root of it. That he may exhaust it of all that it is capable of...instruction, he must have compassed the whole of it. * * Every man must be conscious of a separation made by education, between his own mind and that of... | |
| Great Britain. Committee on Education - Education - 1852 - 356 pages
...under its most elementary form to the mind of the child, he must himself have gone to the root of it. That he may exhaust it of all that it is capable of...instruction, he must have compassed the whole of it. * * Every man must be conscious of a separation made by education, between his own mind and that of... | |
| Education - 1861 - 798 pages
...under its most elementary form to the mind of the child, lie must himself have gone to the root of it. That he may exhaust it of all that it is capable of yielding for the child's instruction, he must hare compassed the whole of it. in his préparation for the discharge of functions such as these, even... | |
| Education - 1861 - 804 pages
...under its most elementary form to the mind of the child, he moat himself have gone to the root of it. That he may exhaust it of all that it is capable of yielding for the child's instruction, he most have compassed the vhole of it In his preparation for the discharge of functions such as these,... | |
| John Gill (of the Normal college, Cheltenham.) - 1876 - 334 pages
...able to present his subject to the minds of the children in its most elementary forms, he himself must have gone to the root of it ; and that he may exhaust...instruction, he must have compassed the whole of it." " The cardinal defect of oral lesson in elementary schools is an inadequate knowledge on the part of... | |
| John Gill - Education - 1876 - 328 pages
...elementary forms, he himself must have gone $• to the root of it ; and that he may exhaust it of all j that it is capable of yielding for the child's instruction, / 'he must have compassed the whole of it." " The cardinal defect of oral lesson in elementary schools is an inadequate knowledge on the part of... | |
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