COMPRISES STANDARD WORKS Jn every department of instrtiction and of every grade. The teacher in want of a book for any par- ticular purpose or class, will always find the best of its kind in our catalogue. No other series even claims to be as complete as this. None is so extensive or so judiciously selected. Among so maiy volumes a high standard of merit is maintained, as it is oar aim never to. permit our impiint upon a poor or unworthy book. It is also our plan to make books not for a class or sect, but for the whole country unobjectionable to parties and creeds, while inculcating the great principles of political freedom and Christianity, upon which all right-minded persons are agreed. Hence, and from their almost universal circulation, the name " National Seiies." Among the principal volumes are Parker & TflTatson's Readers in two distinct series, each complete in itself. Tlic, National Headers, of full grade, in large, elegant volumes, adequate for every want of the most thorough and highly graded schools. Ttie Independent Headers, in smaller volumes, for Common Schools. Low in price, but in no other respect inferior to the companion series. Spellers complete to accompany either series. Davies' PUathematics Arithmetic, Algebra, Geometry, Surveyittff, Ac. Complete in every branch The national standard world-renowned. Millions have been called for, and the sale Increases year by year. New volumes are constantly published to take the places of those that are in the le*itifiluni. the limea. -rv.mi>> . knd others to follow. B usually forgotten, L-of grouping about Southern Branch of the University of California Los Angeles Form L I Education Library LB 1025 , Physical. ither series. From i|e book he wants. I Philosophy, vond all precedent; bject lessons and nan, French, thors, with signal o's Orations, I elegant editions. d texts published rmotated Authors, of language De- Lexicon NORTH - versnl BERARD'S :siastical Hist, itional Steel Pens ds ALLEN'S Hap ;ophy PORTER'S WOOD'S Botany ology ITiJXTi-VG- Manual ALDES'S ratnre, as PAGE'S istant, Ac. YORK. 1. A. WHOLE LIBRARY IN FOUR VOLUMES. OF ENGLISH OF 19th CENT Y OF AMERICAN OF CLASSICAL One Hundred and Twenty Thousand of these Volumes have been sold, and they are the acknowledged Standard wherever this refining study is pursued. PROF. JAMES & BOYD'S WORKS. EMBRACING COMPOSITION, LCGTC, LITERATURE, RHETORIC, CRITICISM, JtlOGRAPHY fPOJSTRY, AN1> PROSE. BOYD'S COMPOSITION AND RHETORIC. Remarkable for the space and attention given to grammatical principles, to afford a substantial groundwork ; also for the admirable treatment of synonyms, figurative language, and the sources of argument and illustration, with notable exercises for pre- paring the way to poetic composition. BOYD'S ELEMENTS OF LOGIC. explains, first, the conditions and processes by which the mind receives idea?, and then unfolds the art of reasoning, with clear directions for the establishment and con- firmation of sound -judgment. A thoroughly practical treatise, being a systematic and philosophical condensation of all that is known of the subject. COYD'S /(AMES' CRITICISM. This standard work, as 'is well known, treats of the faculty of perception, and the result of its exercise upon the tastes and emotions. It may therefore be termed a Com- pendium of Aesthetics and Natural Morals ; and its use in refining the mind and heart has made it a standard text-book. BOYD'S ANNOTATED ENGLISH CLASSICS. Jtfilton's Paradise Lost. Young's Ifiyht Thoughts. Cowper's Task, Table Talk, &e. TJiomson'.t Seasons. Pollok's Course of Time. Lord liaeon's Essays. In six cheap volumes. The service done to literature, by Prof. Boyd's Annotations upon these standard writers, can with difficulty be estimated. Line by line their ex- pressions and ideas are aualyze.l and discussed, until the best comprehension of the powerful use of language is obtained by the learner. MATE N Los Angeles, Cai. , we still contend that the right to inflict it does, and uhould cf necessity, rest with the teacher, and the mere cwisclousness of this, on the part of the pupils, will have a controlling and salutary influence. The same idea is expressed very forcibly in relation to another sub- ject, thus: "The government of the United States em- ploys its hundreds of -workmen, at Springfield and at Harper's Ferry, in tks manufacture of muskets. The inspector examines every one, as it is finished, with great care. He adjusts the flint, and tries it again and again, until its emitted shower of sparka is of proper brilliancy, and, when satisfied that all is right, he packs it away with its thousands of companions, to sleep, probably, in their boxes, in quiet obscurity, forever. A hundred thousand of these deadly instruments form a volcano of slumbering power, which never has been awakened, and * Joseph Hale. DISCIPLINE. 113 THE GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED STATES. which we hope never will. The government never makes use of them. One of its agents, a custom-house officer, waits upon you for the payment of a bond. He brings no musket. He keeps no troops. He comes with the gentleness and civility of a social visit. But you know that, if compliance with the just demands of your govern- ment is refused, and the resistance is sustained, force after force would be brought to bear upon you, until the whole hundred thousand muskets should speak with their united and tremendous energy. The government of these United States is thus a mighty engine, working with immense momentum ; but the parts which bear upon the citizen conceal their power by the elegance of the work- manship, and by the slowness, and apparent gentleness, of their motion. If you yield to it, it glides smoothly and pleasantly by. If you resist it, it crushes you to atoms." * And thus, we contend, it must be with the instructor. Constituted as human nature is, he must be vested with authority and power. These, like the muskets at the arsenals, may remain unobserved until emergency shall call for their appearance. And if parents and teachers will exercise a little more caution and judgment, and say only what they 'mean, and mean just what they say, and manifest a firm, decided, unyielding, though kind determination, to have every requirement strictly regarded and promptly and implicitly answered, it will rarely be necessary to exercise the power and authority to an un- pleasant extent. Oft- repeated and continued scolding or whipping, in a * Jacob Abbott 10* 114 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. THE HARDENING PROCESS ILLUSTRATED. family or school, will only tend to make bad children worse, and good ones indifferent. A blacksmith brought up his son, to whom he was very severe, to his own trade. One day, the old Vulcan was attempting to harden a cold-chisel, which he had made of foreign steel, but could not succeed. At last, the youth, who was standing near, willing to impart knowl- edge which he had obtained by bitter experience, ex- claimed, with an expression full of faith, ' ' Horse- whip it, father ; if that won't harden it, nothing will ! " On the subject of corporal punishment, a subject which has often excited public attention, I would no. be misunderstood. I would not entirely object to its application, but would discountenance its too frequent, and often improper, use. I fully believe that there are cases, in which the best good of a school, as well as of an offender, calls for the infliction of severe chastisement. Though this may be grievous for the time, it will, if rightly applied, produce good fruits. But the rod should never be hastily or passionately used. There are parents, and there are teachers, who, for every slight offence or deviation of a child, grasp the rod, and, with passionate violence, use it. This is, unquestionably, wrong; but the correction of this extreme should not lead us to an opposite one, which, under existing circumstances of society, would be equally pernicious. The rod should not be applied on every occasion, nor for every transgression ; but the infrequency of its use should contribute, in no small degree, to its efficacy. The teacher should always resort to it with calmness and self- control ; and the whole case should be so considered and explained, with all attendant circumstances, that the DISCIPLINE. 115 CORPORAL PUNISHMENT. whole school, and the offender himself, shall see and feel that the teacher is about to perform an unpleasant and painful duty, a duty from which he will never shrink, when called upon by circumstances to act. After the nature and particulars of the case have been suitably commented upon, the deserved punishment should be inflicted with such degree of severity as will subdue the guilty one, and strongly impress upon him, and through him, the fact that " the way of the transgressor is hard." This course, followed by a kindness on the part of the teacher which shall indicate that naught has been done in malice, will usually have a salutary effect. Good order, and submission to wholesome regulations, must be insisted on, in every well-managed family and school. These should be (and, ordinarily, they may be) secured by mild and kind means, if possible ; but they should not, in any instance, be sacrificed to a frequently- conceived, though we think erroneous impression, that the use of the rod is too brutal. If boys so far depart from a proper course as to allow brutal passions to gain the mastery over reason and judgment, and under their con- trol set at naught all just requirements and salutary regulations, they should be met and conquered by such arguments as the existing and ruling principles may seem to demand. To obtain stillness and order in the school-room, it is not necessary that the teacher should be noisy himself, ;>r use loud tones of voice. If scholars are uneasy, rest- less, or noisy, let the teacher suspend all exercises, and wait until all is quiet ; and, if this demands a loss of tlm^ let the school-hours be lengthened, to make up the 116 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. STILLNESS. MOTHER OF WASHINGTON. loss. This waiting process will do wonders, sometimes., in promoting