Annual Report of the Board of Education Together with the ... Annual Report of the Secretary of the Board, Volume 22Board of Education, 1859 - Education 1st-72nd include the annual report of the Secretary of the Board. |
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Page 15
... writing , in the form of essays and dissertation , on every subject connected with the teacher's vocation . A high sense of propriety prevails in the institution . Perhaps at no former time has so much maturity . of character been ...
... writing , in the form of essays and dissertation , on every subject connected with the teacher's vocation . A high sense of propriety prevails in the institution . Perhaps at no former time has so much maturity . of character been ...
Page 51
... writers of such reports must be of inestimable aid to your schoolmasters , standing as they do between the teacher and the parent , and exercising the most wholesome influence on both . Let me remark in passing , that I am struck with ...
... writers of such reports must be of inestimable aid to your schoolmasters , standing as they do between the teacher and the parent , and exercising the most wholesome influence on both . Let me remark in passing , that I am struck with ...
Page 58
... writing , music and drawing . This is also the time when object lessons may be given with great advantage . The forms and names of geometrical solids may be taught . Exercises may be introduced tending to develop those powers by which ...
... writing , music and drawing . This is also the time when object lessons may be given with great advantage . The forms and names of geometrical solids may be taught . Exercises may be introduced tending to develop those powers by which ...
Page 59
... writing words from their spelling lessons , on their slates , in a plain script hand . It is further stated in the same connection , that the teachers are expected to take special pains to teach the SECRETARY'S REPORT . 59.
... writing words from their spelling lessons , on their slates , in a plain script hand . It is further stated in the same connection , that the teachers are expected to take special pains to teach the SECRETARY'S REPORT . 59.
Page 60
... writing and drawing in Primary Schools . To accomplish this object , I have given a course of lessons in a graded or classified school of the third class . The number of pupils instructed in the class was about fifty . The materials of ...
... writing and drawing in Primary Schools . To accomplish this object , I have given a course of lessons in a graded or classified school of the third class . The number of pupils instructed in the class was about fifty . The materials of ...
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Common terms and phrases
Academies Amherst College amount answer arithmetic attainments August August 17 average attendance BARNSTABLE COUNTY better Board of Education Boxborough Braintree branches Bridgewater cause of education Chairman of School character child common schools COUNTY course defects discipline districts duties Edgartown employed examination excellent exercise experience favor feel female Framingham furnished geography give grade graduates Grammar Schools habits High School Hubbardston important improvement income increase influence institutions instruction intellectual interest knowledge labor lessons mental mental arithmetic methods of teaching Middleborough mind moral NANTUCKET COUNTY natural Normal School system Normal School teachers Normal teachers Northborough opinion parents Phillipston practical present Primary Schools principles Private Schools Provincetown Public Schools pupils qualifications questions reading recitation regard respect respectfully scholars School Committee School Fund school-houses school-room Scituate spelling success taught term text-books thing tion town whole number winter words young
Popular passages
Page 17 - I promised God that I would look upon every Prussian peasant child as a being who could complain of me before God if I did not provide for him the best education as a man and a Christian which it was possible for me to provide.
Page 44 - ... among the several towns in proportion to the number of persons in each between the ages of four and sixteen years, as ascertained from said returns ; and he shall transmit the amount distributed to each town to its treasurer, on the application of its school visitors, or...
Page 39 - ... respective population as determined by the last preceding United States census, excluding Indians on reservations. But cities that have special school laws receive their due share separate and apart from the remainder of the counties in which they are situated. The New Jersey state school tax, equal to $5 for each child in the state between the ages of five and eighteen, is raised by the several counties according to their amounts of taxable property respectively, as shown by the tax rolls of...
Page 38 - January next (1835) all monies in the treasury derived from the sale of lands in the State of Maine and from the claim of the State on the government of the United States for military services, and not otherwise appropriated, together with fifty per centum of all monies thereafter to be received from the sale of lands in Maine, shall be appropriated to constitute a permanent fund for the aid and encouragement of common schools; provided, that said fund shall never exceed one million of dollars.
Page 223 - April, in the year eighteen hundred and thirty-seven, no child under the age of fifteen years shall be employed to labor in any manufacturing establishment, unless such child shall have attended some public or private day school, where instruction is given by a teacher qualified...
Page 39 - That means should be devised for the establishment of a fund having in view not the support, but the encouragement, of the common schools, and the instruction of school teachers." This report was made in the month of January, and in February following the same committee say : " The establishment of a fund should look to the support of an institution for the instruction of school teachers...
Page 6 - The memory is almost the only faculty regarded, and only one element of that, viz., the memory of words, while the memory of the understanding is seldom called into exercise. In my visits it was very uncommon to hear, in any of these schools, a single question or remark by the teacher which had any reference to the understanding of the children. In many cases the reading was but little more than the mechanical pronunciation of an unknown tongue. There is a text-book in daily use in all these schools,...
Page 9 - ... requisite age, shall be competent and qualified, not only to enter the Grammar Schools, but to improve the privileges and advantages there offered. And in proportion as the children entering the Grammar Schools come thoroughly qualified and prepared, these schools themselves will be improved, and a large number of pupils pass through them at an age sufficiently early to allow them to enjoy the benefit of the High Schools, before the time arrives at which they wish to leave school for some active...
Page 133 - There is no office higher than that of a teacher of youth; for there is nothing on earth so precious as the mind, soul, character of the child. No office should be regarded with greater respect. The first minds in the community should be encouraged to assume it. Parents should do all but impoverish themselves, to induce such to become the guardians and guides of their children.
Page 44 - ... the income was to be apportioned among those towns which had raised by taxation the sum of one dollar and fifty cents for the education of each person between the ages of five and fifteen years. This provision is now in force. By an act of the Legislature, passed April 15th, 1846, it was provided that all sums of money which should thereafter be drawn from the treasury, for educational purposes, should be considered as a charge upon the moiety of the proceeds of the sales of the public lands...