Reports on Elementary schools |
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Side x
... wall ; and their supply of books , both as to character and number , very inadequate for the pur- poses of instruction : 18 pupil - teachers ( boys ) and one girl have been apprenticed in this county : four masters have obtained their ...
... wall ; and their supply of books , both as to character and number , very inadequate for the pur- poses of instruction : 18 pupil - teachers ( boys ) and one girl have been apprenticed in this county : four masters have obtained their ...
Side xi
... wall , and the lower classes generally left to the care of monitors . Nor can I report more favourably of those in Norfolk and Suffolk , as far as I had opportunity of judging . An excep- tion , however , must be made in favour of the ...
... wall , and the lower classes generally left to the care of monitors . Nor can I report more favourably of those in Norfolk and Suffolk , as far as I had opportunity of judging . An excep- tion , however , must be made in favour of the ...
Side 81
... wall on the old plau . The floor is occupied by benches , forming eight large rect- angular classes . No maps visible , nor any of the ordinary modern tokens of a thriving school . 2. Indifferent : as in so large a school , under one ...
... wall on the old plau . The floor is occupied by benches , forming eight large rect- angular classes . No maps visible , nor any of the ordinary modern tokens of a thriving school . 2. Indifferent : as in so large a school , under one ...
Side 85
... wall desks ; play - ground airy ; offices clean ; situation good ; architecture Elizabethan and picturesque . 2. Ordinary ; the master free from harshness , and the children seem attached to him . 3. Monitorial ; mixed simulta- neous ...
... wall desks ; play - ground airy ; offices clean ; situation good ; architecture Elizabethan and picturesque . 2. Ordinary ; the master free from harshness , and the children seem attached to him . 3. Monitorial ; mixed simulta- neous ...
Side 87
... wall , and benches in classes on the area ; no class - room . 2. Very good ; except as it may be , perhaps , a little too peremptory . 4. Satisfactory . Children do not come up from infant school till they can read , which saves a very ...
... wall , and benches in classes on the area ; no class - room . 2. Very good ; except as it may be , perhaps , a little too peremptory . 4. Satisfactory . Children do not come up from infant school till they can read , which saves a very ...
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Reports on Elementary Schools Her Majesty' Inspectors of Schools Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2015 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Abstracts or Composition Algebra apprentices arithmetic attainment B.S. Boys Battersea Books and apparatus boys and girls Boys'.-Inspected Carmarthen certificate character Children learning Number class-room clergyman Colsterworth Compound Rules Copies deficient Desks and furniture Dictation or Memory discipline Doveridge Easy Narratives efficient fair favour Fractions and Decimals gallery Geography Geometry Girls'.-Inspected Grammar Holy Scriptures improvement infant school Inspector of Schools intelligent July Kennington Oval last 12 months Least Instruction Linear Drawing Liverpool loose benches Lordships lower classes Majesty's Inspector Master and Mistress Mensuration methods metic mistress mixed school moderate monitors Monosyllables moral NAME OF SCHOOL Northampton Number of Children Number present Numeration or Notation open classes ordinary Attendance organization parallel desks parish person population present at Examination Proportion and Practice pupil teachers pupil-teachers Reading Number Rotherhithe Rules and Reduction Salary satisfactory Sheepy Magna Slates Surrey Tabulated Reports taught teaching tion trained Vocal Music wall desks Welsh Wesleyan
Populære avsnitt
Side 739 - The bell strikes One. We take no note of time But from its loss: to give it then a tongue Is wise in man. As if an angel spoke, I feel the solemn sound. If heard aright, It is the knell of my departed hours. Where are they ? With the years beyond the flood.
Side 766 - THESE, as they change, ALMIGHTY FATHER, these Are but the varied God. The rolling year Is full of THEE. Forth in the pleasing Spring THY beauty walks, THY tenderness and love. Wide flush the fields ; the softening air is balm ; Echo the mountains round ; the forest smiles ; And every sense, and every heart is joy.
Side 767 - Or hear'st thou rather, pure ethereal stream, Whose fountain who shall tell ? Before the sun, Before the heavens thou wert, and at the voice Of God, as with a mantle, didst invest The rising world of waters dark and deep, Won from the void and formless infinite.
Side 628 - In the last day, that great day of the feast, Jesus stood and cried, saying, If any man thirst, let him come unto me, and drink.
Side 628 - Now there is at Jerusalem by the sheep market a pool, which is called in the Hebrew tongue Bethesda, having five porches. In these lay a great multitude of impotent folk, of blind, halt, withered, waiting for the moving of the water.
Side 764 - Similar triangles are to one another in the duplicate ratio of their homologous sides.
Side 274 - ... or mistress of which may be unable to conduct an apprentice even through the foregoing course of instruction. Their Lordships being desirous so to adapt their regulations to the condition of such schools, as by their improvement to enable them hereafter to provide for the training of pupil teachers, are disposed for a few years to encourage the managers to retain their monitors, by small stipends, to the age of seventeen, without apprenticeship, but under a form of agreement with the parents,...
Side 763 - A circle is a plane figure contained by one line, which is called the circumference, and is such, that all straight lines drawn from a certain point within the figure to the circumference are equal to one another : 16.
Side 810 - If the square described on one side of a triangle be equal to the sum of the squares described on the other two sides, the angle contained by these two sides is a right angle.
Side 321 - His attempt to obtain an index to the crime of the various counties and districts of England and Wales which would not be affected by the migration of the "depraved" is interesting. He tries to make allowances for the "influence of the denser populations rather to assemble the demoralized than to breed an excess of demoralization.