order. Mr. Parish, the experienced and efficient principal of the Springfield High School, thug, speaks of a similar course : " The simple process of sus- pending all exercises, and obtaining perfect stillness for a single minute, so that a clock or watch may be heard to tick, frequently operates like a charm. Most scholars have little idea of a still school-room, till they learn it by some such experiment ; nor of the noise they make, except by contrast." Again ; the teacher must be even and uniform in his disciplinary efforts. "If strict in discipline to-day, and lax to-morrow; if he punishes an offence at one time which he disregards at another ; or if he suffers an irreg- ularity to pass unnoticed now and censures it to-morrow, how can his scholars have confidence in his judgment 1 They will be very quick to observe any irregularity in the teacher's mode of instructing, or in his general sys- tem of government. Let no one suffer himself to be deceived, by thinking that irregularity will pass without exerting an unhappy influence." * It is said, that when the mother of Washington was asked how she formed the character of her son, she replied, that she had endeavored early and earnestly to teach him three things, obedience, diligence, and truth, If these were essential to the formation of the character of the great and good Washington, shall they not be deemed of the utmost importance in training the young of the present day ? Without obedience, it will be in vain to attempt to teach. "How careful men of influence, and especially teach- * S. B. Hall. DISCIPLINE. 117 EXTRACT FROM JOSEPH HALE*S LECTURE. ers, should be to guard against encouraging that excess- ive love of freedom which can brook no restraint ! They who know not how to be governed are, surely, incapable of that self-government which is the very essence of free- dom. If children ire brought up with the notion that they are never to be restrained by force, how wrong soever their acts may be, they are in great danger of becoming the victims of lawless and ungovernable pas- sions. Let a respect for law and order, then, be early inculcated in them. Let teachers keep steadily on in the path of duty, teaching really what they pretend to teach, and governing really where they ought to govern, listening to the dictates of conscience, and guided more by the fixed principles of a true spiritual philosophy than by the changeful notions of fluctating experimental- ism." * Without further enlarging upon this subject, I will give a few simple and plain rules for the teacher's guid- ance ; and, if they are properly regarded and observed, there will seldom be occasion for resorting to any severe mode of punishment. 1 know not the authorship of the rules ; but give them as found, with the exception of a few unimportant alterations : RULES FOR THE TEACHER. 1. From your earliest connection with your pupils, inculcate the necessity of prompt and exact obedience. 2. Unite firmness with gentleness ; and let your pupila always understand that you mean exactly what you say 8. Never promise anything, unless you are quite sure you can give what you promise. * Joseph Hale. 118 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. ROLES FOR THE TEACHER. 4. Never tell a pupil to do anything, unless you ar gure he knows how it is to be done ; or show him how to do it, and then see that he does it. O. Always punish a pupil for wilful disobedience; but never punish unduly, or in anger ; and in no case should a blow be given on the head. 6. Never let your pupils see that they can vex you, or make you lose your self-command. 7. If pupils are under the influence of an angry or petulant spirit, wait till they are calm, and then reason with them on the impropriety of their conduct. 8. Never yield anything to a pupil because he looks angry, or attempts to move you by threats and tears. Deal mercifully, but justly too. 9. A little present punishment, when the occasion arises, is more effectual than the threatening of a greater punishment, should the fault be renewed. 10. Never allow pupils to do, at one time, what you have forbidden, under the like circumstances, at another. 11. Teach the young that the only sure and easy way to appear good is to be good. 12. Never allow tale-bearing. 13. If a pupil abuses your confidence, make him. for a time, feel the want of it. 14. Never allude to former errors, when real sorrow has been evinced for having committed them. 15. Encourage, in every suitable way, a spirit of dili- gence, obedience, perseverance, kindness, forbearance, honesty, truthfulness, purity, and courteousness. 16. Never speak in a scolding and fretful manner, but use tones of gentleness. Some teachers defeat their objects by using harsh and boisterous tones. CHAPTER XVI. MEANS OF INTERESTING PUPILS AND PARENTS. THE business of education is of a tri-party nature, and its truly healthful and wise advancement can only be secured by the heartfelt and sincere interest and judicious efforts of all concerned. Teachers, parents, and pupils, are the joint-partners in the work ; and, while something may be done by each party individually, nothing, short of the harmonious and cheerful cooperation of all, can secure the richest and fullest blessings which the object under consideration is calculated to impart. The teacher should earnestly ask what he can do to awaken a proper degree of interest on the part of the pupils and parents, with whom and for whom he is called to labor. It will be my endeavor in this chapter to make a few suggestions in reference to this point : I. By possessing and exercising the qualifications previously named, and having a heart truly alive to the duties and responsibilities of his vocation. Unless teachers possess the requisite moral and literary qualifications, together with a well-disciplined faculty of imparting instruction to others, it will be in vain to attempt to awaken and continue an active and galutary interest on the part of pupils and parents. If they who assume the duties of the teacher's office are in any degree incompetent in their qualifications or indifferent in their 120 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. INTEREST IN LESSONS. feelings, that incompetency or that indifference will surely be felt by all with whom they may come in con- tact. The instructor is, or should be, the fountain from whose resources the pupils may obtain their supplies ; and, if those supplies are insufficient in quantity, or impure in quality, the recipients will, most certainly, suffer therefrom. The teacher should have a just appreciation of the nature of the work he is called to perform. As he meets his pupils, from day to day, he should not only strive to supply their minds from his own well-stored mind, but he should, at all times, furnish them the benefit of a good example. Kind, gentle, affectionate, firm, he must, in all particulars, and on all occasions, give the clearest evidence that he is a man, a man possessed of manly feelings, and influenced by manly motives, a man with a heart alive to their interests, and ever ready to administer to their wants and promote their true hap- piness. And how shall he do this 1 1. By manifesting an intelligent and active inte- rest in all their studies. Many of the exercises of the school- room are, in them- selves, of a monotonous and uninteresting character ; and after all that has been said in relation to making them easy and attractive, it is, nevertheless, true, that a good and thorough education cannot be acquired without much patient and laborious application and effort, on the part of pupils. The teacher may do, and should do, much to aid and cheer them on, and thus render their tasks more interesting ; but he cannot perform their work for them. One of the most common, and one of the most erroneous, notions of the present day, is, that every lesson must be TC INTEREST PUPILS. i'2L THE OBJECT TO BE KEPT IN VIEW. made perfectly simple, easy, and pleasant, for the learner. The truth is, that it is impossible to make all lessons and school-exercises easy and simple ; and he who attempts to do so will have a school of simpletons. In obtaining an education, there must be hard study, and close, self- denying application. The scholar should be made to feel this in the outset ; and he may feel it and still strive with pleasure, for the "pursuit of knowledge under difficulties " is not without the highest pleasure, especially when the noble results of its attainment are kept properly and distinctly before the mind. The main thing is, to inspire one with a feeling that a certain object is truly desirable and valuable ; and then it matters not what difficulties are in the way, they will be readily encountered, quickly overcome ; and the pleasure attend- ing the attainment of the object will be greatly enhanced by the very obstacles surmounted in securing it. It is so with the young, no less than with those of maturer years. A few years ago, intelligence came that rich and exten- sive mines of the riches which perish with the using had been discovered upon our far-off western borders ; and when it once became certain that the precious metal abounded in those distant regions, neither the endear- ments of home, perils by land and perils by sea. nor hardships to be encountered and privations to be endured of the severest nature, could deter vast multitudes from thronging our Pacific shores. And, so long as it shall be probable that the fine gold abounds there, there will be no lack of willing pilgrims to the spot, though it may be necessary for them, at almost every step, to pass the bones or the graves of those who have perished by the 11 122 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. MAKE THE SCHOOL-ROOM PLEASANT. way. And men are wanted for teachers who will, by holding before the minds of the young fair prospects of a rich harvest of more durable and satisfying riches than any earthly El Dorado can give, incite them to those habits of diligence, application, and perseverance, which will secure to them prizes of inestimable worth. The teacher should endeavor constantly and earnestly to impress the minds of his pupils with a just sense of the greatness of the work to be accomplished, and of the intrinsic value of the object to be obtained. He should aim to inspire them with confidence in their own abilities, and encourage them to persevere cheerfully in the pur- suit of knowledge, and lead them to feel that the greatest happiness will come from surmounting the most formid- able difficulties. By presenting to their minds, as clearly as may be, the goal to be reached, and the value of the prize to be won, he may do much to incite them on with vigor and zeal in the race before them. But, aside from this, he may do much to make the dullest exercises invit- ing, and throw a cheerful interest around recitations of themselves monotonous and void of interest. By judicious explanations and well-selected anecdotes, he may do much to animate and enliven the heart of the otherwise dispir- ited pupil, and lead him to press on with a hopeful, buoyant, and happy spirit. 