A Memorial of the Life and Services of John D. PhilbrickLarkin Dunton New England Publishing Company, 1887 - 225 pages |
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Page 40
... means . Those who make such criticisms fail to take into account , in the first place , the fact that the making of a good programme implies a profound knowledge of education , both philo- sophic and practical , and in the second place ...
... means . Those who make such criticisms fail to take into account , in the first place , the fact that the making of a good programme implies a profound knowledge of education , both philo- sophic and practical , and in the second place ...
Page 51
... means to secure a desired end was rarely wrong . His view of a broad truth was clear to a degree attained by but few , and his power to apply general principles to special cases was equal to his power of insight . If great- ness be ...
... means to secure a desired end was rarely wrong . His view of a broad truth was clear to a degree attained by but few , and his power to apply general principles to special cases was equal to his power of insight . If great- ness be ...
Page 65
... means the most important item in the whole plan of organiza- tion . Instead of a small room , twenty - eight by thirty- two feet , and holding fifty - six pupils , make a large room holding one hundred and fifty pupils and you change ...
... means the most important item in the whole plan of organiza- tion . Instead of a small room , twenty - eight by thirty- two feet , and holding fifty - six pupils , make a large room holding one hundred and fifty pupils and you change ...
Page 72
... means that the individual contributions to methods of discipline and instruction are seen by the supervisor and carried to all others , so that each teacher is re- enforced by all , and all by each . The inventory of the great items of ...
... means that the individual contributions to methods of discipline and instruction are seen by the supervisor and carried to all others , so that each teacher is re- enforced by all , and all by each . The inventory of the great items of ...
Page 85
... means of compensating teachers , it would be equivalent to a vast increase of school rev- enue ; that the salary , even though raised to the highest practicable limit , when subject to the offset of short and - precarious tenure , with ...
... means of compensating teachers , it would be equivalent to a vast increase of school rev- enue ; that the salary , even though raised to the highest practicable limit , when subject to the offset of short and - precarious tenure , with ...
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acquaintance addresses appreciation Asso Association Bates College became Board Boston masters Boston schools career cation cause of education character Connecticut Danvers Dartmouth College death Deerfield devoted district educa excellent father graded grammar school heart High School highest honor Horace Mann ical influence Institute instruction interest John D John Dudley Philbrick JOHN EATON knew labor learned LETTER LL.D Massachusetts meeting memory methods mind National never noble Normal School opinion organization Pembroke Pembroke Academy permanent tenure position practical principles profes profession programme public schools pupils Quincy School recitation reform reports respect Roxbury school committee school system schoolhouse schools of Boston secure soul spirit success superintendent sympathy teacher teaching tenure of office Thomas Dudley thought tion tional town town of Deerfield tribute Vienna whole winter wisdom wise words young