... class as Persian had previously been. A knowledge of English could secure entry into that class to those who did not belong to the literary castes. The next landmark was Sir Charles Wood's educational dispatch of 1854, which was eagerly implemented... Circular[s] of Information - Side 82av United States. Office of Education, United States. Bureau of Education - 1874Uten tilgangsbegrensning - Om denne boken
| James Johnston (F.S.S.) - 1884 - 296 sider
...of the natives of India. But this success has been confined to but a small number of persons ; AND WE ARE DESIROUS OF EXTENDING FAR MORE WIDELY THE MEANS OF ACQUIRING GENERAL EUROPEAN KNOWLEDGE, OP A LESS HIGH ORDER, but of such a character as may be practically useful to the people of India in... | |
| William Isaac Chamberlain - 1899 - 130 sider
...of education, largely by means of the Grant-inAid System. The Government was represented as being " desirous of extending far more widely the means of...may be practically useful to the people of India."' It also " looked forward to the time when any general system of education entirely provided by Government... | |
| William Isaac Chamberlain - 1899 - 122 sider
...of education, largely by means of the Grant-inAid System. The Government was represented as being " desirous of extending far more widely the means of...character as may be practically useful to the people of India."1 It also " looked forward to the time when any general system of education entirely provided... | |
| India Calcutta University Commission - 1919 - 420 sider
...and European science acquired by a certain number of Indians ; and expressed their desire and object of extending far more widely the means of acquiring general European knowledge of such a character as might be practically useful to the people of India in their different spheres of... | |
| India. Calcutta University Commission - 1920 - 400 sider
...of the natives of India. But this success has been confined to but a small number of persons ; and we are desirous of extending far more widely the means...order, but of such a character as may be practically usefuj to the people of India in their different spheres of life. To attain this end it is necessary,... | |
| Henry Dodwell - 1925 - 360 sider
...(5) The Employment of Indians. — This illustrates the success which attended the Company's desire " of extending far more widely the means of acquiring general European knowledge." But the success was chequered, for the policy framed to give effect to the Company's pious desires... | |
| Gauri Viswanathan - 1989 - 226 sider
...persons. It insisted that European knowledge would never filter downward to a larger base unless it was of a "less high order, but of such a character as...the people of India in their different spheres of life."20 There was an implicit recognition in the dispatch that the British government now had to contend... | |
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