Education Defined, Paley, 17. Parr, 17. Wotton, 12. Self-developing, 376. Building, 131. Sculpture, 16. Ascham, 37. Knowledge necessary to Learning, 393. 393. 396. Fear as a Motive to Study, Ascham, 6%. Locke, 264. Queen Elizabeth, 29. Lady June Grey, 63. Locke, 335. Excess and Restriction, 343. Variety, 348. Locke, 234. Holy State, cited, 43. The Good Schoolmaster, 403. Value of Active Amusements, 40. Deprecates excessive attention to Music, 27. Ascham, 27. Logonomia Anglica, 164. Petty, 207. Crabbe, 458. in Tutor or Teacher, 267. Complex and Difficult, 371. Knowledge for, required, 37). Qualifications and Duties of, 267. Ascham, 70, 74. Spencer, 373. on, Gray, T., Memoir, 426. Ode on Eton College, 428. Education and Government, 431. Proverb, Love of Learning, 15. Ascham, 32. Letter of Ascham in Greek, 33 Definition of Education, 18. and Development, Antagonisni of, 353. Formed Insensibly, 99. A Test of Utility, 376. Spencer, 348. Preface to Plan of College, 191. Office of Public Address, 199. A Duty, 355. Dwells too little on every-day Life, 119. of Milton, 160. The Irish Schoolmaster, 465. Lord Burleigh on, 43. College for, 192. 6 Moral Jesuits, Schools of, 91. Power of Habit, 99. Studies to be pursued by Youth, 152. of Nature's Law of Discipline, 368. Nature's Law of Reaction, 358. Consequences, 362. Too Much Expected, 368. Is Power, 95. For a Youth, 270. 394. 395. “ Discipline of Faculties, 399. On Politeness, 218. Why Learned, 316. Modern, 398. Ascham's Method, 70. 220, 311, 322. 70. Versification, 220, 329. Whately's, 104. by Rote, 372. Raumer's Pedngogical System of, 211. Dedication, 225. Excessive Tenderness, 227 Idleness in Children, not Natural, 294, 377. Sources of, 106. Office of, in Study of History, 121. Locke, Physic, Prevention and not Medicine, 236. Medcalf, Dr., 23. Medicine or Physic. in general Education, 183. Memory necessary to the Scholar, 61, 133. Mental Activity, Excess of, 351. Training, hard and ensy way of, 91. Metaplırasis, 75. Metaphysics, 83, 180. Merchants' Accounts, 339. Method, Importance of, 334. Mildmuy, Walter, 54. Military Exercises, 186, 190. Recommended by Milton, 186. Cowley, 190. Milton, 147, 160, 178. Memoir, 147. Home Life and Education, 147, 160. Private Teacher, 162. St. Paul School, 163. As a Schoolboy, 166. Christ College, Cambridge, 167. Victim of Corporeal Punishment, 175. Tractate on Education, 178. End of Learning. 12, 179. Definition of Education, 181 Mitford, J., Answer to Johnson's Strict. on Milton, 152 Modern Languages, 311. Moral Culture, 237, 356. Milton, 147, 184. Locke, 237. Spencer, 356. Cowper, 452 More, H., on Practice and Habit, 99. Morysine, Sir R., 31. Mother's unconscious Tuition of Objects 379. Power over Moral Education, 51. Motives to Study, 63. Ascham, 63, 69 Pinto on, 56. Milton on, 182. H. Coleridge, 27. Milton, 28, 186. Locke, 221, Dancing, Music, 221, 334. Natural Bent of the Genius, 91, 107, 137. Natural Consequences of Actions, 358. Natural Philosophy, Bacon on, 83, 94, 190, 323 Nature, Study of the Science, 331. Laws of, How Ascertained, 90. Reactionary Laws of, 353. Nature's Law of Discipline, 358. Illustrated in a Child's Litter, 361. Not being ready for a Walk, 362. Breaking Playthings, 362. Advantages of, 364. Navigation, 183. New England Country School, 471. District School Tencher, 416, 419. Nicassius, 