The Teacher
224 pages
English

The Teacher

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The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Teacher, by Jacob Abbott This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net Title: The Teacher Author: Jacob Abbott Release Date: May 7, 2004 [EBook #12291] Language: English Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TEACHER *** Produced by Curtis Weyant, Sjaani THE TEACHER. MORAL INFLUENCES EMPLOYED IN THE INSTRUCTION AND GOVERNMENT OF THE YOUNG. A NEW AND REVISED EDITION. BY JACOB ABBOTT. With Engravings. 1873. Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year one thousand eight hundred and fifty-six, by HARPER & BROTHERS, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the Southern District of New York. PREFACE. This book is intended to detail, in a familiar and practical manner, a system of arrangements for the organization and management of a school, based on the employment, so far as is practicable, of Moral Influences, as a means of effecting the objects in view. Its design is, not to bring forward new theories or new plans, but to develop and explain, and to carry out to their practical applications such principles as, among all skillful and experienced teachers, are generally admitted and acted upon.

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Publié le 08 décembre 2010
Nombre de lectures 24
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

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The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Teacher, by Jacob Abbott
This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net
Title: The Teacher
Author: Jacob Abbott
Release Date: May 7, 2004 [EBook #12291]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TEACHER ***
Produced by Curtis Weyant, Sjaani
THE TEACHER.
MORAL INFLUENCES
EMPLOYED IN
THE INSTRUCTION AND GOVERNMENT
OF
THE YOUNG.
A NEW AND REVISED EDITION.
BY JACOB ABBOTT.
With Engravings.
1873.Entered, according to Act of Congress,
in the year one thousand eight hundred and fifty-six, by
HARPER & BROTHERS,
in the Clerk's Office of the District Court
of the Southern District of New York.
PREFACE.
This book is intended to detail, in a familiar and practical manner, a system of
arrangements for the organization and management of a school, based on the
employment, so far as is practicable, of Moral Influences, as a means of
effecting the objects in view. Its design is, not to bring forward new theories or
new plans, but to develop and explain, and to carry out to their practical
applications such principles as, among all skillful and experienced teachers,
are generally admitted and acted upon. Of course it is not designed for the
skillful and experienced themselves, but it is intended to embody what they
already know, and to present it in a practical form for the use of those who are
beginning the work, and who wish to avail themselves of the experience which
others have acquired.
Although moral influences are the chief foundations on which the power of the
teacher over the minds and hearts of his pupils is, according to this treatise, to
rest, still it must not be imagined that the system here recommended is one of
persuasion. It is a system of authority—supreme and unlimited authority—a
point essential in all plans for the supervision of the young; but it is authority
secured and maintained as far as possible by moral measures. There will be no
dispute about the propriety of making the most of this class of means. Whatever
difference of opinion there may be on the question whether physical force is
necessary at all, every one will agree that, if ever employed, it must be only as
a last resort, and that no teacher ought to make war upon the body, unless it is
proved that he can not conquer through the medium of the mind.
In regard to the anecdotes and narratives which are very freely introduced to
illustrate principles in this work, the writer ought to state that, though they are all
substantially true—that is, all except those which are expressly introduced as
mere suppositions, he has not hesitated to alter very freely, for obvious
reasons, the unimportant circumstances connected with them. He has
endeavored thus to destroy the personality of the narratives without injuring or
altering their moral effect.
From the very nature of our employment, and of the circumstances under which
the preparation for it must be made, it is plain that, of the many thousands who
are in the United States annually entering the work, a very large majority must
depend for all their knowledge of the art, except what they acquire from their
own observation and experience, on what they can obtain from books. It is
desirable that the class of works from which such knowledge can be obtainedshould be increased. Some excellent and highly useful specimens have
already appeared, and very many more would be eagerly read by teachers, if
