School Architecture: Or, Contributions to the Improvement of School-houses in the United StatesH. W. Derby, 1855 - 464 σελίδες |
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Σελίδα 15
... passing objects and events out of doors . in They are not properly ventilated . The purity of the atmosphere is not preserved by providing for the escape of such portions of the air as have become offensive and poisonous by the process ...
... passing objects and events out of doors . in They are not properly ventilated . The purity of the atmosphere is not preserved by providing for the escape of such portions of the air as have become offensive and poisonous by the process ...
Σελίδα 16
... passing of objects , the noise and the dust , are a perpetual annoyance to teacher and scholar , -that no play - ground is afforded for the scholar except the highway , - that the size is too small for even the average attendance of the ...
... passing of objects , the noise and the dust , are a perpetual annoyance to teacher and scholar , -that no play - ground is afforded for the scholar except the highway , - that the size is too small for even the average attendance of the ...
Σελίδα 20
... passing strange , that while many parents incur considerable expense in providing themselves with cushioned and carpeted slips in church , where they ordi- narily spend , perhaps , but three hours each week 20 SCHOOL - HOUSES AS THEY ARE .
... passing strange , that while many parents incur considerable expense in providing themselves with cushioned and carpeted slips in church , where they ordi- narily spend , perhaps , but three hours each week 20 SCHOOL - HOUSES AS THEY ARE .
Σελίδα 21
... passing in a carriage or on horseback may look in upon the whole school , and as a matter of course the scholars will look at whatever passes . When the school - house is so exposed , it would seem , that modesty in our children would ...
... passing in a carriage or on horseback may look in upon the whole school , and as a matter of course the scholars will look at whatever passes . When the school - house is so exposed , it would seem , that modesty in our children would ...
Σελίδα 22
... passing through a district , can easily select the school - house . If you see a very unique - looking building , a " squatter " in the highway , or standing by permission on the side of some lot , in a corner rendered useless by a ...
... passing through a district , can easily select the school - house . If you see a very unique - looking building , a " squatter " in the highway , or standing by permission on the side of some lot , in a corner rendered useless by a ...
Άλλες εκδόσεις - Προβολή όλων
Συχνά εμφανιζόμενοι όροι και φράσεις
accommodate apparatus arrangement attic basement blackboard Boston boys brick carbonic acid cast iron ceiling cellar class-rooms close cold air Committee Common Schools constructed convenient Culver's diagram diameter districts doors entrance entry erected exercises feet high feet long feet wide fitted floor flues four inches frame front furnace furnished gallery girls glass globe Grammar School ground heat height High School houses hung improvement inches inches thick inches wide inclined plane inside instruction iron Lampblack lathed and plastered Lecture main building monitorial system movable Normal School occupied pipe placed plastered platform play-ground Primary School principal Privies public schools pupils recitation rooms recitation-rooms roof scholars SCHOOL CHAIR SCHOOL DESK school-room screws seats and desks second story side slate smoke pipe space stairs stove street surface teacher third story tion tubes ventiducts ventilation walls whole width wood
Δημοφιλή αποσπάσματα
Σελίδα 174 - ... 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 417 - Treatise on Popular Education : For the Use of Parents and Teachers, and for Young Persons of both Sexes. Prepared and Published in accordance with a Resolution of the Senate and House of Representatives of the State of Michigan.
Σελίδα 126 - ... forces, and the more kindly influences 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...
Σελίδα 174 - 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 222 - Annual Report of the Trustees of the Public School Society of New York.
Σελίδα 282 - ... for the instruction and practice of teachers of common schools in the science of education and in the art of teaching, to be located in the county of Albany.
Σελίδα 123 - ... latter always depending on the earlier, and all intended to be conducted on the same general principles, and by methods varying with the work to be done, and the progress already made. With...
Σελίδα 124 - In the mean time the order of the school must be maintained, and the general business must be going forward. Little children without any authorized employment for their eyes and hands, and ever active curiosity, must be made to sit still, while every muscle is aching from suppressed activity...
Σελίδα 190 - In ancient times, the appreciation of whatever was beautiful in the frame of Nature, was accounted salutary, by philosophers and sages. Galen says, ' He who has two cakes of bread, let him sell one, and buy some flowers; for bread is food for the body, but Jlowers are food for the soul.
Σελίδα 16 - ... cases decidedly unhealthy, exposed freely to the sun and storm, and in nearly all, on one or more public streets, where the passing of objects, the noise and the dust, are a perpetual annoyance to teacher and scholar, — that no play-ground is afforded for the scholar except the highway, — that the size is too small for even the average attendance of the scholars, — that not one in a hundred has any other provision for a constant supply of that indispensable element of health and life, pure...