2. By making the school-room cheerful and at- tractive. It is for the teacher, mainly, to determine what kind of atmosphere shall pervade the school- room. It will, indeed, be precisely what he shall decide to make it. If he enters the school with a gloomy or morose counte- nance, and, while in it, indulges in feelings of petulance, HOW TO INTEREST PUPILS. 128 CORRECT MORAL TONE. or manifests a discontented, captious or capricious spirit, his pupils will surely be restless, fretful, and trouble- some. But, on the other hand, if he wears a cheerful countenance, and exhibits a patient, mild, and happy frame of mind, with a corresponding kindness in his tone, expression, and movements, he will do much to make the school-room pleasant, and the pupils contented and happy. I Avould, therefore, urge upon the teacher the importance of cultivating and exhibiting all those kindly feelings and traits of the heart which prove a rich adornment to the whole life and character, rendering their possessor a more agreeable companion, and a more useful citizen. He should always strive so to present himself before them, in every act, word, and expression, as to prove a worthy pattern for imitation, ever remem- bering, that " as is the teacher, so will be the pupils." 3. By promoting a healthy moral tone among his pupils, the teacher Witt create an interest in school duties. To live wisely and well, and possess a happy and cheerful disposition, one should have some just apprecia- tion of life's great end, with a strong desire rightly to perform all its duties, and submissively to bear its tri- als. Hence, the teacher should make it a prominent point, to impress upon his pupils the vastness of the object for which they live. He should bring before their minds, as distinctly and forcibly as may be, the nature of their relations to each other, to the community, and to their Creator, and hold up to their view the duties and responsibilities resting upon every citizen. He should do what he can to cause them to feel that true goodness and true happiness are inseparable ; and that the more they 124 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. INTEREST IN AMUSEMENTS. strive to perform faithfully every duty, as pupils, the more they do to promote the good of their companions, parents, and all with whom they may, in any way, be associated, the greater will be their own true happiness and usefulness. He should, by precept and by example, lead them to love and regard truth and honesty, and cherish and cultivate every moral and kindly feeling of the heart, and to exercise that pleasant and courteous deportment which will make them more agreeable and useful in every relation of life. Indeed, that teacher who succeeds in establishing a sound moral tone among his pupils, will^ find no difficulty in securing the best and strongest cooperation of parents and pupils. 4. By manifesting a judicious interest in the inno- cent recreations of his pupils, and by exhibiting a true sympathy with them in all their trials, the teacher may enlist their feelings in favor of school duties. The mind is ever active ; and, in the period of youth, when life's cares, anxieties, and duties are few, it most readily engages in the amusements of childhood. With a peculiar buoyancy of spirit do the young participate in youth's sports ; and it becomes those who have the over- sight of them, whether as parents or teachers, to do what they can to modify and control what it would be equally impolitic and impossible to prevent. Let them aim to cultivate in children a taste for those recreations which are not only innocent in themselves, but harmless in their tendency. It is too often the case that adults express no interest in boyhood's sports, and speak of them as purely mischievous and annoying. If, however, a teacher would gain the affections and secure the interest of his pupils, HOW TO INTEREST PARENTS. 125 THE SPORTS OF PUPILS. he should not, with repulsive and forbidding looks, pass by their amusements. He should not forget that he was once young, and engaged with earnest delight in the same merry games which now so fully engross the passing hour of his pupils' release from the duties of the school- room. Rather should he gaze with a smiling countenance and an approving expression, and thus give evidence that he takes pleasure in all their rational enjoyments. He may do. and should do, what he can to check an inordi- nate desire for amusements, and also discountenance those which are, in any degree, immoral or hurtful in their tendencies. In relation to these, as in reference to their school duties, let him give assurance that he is their true friend, ever willing and ready to aid them in their toils, smile upon them in their happy and joyous hours, and sympathize with them in all their trials and difficulties. He will thus gain an influence over them by which he may easily interest them in the exercises of the school-room, and by which, also, his own labors for them will prove much more efficacious, salutary, and pleasant. I have thus far spoken of the teacher in relation to awakening an interest, on the part of his pupils, and now propose to designate one or two particulars in which he may awaken parental interest, and secure parental coop- eration. In passing, however, it may be observed, that whatever tends to interest the children will, most surely, have a favorable influence upon the parents; and we may, indeed, say it is impossible to obtain a right feeling on the part of pupils, without securing a corresponding feeling on the part of the parents. It is equally true, that whatever may incite the parents to judicious feeling 11* 126 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. MEANS OF INTERESTING PAEENTS. and right action, will surely cause a better state of feeling with the pupils. Hence, whatever may be suggested as promotive of the interest of either party, will be, in a certain sense, beneficial to all concerned. Every true, faithful, and devoted instructor will, on taking charge of a school, ask himself, " What can I do to promote a righ feeling, and secure the needed cooperation on the part of the parents of my pupils ? " I answer : 1. Invite them to meet you, on some evening, in the school-room, for the purpose of considering some of the mutual duties growing out of your relation to them. It is very desirable that the teacher should embrace an early opportunity to make known to those among whom he is called to labor his views, feelings, and plans. By so doing, most of the difficulties and wrong feeling which often exist in school-districts will be prevented. Indeed, nearly every trouble could be avoided, or amicably set- tled, if the parties concerned knew each other's wishes, motives, and views. The most ready and convenient way for the teacher to gain access to the parents is that just designated. A little effort will secure a general gathering of the parents, and afford an opportunity for many valuable suggestions. It will enable the teacher to speak familiarly and plainly of his sphere of labors, the nature of his duties, and his need of parental aid and sympathy. He may call their attention, as clearly and earnestly as may be, to the importance of regular and seasonable attendance ; and, if possible, lead them to see and feel, that no pupil can excel in scholarship, or make much progress, who is often absent from his class. He may do something, if devoted to his vocation, to convince his HOW TO INTEREST PA11ENTS. 127 VISITING PARENTS AT THEIR HOMES. patrons that he desires to labor with them, as well as for them, in the great work of training their children for usefulness, respectability, and happiness, a work whose most successful prosecution calls for union of purpose and action on the part of parents and teachers ; and, as " a house divided against itself cannot stand," so will discord between parents and teachers prove the ruin of a school He should solicit their earnest and constant cooperation in all his efforts, not only to form studious and orderly habits at school, but also in all his attempts to promote obedience, kindliness of feeling, and true goodness. An hour judiciously occupied, in the free and plain consider- ation of school-room duties, and of the various particulars in which parents may render the teacher most essential aid, cannot fail of producing results truly gratifying and beneficial. By such a course, most parents will be in- duced to reflect, and act with new interest and efficiency. 