| John Orville Taylor - 1835 - 332 páginas
...virtuous men, of all good fathers of families, and even of the mass of the people, on their side. f After the administrative authorities, it is unquestionably...indifferent, or even hostile, to the education of the people. — Cousin's Report. • SECTION VI. TEACHING SHOULD BE MADE A PROFESSION. TEACHING, in our district... | |
| Henry Barnard - 1854 - 904 páginas
...mean, the combined action of the municipal councils and the departmental councils, — of the moires and the prefects. After the administrative authorities,...important place in the business of popular education. The rational middle course is to put the cure or the pastor, t. • . the Catholic and the Protestant... | |
| National Association for the Promotion of Social Science (Great Britain) - 1882 - 948 páginas
...figures realise the maxim of M. Victor Cousin, that — ' After the administrative authorities, it ie unquestionably the clergy who ought to occupy the...important place in the business of popular education.' In their most sanguine speculations; the original Board of Commissioners could hardly have ventured... | |
| 1860 - 664 páginas
...mean, the combined action of the municipal councils and the departmental councils, — of the mains and the prefects. After the administrative authorities,...important place in the business of popular education. The rational middle course is to put the cure or the pastor, ie the Catholic and the Protestant clergyman... | |
| National Association for the Promotion of Social Science (Great Britain) - 1882 - 936 páginas
...say the popularity — of the system, these figures realise the maxim of M. Victor Cousin, that — ' After the administrative authorities, it is unquestionably...important place in the business of popular education.' In their most sanguine speculations, the original Board of Commissioners could hardly have ventured... | |
| Ellwood Patterson Cubberley - 1920 - 724 páginas
...superintendence, which ought to be formed out of the municipal council, and presided over by the maire. . . . After the administrative authorities, it is unquestionably...acknowledge. The clergy in France are generally indifferent, 01 even hostile, to the education of the people. Let them blame themselves if the law does not give... | |
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