Papers ... Also the Results of the Statistical Enquiries of the Society, Volum 3Taylor and Walton, 1839 |
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Side 4
... young ; the weak , the ignorant , the unskilful , and too often the vicious , are placed in constant contact and communication with them . These persons are sometimes indifferent to the happiness of families ; often they are ignorant of ...
... young ; the weak , the ignorant , the unskilful , and too often the vicious , are placed in constant contact and communication with them . These persons are sometimes indifferent to the happiness of families ; often they are ignorant of ...
Side 6
... young child must be found among their provisions , or they are imperfect . Every device which the most judicious parent or well- experienced teacher can worthily employ in promoting the welfare of a child committed to their guidance ...
... young child must be found among their provisions , or they are imperfect . Every device which the most judicious parent or well- experienced teacher can worthily employ in promoting the welfare of a child committed to their guidance ...
Side 7
... young child should be at all times light - hearted . Under the endurance of bodily pain or functional disorder , arising from a bad state of health or some temporary in - ` convenience in its dress , a child cannot be even - tempered ...
... young child should be at all times light - hearted . Under the endurance of bodily pain or functional disorder , arising from a bad state of health or some temporary in - ` convenience in its dress , a child cannot be even - tempered ...
Side 17
... young . Religion must not be commenced with the assertion of abstract truths above an infant's comprehension , nor by the communication of historical facts , which take back the mind to a period of which an infant's arithmetical powers ...
... young . Religion must not be commenced with the assertion of abstract truths above an infant's comprehension , nor by the communication of historical facts , which take back the mind to a period of which an infant's arithmetical powers ...
Side 18
... young minds , and who will find and make oppor- tunities to draw from common scenes and circumstances such lessons as shall make enduring impressions on the minds and the hearts forming and growing beneath his culture . Such a person ...
... young minds , and who will find and make oppor- tunities to draw from common scenes and circumstances such lessons as shall make enduring impressions on the minds and the hearts forming and growing beneath his culture . Such a person ...
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
advantages agricultural amount annual annum appear assistance attend Board boys branches Catholic character child classes College committee common schools considered Consistory cottages course crude form dative declensions DIONYSIUS LARDNER district dollars Dunkirk duties elementary employed employment establishment examination exercise existence expense families farmers funds girls give grammar Greek Greek languages Hackney Wick Herne-hill hundred improvement industrial Infants institutions Ireland knowledge labour language Latin Latin languages lessons Lithuanian master means ment mind monitorial system moral nation natural philosophy nature nouns number of children object Old High German Old Slavonic parents parish pauper persons plural population portion practical present principles Prussia pupils received Roman Sanskrit scholars schoolmaster seminary singular society sufficient superintendence taught teachers teaching things THOMAS WYSE Thucydides tion town University University of Dublin whole number words workhouse writing young Zend
Populære avsnitt
Side 235 - It being one chief project of that old deluder, Satan, to keep men from the knowledge of the Scriptures, as in former times by keeping them in an unknown tongue, so in these latter times by persuading from the use of tongues, that so at least the true sense and meaning of the original might be clouded by false glosses of saintseeming deceivers, — that learning may not be buried in the grave of our fathers in the church and commonwealth, the Lord assisting our endeavors...
Side 153 - Ireland, 508. — of the Irish Society for promoting the education of the native Irish, through the medium of their own language, 508 — account of . Roman Catholic Institutions for the instruction of the Irish, 508.
Side 273 - The legislature shall, as soon as conveniently may be, provide, by law, for the establishment of schools throughout the State, in such manner that the poor may be taught gratis.
Side 235 - ... to the end that learning may not be buried in the graves of our forefathers in church and commonwealth, the Lord assisting our endeavors.
Side 271 - ... made under the authority of the Corporation, or of the several acts of Congress, hereinafter declared to be revived and in force, within the said Corporation, to be existing at the time hereinafter limited for the collection of the said tax ; and at the rate of...
Side 299 - An orphan or deserted child, educated from infancy to the age of 12 or 14, in a workhouse, if taught reading, writing, and arithmetic only, is generally unfitted for earning his livelihood by labour.
Side 33 - And not many weeks or months will elapse before all will be readers. ' In order to learn to read, it is by no means indispensable that the long, tedious method of the schools for children should be adopted. The process may be rendered extremely simple and easy. It is not necessary to commence even with the alphabet, or to go through a course of spelling in Dilworth or Webster. ' Adults have been recently taught to read, in penitentiaries and elsewhere, in a very short period — even within one or...