Educational Review, Volume 57Nicholas Murray Butler, Frank Pierrepont Graves, William McAndrew Doubleday, Doran, 1919 Vols. 19-34 include "Bibliography of education" for 1899-1906, compiled by James I. Wyer and others. |
De dentro do livro
Resultados 1-5 de 74
Página 2
... reason for your drill is not simply to teach the manual of arms , but also to promote your health and to increase your physical strength . You should also give whole - mindedness to your endeavor . Partial - mindedness is one of our ...
... reason for your drill is not simply to teach the manual of arms , but also to promote your health and to increase your physical strength . You should also give whole - mindedness to your endeavor . Partial - mindedness is one of our ...
Página 8
... reasons why , after trying the no - recess plan , the city had adopted it permanently . The reasons were substantially all that afterward were developed in discussion , and Troy , Rochester , Cohoes , Saratoga Springs , Port Chester ...
... reasons why , after trying the no - recess plan , the city had adopted it permanently . The reasons were substantially all that afterward were developed in discussion , and Troy , Rochester , Cohoes , Saratoga Springs , Port Chester ...
Página 9
... reasons . It is an unnatural exercise : the word is not ess - double - e but see ; it makes one conscious ; everybody knows that like a centipede's management of its legs it is fatal to wonder how a word is spelled , and so on . At ...
... reasons . It is an unnatural exercise : the word is not ess - double - e but see ; it makes one conscious ; everybody knows that like a centipede's management of its legs it is fatal to wonder how a word is spelled , and so on . At ...
Página 25
... reason , if not perfectly obvious , is at least perfectly serious , or rather grave . " The word ' horse ' is just as much a matter of con- crete auditory kinesthetic or visual kinesthetic imagery as the image of a particular horse is a ...
... reason , if not perfectly obvious , is at least perfectly serious , or rather grave . " The word ' horse ' is just as much a matter of con- crete auditory kinesthetic or visual kinesthetic imagery as the image of a particular horse is a ...
Página 26
... reason . Hard upon this follows protest against the authority of institutions , especially against those won by the painful self - sacrifice and toilsome insight of the ages . For the cumulative ex- perience of the race cribs , cabins ...
... reason . Hard upon this follows protest against the authority of institutions , especially against those won by the painful self - sacrifice and toilsome insight of the ages . For the cumulative ex- perience of the race cribs , cabins ...
Outras edições - Ver todos
Educational Review, Volume 49 Nicholas Murray Butler,Frank Pierrepont Graves,William McAndrew Visualização completa - 1915 |
Educational Review, Volume 2 Nicholas Murray Butler,Frank Pierrepont Graves,William McAndrew Visualização completa - 1891 |
Termos e frases comuns
ALBERT Bushnell HaRT ALBERT PERRY BRIGHAM American autocracy Bolshevists boys Carnegie Foundation character Cincinnati citizens civilization Columbia University Common Schools course culture curriculum democracy economic educa EDUCATIONAL REVIEW engineering English fact foreign France French geography German German language give grades human idea ideals important individual industrial institutions instruction intellectual intelligent interest junior high school knowledge literary literature mathematics matter ment method mind modern languages moral NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER organization period Philology philosophy political practical present Price principles problems produce Professor pupils question reading Sarah Bernhardt scientific sense socialized education sociology soul spirit standard style taught teachers teaching things thoro thought thru tion TIRANT LO BLANCH Trustees and Visitors vocational writing York YORK CITY young
Passagens mais conhecidas
Página 38 - He that is admitted to the right of reason is made freeman of the whole estate. What Plato has thought, he may think; what a saint has felt, he may feel; what at any time has befallen any man, he can understand.
Página 428 - become one Of those to whom the miseries of the world Are misery, and will not let them rest. He was tortured by the vision of what was, yet more by the rejection of his vision of what could be. He had been used to authority: he grew more and more the prey of irritations. His prose, which in youth had rolled and reverberated
Página 361 - hunt more after words than matter; more after the choiceness of the phrase and the round and clear composition of the sentence and the sweet falling of the clauses, and the varying and illustration of
Página 361 - words with tropes and figures, than after the weight of matter, worth of subject, soundness of argument, life of invention, or depth of judgment.
Página 442 - the National Association of State Universities, the New England Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools, the Association of Colleges and Preparatory Schools of the Middle States and Maryland, the Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools
Página 20 - The light that never was on sea or land, The consecration and the Poet's dream.
Página 442 - Schools, the Association of Colleges and Preparatory Schools of the Middle States and Maryland, the Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools of the Southern States, the North Central Association of Colleges and
Página 11 - There is not so variable a thing in nature as a Lady's head-dress; within my memory I have known it to rise and fall above thirty degrees.
Página 22 - I must have liberty Withal, as large a charter as the wind, To blow on whom I please.
Página 362 - there neither is, nor can be, any essential difference between the language of prose and metrical composition.