Annals of the Boston Primary School Committee: From Its First Etablishment in 1818, to Its Dissolution in 1855

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G.C. Rand & Avery, city printers, 1860 - 313 sider
 

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1
Del 2
56
Del 3
259
Del 4
265
Del 5
280
Del 6
283

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Side 42 - Those who read in the Testament shall be in the First Class; those in easy reading, in the Second Class; those who spell in two or more syllables, in the Third Class; those learning their letters and monosyllables, in the Fourth Class; and that the books be the same in every school, for each pupil hereafter entering.
Side 282 - With a view to secure the Divine blessing, and to impress upon the pupils the importance of religious duties, and their entire dependence on their Maker, the Council of Public Instruction...
Side 173 - Board, collect information of the actual condition and efficiency of the Common Schools, and other means of popular education, and diffuse as widely as possible throughout every part of the Commonwealth, information of the most approved and successful methods of arranging the studies, and conducting the education of the young, to the end that all children in this Commonwealth, who depend upon Common Schools for instruction, may have the best education which those schools can be made to impart.
Side 30 - Ward, whose duty collectively shall be to provide instruction for children between four and seven years of age, and apportion the expenses among the several schools.
Side 36 - To provide instruction for children between four and seven years of age, and apportion the expenses among the several Schools." — Of these gentlemen all but two accepted and have served. — The Board was organized on the 23d day of June by choosing Thomas L. Winthrop Esq., Chairman, and James Savage Esq.
Side 284 - No one of the first class shall be recommended by the Examining Committee to be received into the English Grammar schools, unless he or she can spell correctly, read fluently in the New Testament, and has learned the several branches taught in the second class ; and also the use and nature of the pauses ; and is of good behavior.
Side 25 - If their parents negloct to provide them a school, is it not the duty of the town to do it ? and if the town takes no interest in their welfare, is it not the duty of the Legislature to enact laws for the purpose of saving these dependents, these sufferers...
Side 1 - Boston, who were then upon the stage. lie is not the only master who kept his lamp longer lighted than otherwise it would have been by a supply of oil from his scholars.
Side 195 - Resolve of third, eighteen hundred and forty-two, concerning school fs42Cmended district libraries, be, and the same are hereby extended to every city and town in the Commonwealth, not heretofore divided into school districts, in such manner as to give as many times fifteen dollars to every such city or town as the number sixty is contained, exclusive of fractions, in the number of children between the ages of four and sixteen Proviso.
Side 6 - Grammar Schools unless they shall have learned in some other school, or in some other way, to read the English language by spelling the same...

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