It will tend to raise the standard of the qualifications of instructers, so that the business of teaching shall not be the last resort of dulness and indolence, but shall be considered, as it was in the days of republican Greece, an occupation worthy... The Quarterly Journal of Education - Página 491832Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| American Institute of Instruction - 1831 - 380 páginas
...laborers in every portion of the country. It will tend to raise the standard of the qualifications of instructers, so that the business of teaching shall not be the last resort of dulness and indolence, but shall be considered, as it was in the days of republican Greece, an occupation worthy of the highest... | |
| American Institute of Instruction - 1831 - 416 páginas
...every portion of the country. It will tend to raise the standard of the qualifications of iustructers, so that the business of teaching shall not be the last resort of dulness and indolence, but shall be considered, as it was in the days of republican Greece, an occupation worthy of the highest... | |
| William Russell, William Channing Woodbridge, Fordyce Mitchell Hubbard - 1832 - 644 páginas
...accomplishment of all these objects, ' to raise the standard of the qualification of instructors,* so that the business of teaching shall not be the...our own country ; while distinctions in civil life, sim;lar to our own, being entirely unknown, the highest functionaries of government] and the humble... | |
| Central Society of Education (London, England) - 1838 - 446 páginas
...to diffuse it still more widely, and to raise the standard of the qualification of its instructors, so that the business of teaching shall not be the last resort of dulness and indolence," were objects well worthy the attention of a state whose first principle is, " that the wise and continued... | |
| Central society of education - 1838 - 440 páginas
...to diffuse it still more widely, and to raise the standard of the qualification of its instructors, so that the business of teaching shall not be the last resort of dulness and indolence," were objects well worthy the attention of a state whose first principle is, " that the wise and continued... | |
| Central Society of Education (London, England), John Lalor, John Abraham Heraud, Edward Higginson, James Simpson - 1839 - 566 páginas
...condition, to diffuse it still more widely, and to raise the standard of the qualification of instruction, so that the business of teaching shall not be the last resort of dulness and indolence."* In the canton of Neufchatel, — " It is very difficult," says Baron Chambrier, " to find among our... | |
| Henry Barnard - 1856 - 768 páginas
...every portion of the country. It will tend to raise the standard of tha qualifications of instructors, so that the business of teaching shall not be the last resort of dulluess and indolence, but shall be considered, as it was in the days of republican Greece, an occupation... | |
| American Institute of Instruction - 1864 - 260 páginas
...every portion of the country. It will tend to raise the standard of the qualifications of instructors, so that the business of teaching shall not be the last resort of dulness and indolence, but shall be considered, as it was in the days of republican Greece, an occupation worthy of the highest... | |
| Ernest Carroll Moore - 1917 - 120 páginas
...every portion of the country. It will tend to raise the standard of the qualification of instructors, so that the business of teaching shall not be the last resort of dullness and indolence, but shall be considered, as it was in the days of republican Greece, an occupation... | |
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