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the education of the masses has been so expanded in scope during the century that today it includes aims, classes, types of schools, and forms of service scarcely dreamed of at the time the State began to take over the school from the Church, with a view to extending elementary educational advantages and promoting literacy and citizenship. What some of the more important of these expansions have been we shall state in a following chapter, but before doing so let us return to another phase of the problem—that of the progress of educational theory—and see what have been the main lines of this progress in the theory as to the educational purpose since the time when Pestalozzi formulated a theory for the secular school.

 

QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION

 

1. What does the emphasis on the People’s High Schools in Denmark indicate as to the political status of the common people there?

 

2. Explain the educational prominence of Finland, compared with its neighbor Russia.

 

3. Show the close relation between the character of the school system developed in Japan and the character of its government. In China.

 

4. Show why the state-function conception of education is destined to be the ruling plan everywhere.

 

5. Show the close connection between the Industrial Revolution and a somewhat general diffusion of the fundamental principles revealed by the study of science.

 

6. Show how the Industrial Revolution has created entirely new problems in education, and what some of these are.

 

7. Show the connection between the Industrial Revolution and political enfranchisement.

 

8. Enumerate some of the educational problems we now face that we should not have had to deal with had the Industrial Revolution not taken place.

 

9. Why has the result of these changes been to extend the period of dependence and tutelage of children?

 

10. Outline an educational solution of the problem of Mexico. Of Russia.

Of Persia.

 

11. Show how Germany found it profitable to establish Realschulen in such distant countries as Turkey, Mesopotamia, and the Argentine.

 

12. Describe the expansion of the educational idea since the days when Pestalozzi formulated the theory for the secular school.

 

13. What is the social significance of the development of parallel secondary schools and courses, in all lands?

 

14. Contrast the American and the European secondary school in purpose.

Why should the American be a free school, while those in Europe are tuition schools?

 

15. Show why the essentially democratic school system maintained in the United States would not be suited to an autocratic form of government.

 

16. Show that the weight of a priesthood and the force of religious instruction in the schools would be strong supports for monarchical forms of government.

 

17. Homogeneous monarchical nations look after the training of their teachers much better than does such a cosmopolitan nation as the United States. Why?

 

SELECTED READINGS

 

In the accompanying Book of Readings the following illustrative selections are reproduced:

 

333. Switzerland: Constitutional Provisions as to Education and Religious Freedom.

334. Japan: The Basic Documents of Japanese Education.

(a) Preamble to the Education Code of 1872.

(b) Imperial Rescript on Moral Education.

(c) Instructions as to Lessons on Morals.

335. Ping Wen Kuo: Transformation of China by Education.

336. Mann: Education and National Prosperity.

337. Huxley: The Recent Progress of Science.

338. Anon.: Scientific Knowledge must precede Invention.

339. Ticknor: Illustrating Early Lack of Communication.

340. Monroe: The Struggle for National Realization.

341. Buisson, F.: The French Teacher and the National Spirit.

342. Fr. de Hovre: The German Emphasis on National Ends.

343. Stuntz: Landing of the Pilgrims at Manila.

 

QUESTIONS ON THE READINGS

 

1. Compare the Swiss and American Federal organizations, and state just what the Swiss Constitution (333) provides as to education.

 

2. Suppose you knew nothing about the Japanese, what type of government would you take theirs to be from reading the Imperial Rescript (334b)?

 

3. In comparing the Chinese transformation and the Renaissance (335), does Mr. Ping propose comparable events?

 

4. Show that Mr. Mann’s argument (336) is still sound.

 

5. Does Huxley overdraw (337) our dependence on science?

 

6. From 338, show why the Middle Ages were so poor in inventions and discoveries.

 

7. Are there universities anywhere to-day of which we know as little as Ticknor was able to find out (339) a century ago?

 

8. Show that Monroe’s statements are true that the struggle for national realization (340) has dominated modern history from the fifteenth century on.

 

9. Compare the conceptions as to the function of education in a State as revealed in the selections as to French (341) and German (342) educational purpose.

 

10. Show the entirely new character of the event (343) described by Stuntz.

 

SUPPLEMENTARY REFERENCES

 

* Buisson, F. and Farrington, F. E. French Educational Ideals of To-day.

Butler, N. M. “Status of Education at the Close of the Century”; in Proceedings National Education Association, 1900, pp. 188-96.

Davidson, Thos. “Education as World Building”; in Educational Review, vol. xx, pp. 325-45. (November, 1900.) Doolittle, Wm. H. Inventions of the Century.

Foster, M. “A Century’s Progress in Science”; in Educational Review, vol. xviii, pp. 313-31. (November, 1899.) * Friedel, V. H. The German School as a War Nursery.

Gibbons, H. de B. Economic and Industrial Progress of the Century.

Hughes, J. L., and Klemm, L. R. Progress of Education in the Nineteenth Century.

* Huxley, Thos. “The Progress of Science”; in his Methods and Results.

* Kuo, Ping Wen. The Chinese System of Public Education.

Lewis, R. E. The Educational Conquest of the Far East.

Macknight, Thos. Political Progress of the Century.