2. By visiting parents, at their homes, you may do much to promote their 'interest in behalf of your efforts. That teacher who would discipline and instruct his pupils most successfully and efficiently, should know much of individual character, condition, and peculiarities. As no two pupils are constituted precisely alike, or simi- larly situated in reference to their home relations and home influences, so no uniform mode of discipline and incitement will produce uniform and similar results with different pupils. Hence the importance of a clear knowl- edge of individual temperament, and of the peculiar home and other influences that bear upon each pupil ; and in no way can the teacher so well acquire this knowledge as by calling upon the parents. A few minutes' conver- 128 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. PARENTS SHOULD VISIT THE SCHOOL. Bation and observation at the fireside will afford him an amount of information which will prove highly service- able, and, at the same time, awaken an interest in both parents and pupils. But. that the results of such visits may prove most salutary to all parties, the teacher should communicate freely and frankly in reference to the de- portment and progress of the children at school. If they are regular and constant in their attendance, diligent and orderly in their habits, and correct in their recitations, it should be so stated, both for their credit and encourage- ment. But, if they are irregular and unseasonable in their attendance, careless and disobedient in their habits, and idle or uninterested in their studies, it should be made known, without reserve. The truth, spoken hon- estly and kindly, will do good ; and, when pupils find that frequent interviews take place between their parents and teacher, which are improved in the discussion of their conduct, habits, and progress, they will, in most cases, be incited to greater- care and diligence, in order that a good report may always be made to parents and friends. 3. By inviting parents to make occasional visits to the school, you may promote the interest of all. A little effort, on the part of the teacher, will induce the parents to call at the school-room, for the purpose of listening to the recitations, and witnessing the regular exercises of the pupils. Such visits will cheer and stim- ulate the pupils, encourage the instructor, and interest those who make them. When scholars feel that some of the parents may be present to listen to their recita- tions, they will be prompted to study more diligently, that they may have no occasion for shame when called HOW TO INTEREST PARENTS. 129 THE TEACHER SHOULD I'ERSEVERE. upon to exhibit the fruits of their labor. Indeed, no course can be adopted which will exert an influence so salutary and efficient upon all parties, at once awaken- ing, as it will, new interests, and imparting new informa- tion in relation to school and school duties. It may be said that the positions I have taken will impose too great a burden upon the teacher. It is true that the work is great and the burden heavy. But we assume that the teacher must take the lead in the whole business, because his very occupation causes him to see and feel the true state of affairs more clearly than any others can do. If parents and children are indifferent, or entertain erroneous views and feelings, the teacher must labor to interest and enlighten them. To complain of their indifference or neglect, will do no good ; and those teachers who are constantly complaining of the apathy or opposition of parents, are only doing that which will tend to alienate feelings, and make bad matters worse. The wise, faithful, and j udicious teacher will endeavor to ascertain the true condition of affairs ; and, while he makes the best of present circumstances, he will strive, earnestly and constantly, to remove existing evils, miti- gate what cannot be wholly avoided, and, in every way, endeavor to promote the highest good of parents and pupils ; ever feeling, that the greater the difficulties, the more need there is of patient and persevering labor. If time and strength fail of his accomplishing all that we have suggested, let him aim at a near approximation ; and in the conscientious discharge of all incumbent duties he will do much good, and secure a rich and never-fail- ing reward. " Let us not be weary of well-doing, for in due season we shall reap, if we faint not." CHAPTER XVII. MORAL INSTRUCTION. IT is to be feared that the importance of judicious moral training has not yet been properly appreciated. Unless the book-instruction of the school -room is accom- panied by a wise cultivation and discipline of the suscep- tibilities of the heart, it may prove a curse, instead of a blessing. " The human body may attain its noblest per- fection of health and strength, the observation may be acute, the intellect profound, the imagination rich ; and yet these varied and glorious pOAvers be turned to evil. Strength may support tyranny, acuteness and depth raise up obstacles to truth, and imagination spend its gorgeous eloquence in the service of the basest vices. The work is incomplete, if the moral nature remains un- cultivated. Physical and intellectual education aim at the perfection of the instruments, which may become splendid implements of evil, if moral education does not succeed in regulating the power which is to use them." Every faithful teacher will esteem it a duty and priv- ilege to do what he can in cultivating the moral feelings of his pupils, and calling into full action the kindlier affections of their hearts. His situation will enable him to do much, and a true sense of his responsibility will lead him to a wise improvement of every fitting opportu- nity. It is often the case that teachers are too formal MORAL INSTRUCTION. 131 A RIGHT TIME FOR MORAL IMPRESSIONS. and, perhaps, I may add, too arbitrary, in their efforts to impart moral instruction, and cultivate the nobler ele- ments of their natures. They seem to imagine that a certain amount must be done daily, and at a set time, regardless of circumstances. Some are in the habit of devoting a portion of time, just previous to the hour of dismission, to a sort of lecture on moral philosophy. This" is certainly a very unfavorable season ; for the children will feel more anxious to get released from the school- room, than willing to listen to a homily on morality. If the teacher would effectually impart moral instruc- tion, and awaken religious feeling, he must be wise in the selection of his topics, and wise in the choice of the time for their presentation. Every true teacher may, almost every hour of nearly every day of the year, find proper occasions for saying a few words, and making the right impression. He should seize upon every favoring circumstance for enforcing a just appreciation of every- thing that is lovely and of good report, and a true abhorrence of wrong in every form in which it may appear. He may, at times, convince them of the truth of the couplet, " Vice is a monster of so frightful mien, As, to be hated, needs but to be seen." I would, then, repeat that the instructor should seek for the right times for making good moral impressions ; seasons in which the minds of the pupils and attendant circumstances shall be favorable. " If advice we would convey, There 's a time we should convey it : If we ' ve but a word to say, There 's a time in which to say it" 1S2 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. A METHOD ADOPTED BY MK. OLIVER. The following cases will illustrate more clearly the ideas I would convey. The first is a truthful narrative of an occurrence within the experience of Mr. Oliver, who was for many years a highly popular and successful instructor in Salem. It will speak for itself. The story is related by Mr. Oliver, whose father was the clergyman referred to. " Young people commit more faults from thoughtless- ness than from intent to do wrong ; and want of reflection leads children astray much oftener than want of princi- ple. Indifference to the feelings of the aged, a proneness to make light of peculiarities which they may possess, and even to ridicule their infirmities, are, however, too often indulged in by the young ; and, in the excitement of the momentary gratification which such merriment may produce, all thought of the wrong, and all sense of the right, are equally forgotten. The proverb of the wisest man saith, ' The glory of young men is their strength ; and the beauty of old men is the gray head.' The strength of the young should protect and defend the beauty of the old. " The hoary head should ever be respected, whatever may be the outward condition of its possessor ; and neither sport nor ridicule should be thrown upon him whose enfeebled strength scarce suffices to bear the weight of the many years with which time has burdened him. " The following narrative, which is strictly true, illus- trates what has been observed, and proves that the just recompense of a thoughtless fault may be more speedily repaid, to those who commit it. than may be either ex- pected or desired by them. The common saying, of MORAL INSTRUCTION. 133 THE SLEIGH-RIDE. ' waking up the wrong passenger,' is peculiarly applica- ble to the case. " In one of the most populous cities of New England, a short time since, a party of lads all members of the same school got up a grand sleigh- ride. There were about twenty-five or thirty boys engaged in the frolic. The sleigh was drawn by six gray horses. The afternoon was as beautiful as anybody could desire, and the merry group enjoyed themselves in the highest degree. It was a common custom of the school to which they belonged, and, on previous occasions, their teacher had accompanied them. Some engagement upon important business ; how- ever, occupying him, he was not, at this time, with them. It is quite likely, had it been otherwise, that the re- straining influence of his presence would have prevented the scene which is the main feature of the present story. On the day following the ride, as he entered the school- room, he found his pupils grouped about the stove, and in high merriment, as they chatted about the fun and frolic of their excursion. He stopped a while arid listened ; and, in answer to some inquiries which he made about the matter, one of the tads a fine, frank, and manly boy, whose heart was really in the right place, though a love of sport sometimes led him astray volunteered to give a narrative of their trip, and its various incidents. " As he drew near the end of his story, he exclaimed, '0, sir ! there was one little circumstance which I had almost forgotten to tell you. Toward the latter part of the afternoon, as we were coming home, we saw, at some distance ahead of us, a queer-looking affair in the road. We could not exactly make out what it was. It seemed to be a sort of half-and-half monstrosity. As