properly prepared. It is essential, however, that they should be written by
experienced teachers, who have for some years been actively engaged and
specially interested in the work; that they should be written in a very practical
and familiar style, and that they should exhibit principles which are
unquestionably true, and generally admitted by good teachers, and not the new
theories peculiar to the writer himself. In a word, utility and practical effect
should be the only aim.
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER I.
INTEREST IN TEACHING.
Source of enjoyment in teaching.—The boy and the steam-engine.—His contrivance.—His pleasure, and the source of it.
—Firing at the mark.—Plan of clearing the galleries in the British House of Commons.—Pleasure of experimenting, and
exercising intellectual and moral power.—The indifferent and inactive teacher.—His subsequent experiments; means of
awakening interest.—Offenses of pupils.—Different ways of regarding them.
Teaching really attended with peculiar trials and difficulties.—1. Moral responsibility for the conduct of pupils.—2.
Multiplicity of the objects of attention.
CHAPTER II.
GENERAL ARRANGEMENTS.
Objects to be aimed at in the general arrangements.—Systematizing the teacher's work.—Necessity of having only one
thing to attend to at a time.
1. Whispering and leaving seats.—An experiment.—Method of regulating this.—Introduction of the new plan.
—Difficulties.—Dialogue with pupils.—Study-card.—Construction and use.
2. Mending pens.—Unnecessary trouble from this source.—Degree of importance to be attached to good pens.—Plan
for providing them.
3. Answering questions.—Evils.—Each pupil's fair proportion of time.—Questions about lessons.—When the teacher
should refuse to answer them.—Rendering assistance.—When to be refused.
4. Hearing recitations.—Regular arrangement of them.—Punctuality.—Plan and schedule.—General exercises.
—Subjects to be attended to at them.
General arrangements of government.—Power to be delegated to pupils.—Gardiner Lyceum.—Its government.—The
trial.—Real republican government impracticable in schools.—Delegated power.—Experiment with the writing-books.
—Quarrel about the nail.—Offices for pupils.—Cautions.—Danger of insubordination.—New plans to be introduced
gradually.
CHAPTER III.
INSTRUCTION.
The three important branches.—The objects which are really most important.—Advanced scholars.—Examination of
school and scholars at the outset.—Acting on numbers.—Extent to which it may be carried.—Recitation and Instruction.
1. Recitation.—Its object.—Importance of a thorough examination of the class.—Various modes.—Perfect regularity and
order necessary.—Example.—Story of the pencils.—Time wasted by too minute an attention to individuals.—Example.
—Answers given simultaneously to save time.—Excuses.—Dangers in simultaneous recitation.—Means of avoiding them.
—Advantages of this mode.—Examples.—Written answers.
2. Instruction.—Means of exciting interest.—Variety.—Examples.—Showing the connection between the studies of
school and the business of life.—Example from the controversy between general and state governments.—Mode of
illustrating it.—Proper way of meeting difficulties.—Leading pupils to surmount them.—True way to encourage the young
to meet difficulties.—The boy and the wheel-barrow.—Difficult examples in arithmetic.
Proper way of rendering assistance.—(1.) Simply analyzing intricate subjects.—Dialogue on longitude.—(2.) Making
previous truths perfectly familiar.—Experiment with the multiplication table.—Latin Grammar lesson.—Geometry.
3. General cautions.—Doing work for the scholar.—Dullness.—Interest in all the pupils.—Making all alike.—Faults of
pupils.—The teacher's own mental habits.—False pretensions.
CHAPTER IV.
MORAL DISCIPLINE.
First impressions.—Story.—Danger of devoting too much attention to individual instances.—The profane boy.—Case
described.—Confession of the boys.—Success.—The untidy desk.—Measures in consequence.—Interesting the scholars
in the good order of the school.—Securing a majority.—Example.—Reports about the desks.—The new College building.
—Modes of interesting the boys.—The irregular class.—Two ways of remedying the evil.—Boys' love of system and
regularity.—Object of securing a majority, and particular means of doing it.—Making school pleasant.—Discipline should
generally be private.—In all cases that are brought before the school, public opinion in the teacher's favor should be
secured.—Story of the rescue.—Feelings of displeasure against what is wrong.—The teacher under moral obligation,
and governed, himself, by law.—Description of the Moral Exercise .—Prejudice.—The scholars' written remarks, and the
teacher's comments.—The spider.—List of subjects.—Anonymous writing.—Specimens.—Marks of a bad scholar.
—Consequences of being behindhand.—New scholars.—A satirical spirit.—Variety.Treatment of individual offenders.—Ascertaining who they a

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