... as well as German. I often asked myself why, with such large classes, the order was in general so thoroughly good, and why with such long hours, the children had in general so little look of exhaustion or fatigue ; and the answer I could not help... Hansard's Parliamentary Debates - Side 803af Great Britain. Parliament - 1888Fuld visning - Om denne bog
| 1886 - 982 sider
...exhaustion or fatigue, and the answer I could not help making to myself was, that the cause lay in the children being taught less mechanically and more naturally than with us, and being more interested." I feel sure there is a great deal in this ; variety in mental food is as important as in bodily food,... | |
| 1886 - 788 sider
...exhaustion or fatigue ; and the answer I could not help making to myself was, that the cause lay in the children being taught less mechanically and more naturally...content to advance slowly, the securing of the ground. . . . The same thing in teaching the elements of writing and reading, and in training children to answer... | |
| 1888 - 716 sider
...methods of teaching in foreign schools are more gradual, more natural, more rational, than ours . . . the children being taught less mechanically and more naturally...with us, and being more interested in the teaching, ... I found a higher state of instruction than ours. I speak of what I saw and hoard, and of the- impression... | |
| Reginald brabazon Meath (12th earl of) - 1888 - 624 sider
...exhaustion or fatigue, and the answer I could not help making to myself was, that the cause lay in the children being taught less mechanically and more naturally than with us, and being mare interested.' I feel sure there is a great deal in this ; variety in mental food is as important... | |
| Reginald brabazon Meath (12th earl of) - 1888 - 384 sider
...exhaustion or fatigue, and the answer I could not help making to myself was, that the cause lay in the children being taught less mechanically and more naturally than with us, and leinrj more interested.' I feel sure there is a great deal in this ; variety in mental food is as important... | |
| A. Sonnenschein - 1889 - 244 sider
...exhaustion or fatigue,f—and the answer I could not help making to myself was, that the cause lay in the children being taught less mechanically, and more...being more interested. In the teaching of arithmetic, geography, and natural science, I was particularly struck with the patience, the clinging to oral questions... | |
| 1895 - 190 sider
...exhaustion or fatigue, and the answer I could not help making to myself was that the cause lay in the children being taught less mechanically, and more naturally than with us, and being more interested .... The fault of the teaching in our popular schools at home is, as I have often said, that it is... | |
| Robert Edward Hughes - 1901 - 356 sider
...(.xx ) (000} (00 } \ t ~° = i °r LoooJ loo J Speaking of German schools, Matthew Arnold said : " In the teaching of arithmetic, geometry and natural...content to advance slowly, the securing of the ground." He finds himself he tells us, jotting down in his notebook continually: "These children are human."... | |
| Matthew Arnold - 1912 - 320 sider
...exhaustion or fatigue ; and the answer I could not help making to myself was, that the cause lay in the children being taught less mechanically and more naturally...content to advance slowly, the securing of the ground. This struck me the more because in these matters, in which I am not naturally quick, I always had,... | |
| 1912 - 800 sider
...in use in Germany. In the teaching of arithmetic, geometry, and natural science he was impressed by the patience, the clinging to oral question and answer,...content to advance slowly, the securing of the ground, and he summed up his survey by saying, "The school system of Germany in its completeness and carefulness... | |
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