* Ross, E. A. “The World Wide Advance of Democracy”; in his Changing America.

Routledge, R. A Popular History of Science.

Sandiford, Peter, Editor. Comparative Education.

* Sedgwick, W. T., and Tyler, H. W. A Short History of Science.

* Thwing, C. F. Education in the Far East.

Webster, W. C. General History of Commerce.

White, A. D. The-Warfare of Science and Theology.

CHAPTER XXVIII

NEW CONCEPTIONS OF THE EDUCATIONAL PROCESS

 

I. THE PSYCHOLOGICAL ORGANIZATION OF ELEMENTARY INSTRUCTION

 

THE BEGINNINGS OF NORMAL-SCHOOL TRAINING. The training of would-be teachers for the work of instruction is an entirely modern proceeding. The first class definitely organized for imparting training to teachers, concerning which we have any record, was a small local training group of teachers of reading and the Catechism, conducted by Father D�mia, at Lyons, France, in 1672. The first normal school to be established anywhere was that founded at Rheims, in northern France, in 1685, by Abb� de la Salle (p. 347). He had founded the Order of “The Brothers of the Christian Schools” the preceding year, to provide free religious instruction for children of the working classes in France (R. 182), and he conceived the new idea of creating a special school to train his prospective teachers for the teaching work of his Order. Shortly afterward he established two similar institutions in Paris. Each institution he called a “Seminary for Schoolmasters.” In addition to imparting a general education of the type of the time, and a thorough grounding in religion, his student teachers were trained to teach in practice schools, under the direction of experienced teachers. This was an entirely new idea.

 

The beginnings elsewhere, as we have previously pointed out were made in German lands, Francke’s Seminarium Praeceptorum, established at Halle (p. 419), in 1697, coming next in point of time. In 1738 Johann Julius Hecker (1707-68), one of Francke’s teachers (p. 562), established the first regular Seminary for Teachers in Prussia, and in 1748 he established a private Lehrerseminar in Berlin. In these two institutions he first showed the German people the possibilities of special training for teachers in the secondary school. In 1753 the Berlin institution was adopted as a Royal Teachers’ Seminary (p. 563) by Frederick the Great.

After this, and in part due to the enthusiastic support of the Berlin institution by the King, the teacher-training idea for secondary teachers began to find favor among the Germans. We accordingly find something like a dozen Teachers’ Seminaries had been founded in German lands before the close of the eighteenth century. [1] A normal school was established in Denmark, by royal decree, as early as 1789, and five additional schools when the law organizing public instruction in Denmark was enacted, in 1814. In France the beginnings of state action came with the action of the National Convention, which decreed the establishment of the “Superior Normal School for France,” in 1794 (p. 517). This institution, though, was short lived, and the real beginnings of the French higher normal school awaited the reorganizing work of Napoleon, in 1808 (p. 595; R. 283).

 

The schools just mentioned represent the first institutions in the history of the world organized for the purpose of training teachers to teach. The teachers they trained, though, were intended primarily for the secondary schools, and the training was largely academic in character. Only in Silesia was any effort made, before the nineteenth century, to give training in special institutions to teachers intended for the vernacular schools. There Frederick the Great, in his “Regulations for the Catholic Schools of Silesia” (R. 275, a � 2) designated six cathedral and monastery schools as model schools, where teachers could “have the opportunity for learning all that is needed by a good teacher.” In another place he defined this as “skill in singing and playing the organ sufficient to perform the services of the Church,” and “the art of instructing the young in the German language” (R. 275, a � 1). So long as the instruction in the vernacular school consisted chiefly of reading and the Catechism, and of hearing pupils recite what they had memorized, there was of course but little need for any special training for the teachers. It was not until after Pestalozzi had done his work and made his contribution that there was anything worth mentioning to train teachers for.

 

PESTALOZZI’S CONTRIBUTION. The memorable work done by Pestalozzi in Switzerland, during his quarter-century (1800-25) of effort at Burgdorf and Yverdon, changed the whole face of the preparation of teachers problem. His work was so fundamental that it completely redirected the education of children. Taking the seed-thought of Rousseau that sense-impression was “the only true foundation of human knowledge” (R. 267), he enlarged this to the conception of the mental development of human beings as being organic, and proceeding according to law. His extension of this idea of Rousseau’s led him to declare that education was an individual development, a drawing-out and not a pouring-in; that the basis of all education exists in the nature of man; and that the method of education is to be sought and constructed. [2] These were his great contributions.

These ideas fitted in well with the rising tide of individualism which marked the late eighteenth and the early nineteenth centuries, and upon these contributions the modern secular elementary school has been built.

 

These ideas led Pestalozzi to emphasize sense perception and expression; to formulate the rule that in teaching we must proceed from the concrete to the abstract; and to construct a “faculty psychology” which conceived of education as “a harmonious development” of the different “faculties” of the mind. He also tried, unsuccessfully to be sure, to so organize the teaching process that eventually it could be so “mechanized” that there would be a regular A, B, C, for each type of instruction, which, once learned, would give perfection to a teacher. In his Report of 1800 (R.

267), which forms a very clear statement of his aims, he had said: I know what I am undertaking; but neither

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