Harvard Educational Review, Volumes 16-18Howard Eugene Wilson Harvard University, 1946 |
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Page 216
... pupils and insist that democratic ideals and atti- tudes be applied to and by their the pupils . . . . According to ranking of their teachers , if they are in the higher social classes , they tend to be in the highly intelligent Section ...
... pupils and insist that democratic ideals and atti- tudes be applied to and by their the pupils . . . . According to ranking of their teachers , if they are in the higher social classes , they tend to be in the highly intelligent Section ...
Page 49
... pupils were better informed about the whole of North America than were pupils in the United States , in neither country was there sound educational undergirding for continued good relations " ( 3 ) . Besides examination of textbooks ...
... pupils were better informed about the whole of North America than were pupils in the United States , in neither country was there sound educational undergirding for continued good relations " ( 3 ) . Besides examination of textbooks ...
Page 75
... pupils . I do not urge that it is his duty to take time from scholarship , or even from golf or chess , to study the psychologi- cal status of his pupils . I only timid- ly suggest that perhaps his pupils would irritate and bore him ...
... pupils . I do not urge that it is his duty to take time from scholarship , or even from golf or chess , to study the psychologi- cal status of his pupils . I only timid- ly suggest that perhaps his pupils would irritate and bore him ...
Contents
ARTICLES | 10 |
Heinrich PestalozziHis Life and Work Gustav E Mueller | 141 |
The Imperial Carp | 160 |
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