we ap- 12 134 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. THE SCHOLAR'S NARRATIVE. preached it, it proved to be a rusty old sleigh fastened behind a covered wagon, proceeding at a very slow pace, and taking up the whole road. Finding that the owner was not disposed to turn out, we determined upon a volley of snow-balls and a good hurra. " ' These we gave with a relish; and they produced the right effect, and a little more, for the crazy machine turned out into the deep snow by the side of the road, and the skinny old pony started on a full trot. As we passed, some one of us who had the whip gave the old jilt of a horse a good crack, which made him run faster than he ever did before. I'll warrant. And so, with another volley of snow-balls, pitched into the front of the wagon, and three times three cheers; we rushed by. With that, an old fellow in the wagon, who was buried up under an old hat, and beneath a rusty cloak, and who had dropped the reins, bawled out, " Why do you frighten my horse 1 " " Why don't you turn out, then 7 " says the driver. So we gave him three rousing cheers more. His horse was frightened again, and ran up against a loaded team, and, I believe, almost capsized the old creature. And so we left him.' " 'Well, boys,' replied the instructor, 'that is quite an incident. But take your seats, and, after our morning service is ended, I will take my turn, and tell you a story, and all about a sleigh-ride, too ! ' " Having finished the reading of a chapter in the Bible, and after all had joined in the Lord's Prayer, he commenced as follows : " ' Yesterday afternoon, a very venerable and respecta- ble old man and a clergyman by profession was on his way from Boston to Salem, to pass the residue of the MORAL INSTRUCTION. 135 THE TEACHER S STOKY. winter at the house of his son. That he might be pre- pared for journeying, as he proposed to do in the spring, he took with him his light wagon, and, for the winter, his sleigh, which he fastened behind the wagon. He was, just as I have told you, very old and very infirm. His temples were covered with thinned locks, which the frosts of eighty years had whitened. His sight, and hearing, too, were somewhat blunted by age, as yours will be, should you live to be as old. He was proceeding very slowly and quietly, for his horse was old and feeble, like his owner. He was occupied with memories of the past, and his thoughts reverted to the scenes of his youth, when he had perilled life in fighting for the liberties of his country ; to the associates of his college-days, of whom the greater part "had fallen asleep" in death; to the days of his ministration of the gospel of his Divine Master, both in the church of his people, and to the heathen of a remote wilderness ; to the scenes of ad- vanced years, when the infirmities of age were pressing upon him, and, sadly and solemnly, to the lamented dead of his household and of his love, long since " buried out of his sight;" leading the way to that better world, from which he himself was not far distant. " ' While thus occupied, almost forgetting himself in the multitude of his thoughts, he was suddenly disturbed, and even terrified, by loud hurras from behind, and by a furious pelting and clattering of balls of snow and ice upon the top of his wagon. In his trepidation, he dropped his reins, and, as his aged and feeble hands were quite benumbed with cold, he found it impossible to gather them up, and his horse began to run away. In the midst of all the old man's trouble and alarm, there rushed by 136 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION THE TEACHER'S STORY. him, with loud shouts, a large party of boys, in a sleigto drawn by six horses. " Turn out, turn out, old fellow ! give us the road, old boy ! what '11 you take for your pony, old daddy 7 " " Go it, frozen-nose ! '' "What 's the price of oats?" were the various cries that met his ears. " Pray, do not frighten my horse ! " exclaimed the infirm driver. " Turn out, then, turn out! " was the answer, which was followed by repeated cracks and blows from the long whip of the "grand sleigh," with showers of snow-balls and three tremendous huzzas from the boys who were in it. The terror of the old man and of his horse was increased, and the latter ran away with him, to the imminent danger of his life. He contrived, however, after some exertion, to secure his reins, which had been out of his hands during the whole affray, and to stop his horse just in season to prevent his being dashed against a loaded team. As he approached Salem, he overtook a young man who was walking toward the same place, and whom he invited to ride. The young man alluded to the grand sleigh which had just passed, which induced the old gentleman to inquire if he knew who the boys were. He replied that he did ; that they all be- longed to one school, and were a set of wild fellows. "Aha! " exclaimed the former, with a hearty laugh, for his constant good-nature had not been disturbed, "do they, indeed? Why. their master is very well known to me. I am now going to his house, and I rather think I shall give him the benefit of this whole story.'' A short distance brought him to his journey's end the house of his son. His old horse was comfortably housed and fed, arid he himself abundantly provided for. That son, boys, is your instructor ; and that aged and infirm old man, MORAL INSTRUCTION. 137 THE RESULT AND SURPRISE. that "old fellow" and "old boy" (who did not turn out for you, but who would have gladly given you the whole road, had he heard your approach) ; that "old boy," and "old daddy," and " old frozen-nose ," waa your master's father ! ' "It is not easy to describe, nor to imagine, the effect produced by this new translation of the boys' own narra- tive. Some buried their heads behind their desks ; some cried ; some looked askant at each other ; and many hastened down to the desk of the teacher, with apologies, regrets, and acknowledgments, without end. All were freely pardoned ; but were cautioned that they should be more civil, for the future, to inoffensive travellers, and more respectful to the aged and infirm. " Years have passed by. Most of the lads are men, though some have found an early grave. The ' manly boy ' who told the story 'is 'in the deep bosom of the ocean buried.' They who survive, should this meet their eye, will easily recall its scenes, and throw their memo- ries back to the school-room wherein we passed so many pleasant hours together, and to their old friend and well- wisher, H. K. OLIVER." Another illustration of the manner in which a deep impression may be made is the following, taken from the " Theory and Practice of Teaching," a work written by that distinguished instructor, the late D. P. PAGE. The volume is replete with good sense and sound views, and should be in the library of every teacher and friend of education : "I can never forget nor would I, if I could ;v lesson impressed upon my own youthful mind, conveying the truth that we are constantly dependent upon our 138 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. AN ILLUSTRATION FROM MR. PAGE. heavenly Father for protection. In a plain country school-house, some twenty-five children, including my- self, were asserr bled, with our teacher, on the afternoon of a summer's day. We had been as happy and as thoughtless as the sportive lambs that cropped the clover of the neighboring hill-side. Engrossed with study or play, for at thi.-i distance of time it is impossible to tell which, we had not noticed the low rumbling of the / o distant thunder, till a sudden flash of lightning arrested our attention. Immediately the sun was veiled by a cloud, and a corresponding gloom settled upon every face Avithin. The elder girls, with the characteristic thought- fulness of woman, hastily inquired whether they should not make the attempt to lead their younger brothers and sisters to the paternal roof before the bursting of the storm. For a moment, our little community was thrown into utter confusion. The teacher stepped hastily to the door, to survey more perfectly the aspect of the western heavens. Immediately returning, he signified to the children that there would not be time for them to reach their homes before the tempest would be upon them. Oppressed with dread, for it is no uncommon thing for children in the country to be terrified by lightning, some of the youngest of us clung to our older brothers or sisters, while others, being the sole representatives of their family in the school, for the first time felt their utter loneliness in the midst of strangers, and gave utter- ance to their feelings in audible sighs or unequivocal sobs. " The teacher, meanwhile, with an exemplary calmness and self-possession, closed the windows and the doors, and then seated himself quite near the younger pupils, to await the result. The thick darkness gathered about us. MORAL INSTRUCTION. 