The Education of Boys for Business: Being Practical Suggestions to Parents on the Education of Their Sons for Commercial Life |
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Page viii
... reason- ing radiates , and to which it again converges , is ourselves , or the school we represent . This will appear but natural , if the reader bear in mind that the contents have all been spoken or written in connection with , and to ...
... reason- ing radiates , and to which it again converges , is ourselves , or the school we represent . This will appear but natural , if the reader bear in mind that the contents have all been spoken or written in connection with , and to ...
Page xiv
... Loss on the Public Schools , Masters of Public Schools have little or no Pecuniary Interest 113 at Stake , . • 115 The Point at Issue evaded in Public Schools , 115 PAGE Salaries of Masters , 116 Reasons for the Head xiv CONTENTS .
... Loss on the Public Schools , Masters of Public Schools have little or no Pecuniary Interest 113 at Stake , . • 115 The Point at Issue evaded in Public Schools , 115 PAGE Salaries of Masters , 116 Reasons for the Head xiv CONTENTS .
Page xv
... Reasons for the Head - Master's Election , 118 Appointment or Discharge of Assistant - Masters , 119 Some Advantages of the Large Private School , . 123 The Private School a Superior Field for the Energies of an Enterprising Educator ...
... Reasons for the Head - Master's Election , 118 Appointment or Discharge of Assistant - Masters , 119 Some Advantages of the Large Private School , . 123 The Private School a Superior Field for the Energies of an Enterprising Educator ...
Page 9
... reasons , and facts without connection , is next to useless- certainly less useful than a superficial knowledge of any other subject I have named . The long - vexed controversy about the relative merits of ancient and modern languages ...
... reasons , and facts without connection , is next to useless- certainly less useful than a superficial knowledge of any other subject I have named . The long - vexed controversy about the relative merits of ancient and modern languages ...
Page 11
... reasons that , in a liberal edu- cation , give to French , in particular , claims superior to those of an ancient tongue . There is , for instance , the extended and daily increasing social intercourse between this country and France ...
... reasons that , in a liberal edu- cation , give to French , in particular , claims superior to those of an ancient tongue . There is , for instance , the extended and daily increasing social intercourse between this country and France ...
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The Education of Boys for Business: Being Practical Suggestions to Parents ... George Coutie No preview available - 2009 |
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ability able advantages arithmetic attainments attention better boy's cerned character child classical classical education commercial conduct corporal punishment course difficult discipline dition duty efficient elementary encouragement England examinations exer exercise experience fact favour Fearon feel fees frequently gerundive give grammar habits head-master higher honour ignorant institutions instruction intellectual interest junior knowledge labour language large number large school leaving school lessons Liverpool look master mathematics ment mental methods middle-class mind moral natural neglect never number of boys offence opinion ordinary parents pass practical primary education principal private school profes profession progress public schools punctuality pupils racter receive removed render Report rule scholars school discipline schoolmaster Scotland small school sons standards stoicism subjects success superior task taught teacher teaching third-rate tion whilst words writing youth
Popular passages
Page 127 - Report, p. 293. suffered our boys to grow up in total ignorance of, sometimes in disgraceful contempt for, every scientific pursuit. In an age which is emphatically the age of science, " 'Mid the mighty march of mind, The steamship, and the railway, and the thoughts that shake mankind...
Page 196 - Writing A sentence slowly dictated once by a few words at a time from the same book, but not from the paragraph read.
Page 196 - A short paragraph from an elementary reading book. Writing. — A sentence from the same book, slowly read once,' and then dictated in single words.
Page 160 - The school premises are healthy, well lighted, warmed, drained, and ventilated, properly furnished, supplied with suitable offices, and contain in the principal school-room and class-rooms at least 80 cubic feet of internal space, and 8 square feet of area, for each child in average attendance.
Page 63 - ... insecurity of his position, and taught by the experience of many falls the danger of relaxing his efforts for one moment. In front of this eager, animated throng stands the master, gaunt, muscular, and time-worn, poorly clad, and plain in manner and speech, but with the dignity of a ruler in his gestures, and the fire of an enthusiast in his eye ; never sitting down, but...
Page 63 - ... enthusiast in his eye; never sitting down, but standing always in some commanding position before the class ; full of movement, vigour, and energy; so thoroughly versed in his author or his subject that he seldom requires to look at the text-book, which is open in his left hand, while in his right he holds the chalk or the pointer, ever ready to illustrate from map or black board, or perhaps flourishes the ancient " taws " with which in former days he used to reduce disorderly new comers to discipline...
Page 128 - ... historico-infinitive, and prolate-infinitive ; of adverbs consecutive, final, causal, temporal, conditional, concessive, comparative ; of relations — never heard of in his own home — epithetic, attributively enthetic, adverbially enthetic, complemental, annexive, circumstantive, predicative, prolative, receptive, proprietive ; of gerundive attractions — to him inattractive ; of gerundives with attributive constructions — upon which he can put no...
Page 127 - I may so phrase it, its raison d'etre, — a considerable number (many would be inclined to say the larger number) leave school at the age of eighteen or nineteen, not only ignorant of history, both ancient and modern, ignorant of geography and chronology, ignorant of every single modern language, ignorant of their own language and often of its mere spelling, ignorant of every single science, ignorant of the merest elements of geometry and mathematics, ignorant of music, ignorant of drawing, profoundly...
Page 65 - SCOTCH SCHOOLS. There are some points in which the schools of Scotland are very remarkable. In the thoroughness with which they teach the intellectual part of reading, they furnish a model worthy of being copied by the world. Not only is the meaning of all the important words in the lesson clearly brought out, but the whole class or family of words, to which the principal word belongs, are introduced, and their signification given. The pupil not only gains...
Page 262 - The eye is much more the expression of all that the teacher is than the best-chosen words can be. The scholars can understand it more quickly than they can understand words, and there is nothing for which the eye is more available than the expression of satisfaction or dissatisfaction with what is seen. The eye is hardly misinterpreted by one who observes its play. In addition, it is the most quick and most silent of messengers. There is no quicker telegraph for the schoolroom, and it is practically...