Teaching is the most difficult of all arts, and the profoundest, of all sciences. In its absolute perfection, it would involve a complete knowledge of the whole being to be taught, and of the precise manner in which every possible application would affect... Studies in the History of Modern Education - Side 171av Charles Oliver Hoyt - 1910 - 223 siderUten tilgangsbegrensning - Om denne boken
| Massachusetts. Board of Education - 1838 - 498 sider
...arts, and the profoundest of all sciences. In its absolute perfection, it would involve a complete knowledge of the whole being to be taught, and of...precise manner in which every possible application would affect it; that is, a complete knowledge of all the powers and rapacities of the individual,... | |
| Horace Mann - 1867 - 600 sider
...arts, and the profoundest, of all sciences. In its absolute perfection, it would involve a complete knowledge of the whole being to be taught, and of...precise manner in which every possible application would affect it ; that is, a complete knowledge of all the powers and capacities of the individual,... | |
| Horace Mann - 1891 - 604 sider
...arts, and the profounde?t of all sciences. In its absolute perfection, it would involve a complete knowledge of the whole being to be taught, and of...precise manner in which every possible application would affect it ; that is, a complete knowledge of all the powers and capacities of the individual,... | |
| 1931 - 508 sider
...arts, and the profoundest of all sciences. In its absolute perfection, it would involve a complete knowledge of the whole being to be taught, and of...precise manner in which every possible application would affect it." 5,000 School Children When President Crozier asked me to summarize two great Washington... | |
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