189 THE TEMPEST. as if to make the glare of the lightning, by contrast, more startling to our vision; while the loud thunder almost instantly followed, as it were the voice of God. The wind howled through the branches of a venerable tree near by, bending its sturdy trunk, and threaten- ing to break asunder the cords which bound it to its mother earth. An angry gust assailed the humble build- ing where we were sheltered ; it roared down the capa- cious chimney, violently closed a shutter that lacked a fastening, breaking the glass by its concussion, and almost forced in the frail window-sashes on the western side of the room. Quicker and more wild the lightnings glared, flash after flash, as if the heavens were on fire ; louder and nearer the thunder broke above our heads ; while the inmates of the room, save the teacher, were pale with terror. At this moment, there was a sudden cessation of the war of elements a hush almost a prophetic pause ! It was that brief interval which precedes the falling torrent. " A dread stillness reigned within the room. Every heart beat hurriedly, and every countenance told the consternation that was reigning within. It was an awful moment ! With a calm voice, breathing a subdued and confiding spirit, the teacher improved this opportunity to impress upon our young minds a great truth. ' Fear not, children,' said he ; 'it is your heavenly Father that sends the storm, as well as the sunshine and the gentle breeze. You have been just as much in his power all day as you are at this' moment. He has been as near you, supporting you, supplying you with breath, with life, all through the pleasant morning ; but then you did not see him He is just as able to protect, you now ; for 140 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. THE STORM CEASES. A PSALM IS READ. "not a sparrow falls to the ground without his notice," and he ruleth the storm, and " rideth upon the wings of the wind." We should ever feel willing to trust him, for he is ever able to grant us deliverance from all our dangers. God is here now to protect us.' Just as he had finished these words, the rain began to fall. First, the drops were few and scattered ; but soon the windows of heaven were opened, and the thirsty ground was abundantly satisfied. The sound of the thunder became fainter and fainter as the cloud passed away ; the sun burst out again in renewed splendor ; the full drops glit- tered in his beams upon the grass ; the birds began their songs ; the rainbow spanned the eastern hills ; and our hearts, taught by the timely instructions of a good man, began to expand with eager gratitude for our preservation by the hand of our heavenly Father. ' ' The remainder of the afternoon passed happily away ; and, when our books were laid aside, and we were ready to burst out of the room to enjoy the refreshing air and participate in the general joy, the teacher, taking the Bible from the desk, asked us to remain quiet a moment, while he would read a few words that he hoped we should never forget. The passage was the following, from the 65th Psalm : " ' By terrible things in righteousness wilt thou answer us, God of our salvation ; who art the confidence of all the ends of the earth, and of them that are afar off upon the sea : " ' Which by his strength setteth fast the mountains being girded with power : " ' Which stilleth the noise of the seas, the noise of their waves, and the tumult of the people. MORAL INSTRUCTION. 141 CONFIDENCE IN GOD URGED. " ' They also that dwell in the uttermost parts are afraid at thy tokens : thou makest the outgoings of the morning and evening to rejoice. " 'Thou visitest the earth, and waterest it; thou greatly enrichest it with the river of God, which is full of water ; thou preparest them corn, when thou hast so provided for it. " ' Thou waterest the ridges thereof abundantly ; thou settlest the furrows thereof; thou makest it soft with showers ; thou hlessest the springing thereof : " ' Thou crownest the year with thy goodness ; and thy paths drop fatness. " 'They drop upon the pastures of the wilderness; and the little hills rejoice on every side. ' ' ' The pastures are clothed with flocks ; the valleys also are covered over with corn ; they shout for joy, they also sing.' " After closing the book, the teacher said, ' Go out, now, children, and witness -how perfectly these words have been fulfilled toward us this afternoon ; and, from this day's mercies, learn hereafter to trust God as confi- dently in the storm, when he displays his power by his outward "tokens," as when he kindly smiles upon you in the beams of the glorious sun, or gently breathes upon you in the morning breeze.' "We went forth, bounding in gladness and gratitude, and saw the ' outgoings of the evening to rejoice,' 'the pastures clothed with flocks.' ' the valleys covered over with corn,' 'the little hills rejoicing on every side,' we heard, also, the general shout for joy ; an I we felt, as we never before had felt, a deep, thorough, abiding conviction of the truth that God is our fftW >)d our friend i the God of our sal* 142 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION, THE INSANE OLD MAN. vatlon. I know not how soon these impressions faded from the minds of the other children ; but for myself 1 can say, that, from that time to the present, whenever I have been exposed to apparent danger from the impend- ing tempest, the warring elements, or the ravages of disease, the teachings of that hour have always revived in my mind to soothe my troubled spirit, and to reassure my faith and confidence in the presence of an all-sufficient and merciful Preserver. A thousand times have I de- voutly blessed the memory of that faithful teacher, for having so early and so happily turned my thoughts upward to HIM in whom ' we live, and move, and have our being.' ' A certain teacher, on his way to the school -room, one morning, saw several of his pupils collected around an insane old man in the streets, making themselves bois- terously merry at his condition, and doing much to increase his excitement. He did not stop, as some would have done, to utter commands and threats, but passed quietly to the place of his labors, and quickly summoned the scholars, by the usual signal, to assemble. At a suitable time, after the opening of the school, he called for their attention, and addressed them in substance as follows : "My young friends. I was much pained, a short time ago, in witnessing a crowd of boys making themselves merry at the unfortunate condition of an old man. It would have been a painful sight under any circumstances, but it was peculiarly so in this instance, as the boys were members of this school, and most of them were boys of good character, good feeling, and. generally, of good intentions, boys from whom I expected much by way of good example and good influence. MORAL INSTRUCTION. 141 THE TEACHER'S REMARKS. " That old man, now so decrepit in body and shattered in intellect, was once a happy school-boy, the joy of his parents and friends. He grew to manhood, and was, for many years, an upright, virtuous, respected, and useful citizen. He did much for the improvement of this, his native town, much to make your early advan- tages and privileges superior to his. By the hand of Providence, and not from errors of his, has his reason been dethroned, and he now wanders a harmless maniac, a fit object of pity for every one. He has sons and daughters, who feel deeply for him ; many friends, who lament his sad condition. How, think you, they would have felt, if they had witnessed what I saw 1 Would it not have caused their hearts to ache and grieve afresh ? How, my dear young friends, would you have felt, if that man had been your father 7 Could you or would you have acted as you did ? I know you would not. It would almost break your hearts to see a fond parent thus treated. Bereft of reason, that poor old man says and does what he would not do if he were in his ' right mind.' Possessed of reason, you have abused it, and offended against the laws of God and the rights of your fellow- beings. You have done a great wrong ; but I would fain hope you acted without thought. I trust you will never again so far lose your self-respect, and so far for- get the rights of ethers, as to be guilty of a similar wrong. I beseech you, never allow yourselves, under any circumstances, to trifle with the unfortunate, or to gay or do aught which can cause the slightest pain to any one. You are now young and happy ; but who can tell what your condition may be, long before you shall have lived as many years as that old man has ? Perhaps 144 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. A MOTHER'S PRAYERS AND A FATHER'S COUNSELS. you may become maniacs in a worse sense than he is. Misfortune may mark you, and make you at once objects of pity and dread. Then strive to live wisely ; pity the erring and unfortunate, and never wound the feelings of any one." Would not remarks similar to these make a salutary and lasting impression upon the young, and prove much more effectual than a hasty and unguarded reprimand ? "The true teacher will feel his spirit burdened with the weight of influence, for good or evil, which he knows he must exert ; and he will often tremble, as he asks himself, ' What shall befall the children of my care ? ' and ' What shall be the effect of my instructions on their young and pliant minds 1 ' " Many a just and noble man has owed his greatness to a gentle mother's prayers, a kind father's counsels, or a faithful teacher's words ; and many a man of sin has traced his character of crime and infamy to some unwise control, or some neglect or injudicious counsel, in his youth. If, then, the teacher's influence be so important. Well may he tremble, as he prays For some kind spirit to direct his ways.' " The following anecdote may not be deemed wholly inappropriate in this connection. A celebrated artist, in one of his rambles, met with a most beautiful and inter- esting child. It was the finest and most perfect child, he thought, that he had ever seen. ' I will,' said he, ' paint the portrait of this child, and keep it for my own ; for I may never look upon its like again.' He accord- ingly painted it ; and, when trouble came, and evil pas- MORAL INSTRUCTION. 145 THE PORTRAITS; ANECDOTE. sions moved his spirit to rebel, he gazed upon the likeness of the boy, and passion fled, and holier thoughts entranced his soul. He said, ' If I can find a being that will an- swer for a perfect contrast to the child, one in whom is concentrated everything vile and ugly of which I can conceive. I will paint his portrait, also.' "Years passed away, and he saw no person sufficiently hideous to answer his design. At length, while travel- ling in a distant land, he went within a prison's walls, and there he saw, stretched upon the floor of stone, the object which his fancy had portrayed. A man, whose soul was stained with blood, with glaring eyes and hag- gard face, and with demoniac rage cursing himself and his fellow-beings, and blaspheming God, lay chained within that miserable abode, awaiting the appointed hour of execution. " The artist transferred his likeness to the canvas, and placed it opposite the child's. The contrast was most striking and complete. The angel boy, the fiend man ! What must have been the feelings of the artist, when, upon inquiry, he ascertained that both portraits were of the same individual being ! The beautiful, the innocent child, had grown into the hideous, th^ sinful man! "* If it be true that any mismanagement, cr neglect of proper moral training, on the part of a parent or teacher, can render such a transformation possible, how earnestly ind constantly should those who have aught to do with the young strive to lure them in wisdom's ways ! How much may be done, by the interested teacher, to * P H Sweetser. 