Practical Illustrations of the Principles of School ArchitectureNorton, 1854 - 162 σελίδες |
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Σελίδα 5
... instruction , demand . The earliest publication on the subject in this country , which has met the notice of the Committee , may be found in the School Magazine , No. 1 , published as an Appendage to the Journal of Education , in April ...
... instruction , demand . The earliest publication on the subject in this country , which has met the notice of the Committee , may be found in the School Magazine , No. 1 , published as an Appendage to the Journal of Education , in April ...
Σελίδα 10
... instruction may be made in the highest degree useful . 13. Accommodations for a school library for consultation and circula- tion among the pupils , both at school and as a means of carrying on the work of self - education at their ...
... instruction may be made in the highest degree useful . 13. Accommodations for a school library for consultation and circula- tion among the pupils , both at school and as a means of carrying on the work of self - education at their ...
Σελίδα 11
... instruction . 1. In by far the largest number of country districts as they are now situated , there will be but one school - room , with a smaller room for reci- tations and other purposes , needed . This must be arranged and fitted up ...
... instruction . 1. In by far the largest number of country districts as they are now situated , there will be but one school - room , with a smaller room for reci- tations and other purposes , needed . This must be arranged and fitted up ...
Σελίδα 12
... instruction , from summer to winter , and from winter to summer . In summer , the younger children and classes in the ele- mentary studies predominate , and in the winter the older pupils , and classes in the more advanced studies ...
... instruction , from summer to winter , and from winter to summer . In summer , the younger children and classes in the ele- mentary studies predominate , and in the winter the older pupils , and classes in the more advanced studies ...
Σελίδα 13
... instruction . No one at all acquainted with the history of education in this country , can doubt that the establishment of the Primary School for children under six years of age , in Boston , in 1818 , as a distinct grade of schools ...
... instruction . No one at all acquainted with the history of education in this country , can doubt that the establishment of the Primary School for children under six years of age , in Boston , in 1818 , as a distinct grade of schools ...
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accommodate admitted apartment apparatus Argand Lamp arrangement attic basement blackboard Board Boston boys brick building carbonic acid carried ceiling class-rooms closed cold air Committee common schools constructed convenient Culver's CURTAIN desks and seats diagram diameter districts doors elevation entrance erected exercises feet high feet long feet wide fireplace floor four front furnace furnished gallery girls grade Grammar School ground gymnastic hall heat height HENRY BARNARD High School hot air inches inches wide iron lamp-black ment Nathan Bishop Normal School occupied pipe placed play-ground primary schools principles private schools public schools pupils recitation rooms Recitation-room registers Rhode Island roof scholars school architecture school-room seats and desks Second Story side smoke flue smoke pipe space square stove studies teacher's platform temperature third story tion tube upper ventiducts ventilating flues wall warm air whole width
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Σελίδα 93 - ... and it is further ordered, that where any town shall increase to the number of one hundred families or householders they shall set up a grammar school, the master thereof being able to instruct youth so far as they may be fitted for the university...
Σελίδα 14 - ... all these things and, more, require in the teacher a rare union of qualities, seldom found in one in a hundred of the male sex, and to be looked for with the greatest chance of success among females, " in whose own hearts, love, hope, and patience have first kept school...
Σελίδα 6 - School Architecture," or Contributions to the Improvement of School-houses in the United States, by Henry Barnard, Commissioner of Public Schools in Rhode Island, p.
Σελίδα 93 - It was then generally agreed upon, that our brother Philemon Purmont shall be instructed to become schoolmaster for the teaching and nurturing of children with us.
Σελίδα 38 - They ought to be so constructed as to admit of being readily removed when necessary, but not so as to be easily pushed out of place by accident, or to be shaken by the movements of the children when seated at them. The reasons of the following rules will be readily inferred from these preliminary explanations. 1. In planning a school-room, if it be not more than 18 feet in width, about 8 or 9...
Σελίδα 59 - ... of the whole number. When the class is large, there is a spirit, a glow, a struggle which can never be infused or called forth in a small class. Whatever time is spent upon a few, which could have been as profitably spent on a larger number, is a loss of power and time to the extent of the number who were not thus benefited. The recitations of a large class must be more varied, both as to order and methods, so as to reach those whose attention would wander if not under the pressure of constant...
Σελίδα 55 - There cannot be a regular course of discipline and instruction, adapted to the age and proficiency of pupils — a series of processes, each adapted to certain periods in the development of the mind and character, the first intended to be followed by a second, and the second by a third, — the latter always...
Σελίδα 58 - ... of nature, the family and society. Among these conditions of success in the operation of a system of public schools, is such a classification of the scholars as shall bring a larger number of similar age and attainments, at all times, and in every stage of their advancement, under teachers of the right qualifications, and shall enable these teachers to act upon numbers at once, for years in succession, and carry them all forward effectually together, in a regular course of instruction. The great...
Σελίδα 56 - ... solved, excuses for tardiness or absence received, questions answered, whisperings allowed or suppressed, and more or less of extempore discipline administered. Were it not a most ruinous waste of precious time, — did it not involve...
Σελίδα 56 - Compelled to hurry from one study to another, the most diverse, — from one class to another, requiring a kno%vledge of methods altogether distinct, — from one recitation to another, equally brief and unsatisfactory, one requiring a liveliness of manner, which he does not feel and cannot assume, and the other closeness of attention and abstraction of thought, which he cannot give amid the multiplicity and variety of cares, — from one case of discipline to another, pressing on him at...