The Quarterly Journal of Education, Volum 7Charles Knight, 1834 |
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Side 28
... ideas expressed by European terms of art , and are liable to considerable interruptions and loss of time occasioned by the numerous holidays observed by the native population . În one of his more recent reports , ( 1826 , ) the chief en ...
... ideas expressed by European terms of art , and are liable to considerable interruptions and loss of time occasioned by the numerous holidays observed by the native population . În one of his more recent reports , ( 1826 , ) the chief en ...
Side 50
... pass through the university , not merely in idleness but even in respectability , and many obtain the highest distinction as scho- lars , without acquiring a single idea , however simple 50 Physical Studies in Oxford .
... pass through the university , not merely in idleness but even in respectability , and many obtain the highest distinction as scho- lars , without acquiring a single idea , however simple 50 Physical Studies in Oxford .
Side 51
... idea should be for the first time started in the first university of the first country in Europe ? -that a few members of that university should be now cautiously and timidly proposing to the governing powers to do that which we should ...
... idea should be for the first time started in the first university of the first country in Europe ? -that a few members of that university should be now cautiously and timidly proposing to the governing powers to do that which we should ...
Side 67
... ideas , and conceptions of his whole after - life , and , by an influence , indirect and imperceptible , give a bias to his inclinations , his actions , and his moral conduct . The influence of the family on the education of the youth ...
... ideas , and conceptions of his whole after - life , and , by an influence , indirect and imperceptible , give a bias to his inclinations , his actions , and his moral conduct . The influence of the family on the education of the youth ...
Side 68
... ideas by which it is attracted and repulsed ; its senses are exercised , its mind developed , independently of our influence . It was necessary that this should be so ; for if , during its early years , the child did not learn by its ...
... ideas by which it is attracted and repulsed ; its senses are exercised , its mind developed , independently of our influence . It was necessary that this should be so ; for if , during its early years , the child did not learn by its ...
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acquired Æneid ancient angles appears applied arithmetic attended axiom axiom of Euclid Bombay boys branch called candidate character child classes committee common Concan course Cramer deaf and dumb district duty elementary English equal establishment Euclid examination exercise feel Friedrich Rückert geography geometry Gesenius grammar Greek habits Hebrew Hebrew language Herodotus improvement inhabitants institution instruction knowledge labour language Latin Latin language lectures lessons London London University master mathematics means ment midwifery mind moral mountains native nature object observed opinion parents persons physical practice present principles prize professors Prytaneum pupils reading received religious remarks render respect river Rugby School rupees scholars society Strabo taught teachers teaching things Thomas Munro Thucydides tion town translation village W. M. L. De Wette whole Wilhelm Gesenius words youth
Populære avsnitt
Side 124 - How cold and dead does a prayer appear, that is composed in the most elegant and polite forms of speech, which are natural to our tongue, when it is not heightened by that solemnity of phrase, which may be drawn from the sacred writings. It has been said by some of the ancients, that if the gods were to talk with men, they would certainly speak in Plato's style; but I think we may say, with justice, that when mortals converse with their Creator, they cannot do it in so proper a style as in that of...
Side 171 - MA; — and the other two are open to all Undergraduates who shall have resided not less than seven terms at the time when the exercises are to be sent in. The subjects...
Side 171 - Undergraduate as shall make the best translation of a proposed passage in Shakspeare, Ben Jonson, Massinger, or Beaumont and Fletcher, into Greek Verse. The metre of the translation, if the selection be from a tragedy, shall be Tragicum lambicum Trimetrum Acatalecticum...
Side 229 - ... experience, and place us in the same state as if the human race had first come into existence in the year 1500. For it is nothing to say that a few learned individuals might still study classical literature ; the effect produced on the public mind would be no greater than that which has resulted from the labours of our oriental scholars...
Side 70 - That the amount of private subscription be received, expended, and accounted for, before any issue of public money for such school be directed. " 4. That no application be complied with unless upon the consideration of such a report either from the National School Society, or the British and Foreign School Society, as shall satisfy this Board that the case is one deserving of attention, and there is a reasonable expectation that the school may be permanently supported.
Side 230 - ... tastes and comparative comprehensiveness of its views and notions. All this supposes, indeed, that classical instruction should be sensibly conducted; it requires that a classical teacher should be fully acquainted with modern history and modern literature, no less than with those of Greece and Rome. What is, or perhaps what used to be, called a mere scholar, cannot possibly communicate to his pupils the main advantages of a classical education. The knowledge of the past is valuable, because...
Side 359 - House the expediency of abrogating by legislative enactment every religious test exacted from members of the university before they proceed to degrees whether of Bachelor, Master, or Doctor in Arts, Law, or Physic.
Side 11 - Whatever expense Government may incur in the education of the people will be amply repaid by the improvement of the country, for the general diffusion of knowledge is inseparably followed by more orderly habits, by increasing industry, by a taste for the comforts of life, by exertions to acquire them, and by the growing prosperity of the people.
Side 137 - A Hebrew Dirge, chaunted in the Great Synagogue, St. James's Place, Aldgate, on the Day of the Funeral of her Royal Highliess the Princess Charlotte, by Hyman Hurwitz, with a translation in English verse, by SF Coleridge, Esq.
Side 228 - There are exercises in composition, in Greek and Latin prose, Greek and Latin verse, and English prose, as in other large classical schools. In the subjects given for original composition in the higher forms, there is a considerable variety. Historical descriptions of any remarkable events, geographical descriptions of countries, imaginary speeches and letters, supposed to be spoken or written on some great question or under some memorable circumstances ; etymological accounts of words in different...