18 146 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. A LESSON ON KINDNESS : ANECDOTE. promote a kindly spirit and feeling in the hearts of the young ! Instances will iaily occur, in which he may do something by way of cultivating the tender sensibili- ties of his pupils. An affectionate and devoted teacher gives the following illustration: "It is a cloudy day in midsummer. The air of the school-room seems more close than usual. Some of the young people appear fatigued, some playful, and very few deeply interested in their studies. The teacher, after calling their attention, says : ' Children, you know little Mary has been sick a long time. She cannot come to school ; she cannot go out to play. Who would like to send her a bouquet of flowers 1 ' Every hand is raised, every face is animated with pleasure. They are requested to bring their flowers in the afternoon. The table is loaded ; a beautiful bou- quet is arranged; a note is written by the teacher in behalf of the scholars, and a messenger from their num- ber despatched with the gift to the sick room." Who can limit the happy influence of this little act of kind- ness, delightful alike to the givers and the receiver, pleasant for the contemplation of all? A beautiful fra- grance diffuses itself from that little bunch of flowers, which has a perpetuating and pleasing effect, directly 01 indirectly imparting joyous emotions to many a heart. CHAPTER XVIII. EMULATION AND PRIZES. THE subject of emulation has of late been often dis- cussed ; and it is one on which the friends of education entertain quite a diversity of opinion. That a laudable emulation to excel in well-doing, founded on good motives, and stimulated by unselfish means and inducements, is desirable, but few will gainsay. But that emulation which is encouraged by the proffer of some piize, or by the mere desire to surpass and outshine a fellow-student, is highly objectionable and pernicious. While I freely admit that some good results may emanate from a prize- encouraged emulation, I at the same time feel that the ill consequences will so greatly preponderate as to render it unwise to introduce any such system into our plans for school instruction. The following are some of the more prominent objections to a prize-fostered system of emu- lation : 1. The extreme difficulty of selecting the most de- serving from, a class of competitors. In a school of thirty pupils, twenty may so conduct and apply themselves as to secure the general approbation of their instructor and friends, some, perhaps, slightly excelling in one particular, and others in another. Now, it is no easy task to select from this number some four or five as the best, all circumstances considered, without doing a real or apparent injustice to the remainder It 148 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. OBJECTIONS TO PRIZES. would, under these conditions, seem almost unkind to intrust it to men of fallible judgment to decide as to the exact degree of merit. Would it not be better that all should be left to enjoy the satisfaction emanating from a consciousness of duty faithfully discharged, than that one should be unduly, and, it may be, undeservingly, exalted, while the many are made to suffer unfavorably, and per- haps unjustly, by the decision of partial or incompetent men? 2. The difficulty of determining what, and how much, regard shall be had to the external aids and circumstances of the aspirants. One boy may be surrounded by kind and intelligent parents and friends, and receive such home or fireside influence as shall greatly encourage and facilitate all his operations, while another in the same class may occupy a situation the very reverse. While the former has nothing to interrupt, but much to assist him, at home, the latter, if he has a home, receives from it no kindly influences, but many hindrances and drawbacks. The latter may be the more industrious, and strive the more zealously and perseveringly, and, on the ground of real self- exertion and self-merit, richly deserve success, and yet fail, on account of the adverse influences to which he if exposed, and for which he should not, in any degree, be considered accountable. 3. A few are stimulated, and the many discour- aged. Boys will very soon satisfy themselves concerning their own individual prospects of success ; and, if these are against them, they will often give up, with the idea that it is in vain for them eveu to try. And thus, not EMULATION AND PRI/ES. 149 UNPLEASANT RIVALRY FOSTERED. nnfrequently, the boy who is naturally bold, prompt, and persevering. the boy who certainly needs not a pros- pective prize to stimulate him, will, with ease, and without any self-denying toil, reach the goal and bear away the "palm," while the more diffident and distrust- ful, but, perhaps, more deserving, will become discour- aged in the onset, and leave the course free for his more fortunate, but not more meritorious rival. 4. The rivalry consequent upon a contest for prizes often engenders or calls forth some of the baser feel- ings and passions of the heart. Have not enmities often been caused in this way which have continued, with increasing bitterness, through a long life ? The boy whose heart rankles with envy and hatred at the success of his classmate at school, will, if life con- tinues, look upon his every successful step in the journey of subsequent life with the bitter and malicious feelings of envy. 5. Boys should be trained to regard some higher and better object than the mere attainment of a prize, as an inducement to good deportment and diligent application. A desire to become useful, respected, and happy citi- zens, should be prominent in the mind of every member of a school. If, in reply to this, it is urged, that school- prizes are merely attractive way-marks to lure them onward to a higher and nobler object, I would answer, that danger lurks in the way ; and, before that better object is gained, the mind may become entirely en- grossed, or the kindly feelings of the heart blunted or perverted, in the pursuit or attainment of the way allure- ment. 18* 160 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. ANECDOTE OF SIR WALTER SCOTT. 6. Improper measures are often adopted to gain the desired end. Boys who are trained to regard the attainment of some prize as a chief inducement to excel, are strongly tempted to resort to means alike dishonorable and selfish. Thus it not unfrequently happens, that, in their efforts to gain the desired end, they overlook the rules of right, and disregard the feelings or circumstances of others. Says Sir Walter Scott, " There was a boy in my class at school who stood always at the head of the class ; not could I, with all my efforts, supplant him. Day after day, and week after week, he kept his place, in spite of all my endeavors to get above him. I at length observed, that, when a question was asked him, he always fumbled with his fingers at a particular button on his waistcoat. To remove it, therefore, became expedient, in my eyes ; and, in an evil moment, it was removed, with a knife Great \\as my anxiety to know the success of my meas- ure ; and it succeeded too well. When the boy was again questioned, his fingers sought, as usual, for the button, but it was not to be found. In his distress, he looked down for it ; but he could neither see nor feel it. He stood confounded, and I took possession of his place ; nor did he evei recover, or ever, I believe, suspect who was the author of his wrong. Often, in after life, has the sight of hin? smote me, as I passed by him ; and often have I resolved to make him some reparation, but it ended in good resolutions." Thus, what one gained by stratagem, proved a serious and irreparable loss to the other. If a system could be established, by which all who gained a certain attainable point of excellence could be equally rewarded, there might be less serious objection EMULATION AND PRIZES. 151 MOTIVES FOE ACTION. But, under present circumstances, the safest and best course for the teacher is, to allure his pupils onward bj holding before them the great, sure, and attainable rewards which come from well-doing. Thus influenced by pure motives, with " Excelsior " for their motto, they may press safely onward and upward. But how shall the teacher form, in his pupils, habits of industry and perseverance, without emulation '? I will answer briefly, in the words of another : " First, he must excite and discipline their curiosity. This is acknowl- edged to be a common feeling, and ever active in chil- dren, if properly trained. There are certain kinds of knowledge which always interest them, and which their curiosity leads them to investigate. They are fond of the marvellous and the wonderful. Let all science, then, be made to partake of this character, for this really belongs to it, and curiosity will lead them to examine it. It is a great merit in a teacher to be able to excite the curiosity of his pupils concerning things pertaining to their ordinary studies. " Another powerful motive is, the love of approba- tion, the desire to gain the favor of the wise and good, and the approval of their teachers, parents, and friends. We met, a few days ago, with a young lady, a former pupil of ours, who is now a successful teacher in a gram- mar-school. For a year or two, she caused a great deal of trouble in the school, by neglecting her duties, and otherwise abusing her privileges. At last, a sudden change took place in her conduct, and, from one of the most troublesome scholars, she became one of the best. During some conversation relating to the school, she said. ' I remember what first induced me to alter my 152 .'OMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. LOVE