 | James Gordon Carter - 1824 - 123 páginas
...teachers have been prepared to act upon those of their pupils to the greatest advantage. If, then, the first step towards a reform in our system of popular education be the scientific preparation of teachers for the free schools ; our next inquiry becomes, how can... | |
 | James Gordon Carter - 1826 - 60 páginas
...teachers have been prepared to act upon those of their pupils to the greatest advantage. If, then, the first step towards a reform in our system of popular education be the scientific preparation of teachers for the free schools ; our next inquiry becomes, how can... | |
 | Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - 1827
...teachers have been prepared to act upon those of their pupils to the greatest advantage. ' If, then, the first step towards a reform in our system of popular education be the scientific preparation of teachers for the free schools ; our next inquiry becomes, How can... | |
 | Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - 1827
...teachers have been prepared to act upon those of their pupils to the greatest advantage. ' If, then, the first step towards a reform in our system of popular education be the scientific preparation of teachers for the free schools ; our next inquiry becomes, How can... | |
 | Arthur Clarke Boyden - 1919 - 157 páginas
...Bridgewater School. James G. Carter, of Lancaster, was the first to call public attention in Massachusetts to the necessity and advantages of Normal Schools,..."Franklin." In these he maintained that "the first step toward a reform in our system of popular education, is the scientific preparation of teachers for the... | |
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