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Essays On Education And Kindred Subjects — Herbert Spencer

Essays On Education And Kindred Subjects
507,00
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Essays On Education And Kindred Subjects

Herbert Spencer

Kriter Yayınları

2020248 sf.
Şehadet KitapEn ucuz

Essays On Education And Kindred Subjects

Herbert Spencer

The profession of teaching has long been characterised by certain habitual convictions which Spencer undertook to shake rudely and even to deride The first of these convictions is that all education physical intellectual and moral must be authoritative and need take no account of the natural wishes tendencies and motives of the ignorant and undeveloped child The second dominating conviction is that to teach means to tell or show children what they ought to see believe and utter Expositions by the teacher and books are therefore the true means of education The third and supreme conviction is that the method of education which produced the teacher himself and the contemporary or earlier scholars authors and publicists must be the righteous and sufficient method Its fruits demonstrate its soundness and make it sacred Herbert Spencer in the essays included in the present volume assaulted all three of these firm convictions Accordingly the ideas on education which he put forth more than fifty years ago have penetrated educational practice very slowly particularly in England but they are now coming to prevail in most civilised countries and they will prevail more and more Through him the thoughts on education of Comenius Montaigne Locke Milton Rousseau Pestalozzi and other noted writers on this neglected subject are at last winning their way into practice with the modifications or adaptations which the immense gains of the human race in knowledge and power since the nineteenth century opened have shown to be wise Charles W Eliot 1910

Kitap Sepeti
539,50

Kriter Yayınları

2020232 sf.
Ciltsiz
Kitap Sepeti

The profession of teaching has Tong been characterised by certain habitual convictions which Spencer undertook to shake rudely and even to deride The first of these convictions is that all education physical intellectual and moral must be authoritative and need take no account of the natural wishes tendencies and motives of the ignorant and undeveloped child The second dominating conviction is that to teach means to tell or show children what they ought to see believe and utter Expositions by the teacher and books are therefore the true means of education The third and supreme conviction is that the method of education which produced the teacher himself and the contemporary or earlier scholars authors and publicists must be the righteous and sufficient method Its fruits demonstrate its soundness and make it sacred Herbert Spencer in the essays included in the present volume assaulted all three of these firm convictions Accordingly the ideas on education which he put forth more than fifty years ago have penetrated educational practice very slowly particularly in England but they are now coming to prevail in most civilised countries and they will prevail more and more Through him the thoughts on education of Comenius Montaigne Locke Milton Rousseau Pestalozzi and other noted writers on this neglected subject are at last winning their way into practice with the modifıcations or adaptations which the immense gains of the human race in knowledge and power since the nineteenth century opened have shown to be wise

Nobel Kitap
598,00

Kriter Yayınları

2020232 sf.
Ciltsiz16x24 cm2. Hamur
Nobel Kitap

The profession of teaching has Tong been characterised by certain habitual convictions which Spencer undertook to shake rudely and even to deride The first of these convictions is that all education physical intellectual and moral must be authoritative and need take no account of the natural wishes tendencies and motives of the ignorant and undeveloped child The second dominating conviction is that to teach means to tell or show children what they ought to see believe and utter Expositions by the teacher and books are therefore the true means of education The third and supreme conviction is that the method of education which produced the teacher himself and the contemporary or earlier scholars authors and publicists must be the righteous and sufficient method Its fruits demonstrate its soundness and make it sacred Herbert Spencer in the essays included in the present volume assaulted all three of these firm convictions Accordingly the ideas on education which he put forth more than fifty years ago have penetrated educational practice very slowly particularly in England but they are now coming to prevail in most civilised countries and they will prevail more and more Through him the thoughts on education of Comenius Montaigne Locke Milton Rousseau Pestalozzi and other noted writers on this neglected subject are at last winning their way into practice with the modifıcations or adaptations which the immense gains of the human race in knowledge and power since the nineteenth century opened have shown to be wise