55. Nosocomium Academicum, of Sir W. Petty, 204 Nursery Management, 357. Observing Fnculties, 373. Office of Common Address, 198. Opportunities, for a Pursuit, 107, 144 Orbilius, 405. Over Education, 354. Pain, the Punishment of Law violated, 358. . Ovid, 42. Painting, 337. Displeasure, 367. Ignorance, 393. Over Estimate of Capacity, 132. Place of, in Educution, 68. Instructed in Latin by Ascham, 29. Lord Pulinerston on, 26. Locke, 309. Petty, Sir W., 189. Plan of a Trade School, 199. Milton, 185. Comeliness and Perfection of Parts, 134. Eye, 135. Relative Value of 391. Raumer, 93. Milton, 184. Locke, 320. Locke, 253. Crabbe, 459. Of Instruction, 112. Of Examination, 112. Raumer, on Bacon's Pedagogy, Locke's, 209. Mode and Purposes of, 111. Made n Pastime, 307. Candor of Mind essential, 116. With Children, 262. Ascham on, 39, 42. Spencer, 397. For Children, 256. Teaching, 372, Fuller, T., 403. Cowper, W., 432. For Infants, 455. For Young Ladies, 458 For Boys, 459. The Scholar and Literary Life, 462. Delille, 407. Hood, 465. Schoolmaster, The, by Roger Ascham, 27, 45. Society, Education for, 253, 269, 398. Science of, 392. Socrates, on the average Capacity, 61. Marks of a promising Scholar, 63. 1. Sound Body, 63. 2. Memory, quick and Retentive, 63. 3. Love of Learning, 64. 4. Love of Labor, 64. 6. Buldoess to ask, 64. 7. Love of Praise for well-doing, 64. What to learn, 152 Sophisters at Cambridge, 172. South, Dr., Power of Habits, 13. Spenking, fluent, 76. 1. Physical Education, 345. Food, 345. Quality, Quantity, and Variety of Food, 347. Clothing, 348. Exercise, 350. Excess of Mental Activity, 351. Special Preparation for Family Management, 356. Examples of the Rule of Natural Reaction, 361. True Relation of Parent and Child, 365. How to deal with Grave Offences, 367. Commands few, but Decisive and Consisteut, 36J. Self-government the Aim of all Discipline, 370. Right Government complex and difficult, 371. 3. Intellectual Educati and Studies, 372. Decline of Old Methods, 372. Introduction of New Method, 373. The Order und Method of Nature to be followed, 374 Guiding principles of Education, 375. Application of Principle to Practice, 377. Intuitional Exercise of the Perceptions, 377. Object-lessons, 378. A Mother's Unconscious Tuition on Objects, 379. Extension of the field of Object-leaching, 380. Value of a Love and a Knowledge of Nature, 381. Drawing, including Form und Color, 381. Dimensions in Perspective, 382. Geometry, Primary, 383. Empirical, 384. Acquisition of Knowledge should be a process of self-instruction and continuous pleasure, 386. 4. What Knowledge is most Worth, 388. Relative Values of Knowledge, 388. Knowledge requisite tv Self-preservation, 389. Industrial success, 389. Mathematics, 390. Physics, 391. Chemistry. 391. Biology, 392. Science of Society, 392. Rearing and discipline of the family Offspring, 393 Functions of the Citizen, 396. Æsthetics, or Education for Relaxations, etc., 397. Knowledge requisite for purposes of Discipline, 399 Prominent value of Science, 399. Spirits, 297. Spontaneous Activity of Children, 377. Stimulation of the Faculties, 352. Story-books, Influence of, on Character, 117. Stubbornness, 260. Studies, calculated to mar some Minds, 28. To be varied to the Peculiarities, 91. Necessary to Life, 151, 272. Trivium, 177. Quadrivium, 177. |