Aspects of Child Life and EducationD. Appleton, 1921 - 326 páginas |
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Página vi
... imagination ; the phenomena of storm , including rain , thunder , and lightning ; heat and cold , along with fire and frost ; rocks and earth ; trees and forests ; flowers and the sentiments they inspire ; animals , with special studies ...
... imagination ; the phenomena of storm , including rain , thunder , and lightning ; heat and cold , along with fire and frost ; rocks and earth ; trees and forests ; flowers and the sentiments they inspire ; animals , with special studies ...
Página viii
... imagination ; response to folklore ; studies of their curiosity and interest , of their spontaneous drawings ; attempts at artistic creations ; their fetishes ; collections ; the beginnings of property ownership ; punishments , both in ...
... imagination ; response to folklore ; studies of their curiosity and interest , of their spontaneous drawings ; attempts at artistic creations ; their fetishes ; collections ; the beginnings of property ownership ; punishments , both in ...
Página 3
... imagination , or embarrassment of the chil- dren . When the answers were taken in class nearly twice as many children asserted knowledge of the concept as when they were taken in groups of 8 to 10. Nearly half the boys and more than ...
... imagination , or embarrassment of the chil- dren . When the answers were taken in class nearly twice as many children asserted knowledge of the concept as when they were taken in groups of 8 to 10. Nearly half the boys and more than ...
Página 20
... imaginative , while their knowledge of things outward and re- mote , their power to sing and articulate correctly from dicta- tion , their acquaintance with number and animals , is distinctly less than that of the boys . The Berlin ...
... imaginative , while their knowledge of things outward and re- mote , their power to sing and articulate correctly from dicta- tion , their acquaintance with number and animals , is distinctly less than that of the boys . The Berlin ...
Página 53
... imagination during waking hours " — by no means covers the material of the returns , which include nearly every form ... imaginative mental states in which there is a greater or less degree of autom- atism in the images which come before ...
... imagination during waking hours " — by no means covers the material of the returns , which include nearly every form ... imaginative mental states in which there is a greater or less degree of autom- atism in the images which come before ...
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Términos y frases comunes
active adolescence adults animals Annaberg answer asked attention baby birds Boys Girls Brandenburg Gate buttons cent chil child childhood cigar tags clothes collections color concepts curiosity daydreaming desire doll Family doll play doll's dolly dreams dren dress Earle Barnes early echolalia eggs experience eyes fairy-story fancy fear feeling fetich flowers frog give given grow hair Helen Keller Herbartian horse idea images imagination imitation impulse individual instinct kind kindergarten later less look ment mental Mikado mind months mother never objects ownership paper dolls Pedagogical Seminary perhaps person possession psychic Psychology questions sand pile savage sea moss seems sense Silas Marner sometimes stages STANLEY HALL stones story suggested teach teachers things thought tion toys trade trees Tusayan week
Pasajes populares
Página 23 - Every teacher on starting with a new class or in a new locality, to make sure that his efforts along some lines are not utterly lost, should undertake to explore carefully section by section children's minds...
Página 78 - at church, or in company, or when I was reading, and always, I think, when my muscles were at rest, I felt the approach of the mood. Irresistibly it took possession of my mind and will, lasted what seemed an eternity, and disappeared in a series of rapid sensations which resembled the awakening from anaesthetic influence. One reason why I disliked this kind of trance was that I could not describe it to myself. I cannot even now find words to render it intelligible.
Página 159 - Material of Which Dolls Are Made, Substitutes, and Proxies Of 845 children, with 989 preferences, between the ages of three and twelve, 191 preferred wax dolls; 163, paper dolls; 153, china dolls; 144, rag dolls; 116, bisque dolls; 83, china and cloth dolls; 69, rubber dolls; 12, china and kid dolls; 11, pasteboard dolls; 7, plaster of Paris dolls; 6, wood dolls; 3, knit dolls; while a few each preferred papier-mache, clay, glass, cotton, tin, celluloid, French, Japanese, brownie, Chinese, sailor,...
Página 34 - ... or in the clouds, in the church, or even street. He came in our gate -, comes to see us sometimes. He lives in a big palace or a big brick or stone house on the sky. He makes lamps, babies, dogs, trees, money, etc., and the angels work for him. He looks like the priest, Frobel, papa, etc., and they like to look at him, and a few would like to be God. He lights the stars so he can see to go on the sidewalk or into the church. Birds, children, Santa Claus, live with him, and most but not all like...
Página 23 - That there is next to nothing of pedagogic value, the knowledge of which it is safe to assume at the outset of school life.
Página 307 - I say, four I love with all my heart, and five I cast away, etc." Here the apples were quartered and strung, and hung in festoons to dry all over the kitchen. There were quilting bees for girls about to marry, where the men came in the evening and partook of the new species of rice popcorn, served in two large milk pans, with perhaps the most delicious homemade spruce and wintergreen beer.
Página 12 - ... independent answer of their own, but they often love to seem wise, and, to make themselves interesting, state what seems to interest us without reference to truth, divining the lines of our interest with a subtlety we do not suspect ; if absurdities are doubted they are sometimes only the more protested, the faculties of some are benumbed and perhaps their tongues tied by bashfulness, while others are careless, listless, inattentive, and answer at random. Again, many questioners are brusque,...
Página 23 - Alas for the teacher who does not learn more from his children than he can ever hope to teach them ! Just in proportion as teachers do this do they cease to be merely mechanical, and acquire interest, perhaps enthusiasm, and surely an all-compensating sense of growth in their work and life.
Página 34 - ... God. He lights the stars so he can see to go on the sidewalk or into the church. Birds, children, Santa Glaus, live with him, and most but not all like him better than they do the latter. When people die they just go, or are put in a hole, or a box or a black wagon that goes to heaven, or they fly up or are drawn or slung up into the sky where God catches them. They never can get out of the hole, and yet all good people somehow get where God is. He lifts them up, they go up on a ladder or rope,...
Página 38 - In about 450 answers 53 wrongs acts are specified, while in, over 350 answers only 34 different good acts are named. The more frequent answers are to mind and be good, or to disobey, be naughty, lie, and say bad words ; but the answers of the girls differ from the boys in two marked ways, they more often name specific acts and nearly twice as often conventional ones, the former difference being most common in naming right, the latter in naming wrong things. Boys say it is wrong to steal, fight, kick,...