OF KNOWLEDGE. OBLIGATIONS. course. You praised me. I found I had met your approbation, and I determined to deserve it.' " Again ; the teacher should labor to inspire his pupils with the love of knowledge. It is difficult, we are aware, to cause young children to realize the importance of edu- cation. Indeed, they are not capable of appreciating, to any considerable extent, the intrinsic value of knowledge ; but, that it may be presented in so attractive a manner as to gain their attention, and, in most cases, ultimately to secure their love, we fully believe. To induce chil- dren to love learning, the teacher must be deeply inter- ested in it himself; and he must show to them that he considers it of the first importance. And it is well, also, for the teacher to be interested in their knowledge, and in things which seem, to them, important ; to sympa- thize with them in their joys, and in their trials ; for. by so doing, he will lead his pupils to sympathize with him, and to feel an interest in that which is of consequence to him. The teacher should possess a sort of mesmeric influence over the minds of his pupils, that shall enable him to enter into their thoughts, and to control their acts. Finally ; the teacher should earnestly endeavor to impress upon them an idea of tneir obligations to them- selves, and to their fellow-beings. He should teach them that talents and privileges were given them to use, not to abuse ; that there arc duties devolving upon them from which they cannot escape, and in the performance of which they cannot fail to realize their highest good. He should strive to impress upon them a sense of their de- pendence upon God ; their accountability to Him, and the consequences that inevitably follow good or evil deeds. EMULATION AND PRIZES. 153 EXPERIENCE TI1E BEST SCHOOLMASTER. It is true, that such influences may not always produce the speediest result ; but we should ' Learn to labor and to wait ;' for, if we cast our bread upon the waters, we shall find it again, if not till after many days. It is not true, we think, that children stimulated by these motives will be necessarily dull and lifeless. Experience is said to be the best schoolmaster ; and twenty years' experience as a teacher has fully convinced us that scholars may be bet- ter governed and better taught, and that the pupils will be more cheerful and happy, under such influences, than when controlled by the spirit of emulation." * P. H-Swetlwr CHAPTER XIX. PRIMARY SCHOOLS. OUR primary schools have not yet assumed that posi- tion in the minds of the people which their importance demands. In them the young receive their earliest and most lasting school impressions. While work that is well done here will facilitate all subsequent school efforts, instruction incorrectly imparted, or neglect suffered, will tend to embarrass and render more difficult all future efforts, both on the part of the learner and teacher. If correct habits of discipline, mental and physical, are thoroughly established at the outset, the result of later labors will be rendered more effectual and certain. The poet says, " As the twig is bent the tree 's inclined." If this is so, how important that early attention be given to the formation of right habits of thought, study, action, and expression ! And yet, is it not often the case that many things are attended to carelessly, or utterly neg- lected, with the feeling that pupils are so soon to enter a higher school? What would be thought of that cultivator who should neglect his plants and young trees while in the nursery, and assign as an excuse, that they were soon to be removed and transplanted into a situation in which they would receive more care and attention ? Is it not considered PRIMARY SCHOOLS. 155 IMPORTANCE OF FIRST IMPRESSIONS. the part of true wisdom to watch and train them with the greatest care while in the nursery, that they may become fit subjects for transplantation? If, while there, they are suffered, from an over-growth of weeds and thorns, or from any other source, to become crooked, and dwarfed, and ill-shapen, they can never after be trans- formed into perfect and well-developed trees. But, if properly started and cared for in the nursery, their after growth an4 productiveness will be rendered sure and satisfactory. So it is with our primary schools. Good or bad hab- its formed in them will, usually, exhibit themselves in the higher grades of schools. Impressions which children here receive will "grow with their growth, and strengthen with their strength." How important, then, that these impressions be of the. right kind, and that they be sea- sonably and wisely made ! How desirable that they lay broad, and deep, and well, the foundations on which the higher schools are to rear a superstructure ! How much time and strength, that, in many cases, must, necessarily, be spent in undoing and re-doing, might be most pleas- antly and profitably spent in extending and perfecting the good work, if properly commenced ! If pupils in our primary schools receive wholesome and judicious train- ing, their future instruction and discipline will be ren- dered easy and pleasant. The feeling sometimes prevails, that any one will answer to teach a school of small children. This is a great error. It requires a rare combination of excellent qualities to form a good teacher for a primary school ; and it is to be hoped that, hereafter, true merit will be more fully appreciated, and more adequately rewarded 156 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION STUDIES FOR PRIMARY SCHOOLS. It is not desirable that many studies should be intro- duced into these schools ; but it is important that what is done should be well done. Reading, spelling, and some- thing of geography and arithmetic, are, probably, as many branches as can be attended to with any profit. In addition to these, quite a variety of miscellaneous exer- cises may be and should be introduced. Very young children take great pleasure in making figures and draw- ings upon their slates. It is very essential that every primary-school room should be furnished with a great variety of pictures, maps, &c., that the pupils may have an opportunity to copy the same. The practice will be of advantage to them, and tend to interest them during many hours that would, otherwise, be passed in list- lessness or idle mischief. Let them also spend much time in copying figures upon their slates or upon the blackboard. It is very desirable that figures should be made neatly and plainly ; and a little daily practice in our primary schools will do much towards securing these useful points. After the pupils have acquired the ability to make figures with a good degree of freedom and distinctness, let them be required to arrange them in columns, with a special reference to having them straight. Practice will do much in this particular. They can also spend much time in printing letters, and copying words, and making drawings of such simple objects as may be placed before them. Some of the more advanced may be allowed to write the words of their spelling exer- cises upon the blackboard or slate. In conducting a spelling lesson for a younger class, it will be found inter- esting, if the teacher will require the purils tc name the letters of a word while she writes the same upon the PRIMARY SCHOOLS. 157 WRITING WORDS J SPEAKING PIECES. blackboard. The judicious teacher will vary such exer- cises, and succeed in combining instruction and amuse- ment. The older pupils in these schools may, profitably and pleasantly, spend some of their time in writing short sentences. Suppose, for example, the teacher writes upon the blackboard the following words. Dog, Horse. Boy, and asks the pupils to write a short sentence about each. The result may be something like the fol- lowing : The dog barks ; The horse runs ; The boy loves play. These, it is true, are very simple, but will answer for a beginning. Such exercises will prove highly inter- esting and useful ; and, after a little practice, much longer sentences will be written with ease. Another valuable and pleasant exercise is " speaking pieces." Quite young scholars may profitably learn and speak short pieces of poetry, prose, or dialogue. But great care should be taken to have them speak with a proper regard to distinctness of enunciation, and propriety of emphasis and inflection. If suitable lessons in simple composition, or writing of sentences, and declamation, should be introduced into our primary schools, they would greatly tend to dispel the dark clouds which often hang around these exercises when commenced at a later day. But, unless they receive right attention, it would be better never to have them introduced. Reading and spelling should receive prominent atten- tion, and great care should be taken to establish habits of distinct utterance and clear enunciation. Every effort should be used to secure a correct comprehension of what is read, that pupils may read with the " spirit and under- standing " too. If possible, the teacher shculd cause them to feel interested in their reading exercise . She may do 14' COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. MENTAL ARITHMETIC. something towards awakening an interest, by asking them many questions respecting the subject of the lesson. If pupils in these schools would make free use of tht dictionary, it would be for their good. Let them be early and carefully trained to look for the meaning of such words as they do not comprehend, and they will form a habit which will prove valuable to them in all subsequent life. The practice will please them, and occupy time which would, otherwise, be spent in idleness. At an early age, indeed, at the very outset, chil- dren should be thoroughly taught in relation to the shape, name, and power of each letter ; and the frequent prac- tice of giving the various sounds of the different letters will prove highly serviceable. It will also prove a pleas- ing and profitable exercise to require them to spell words by giving the appropriate sound or power of each letter, instead of calling its name. In exercises in mental arithmetic, the teacher should insist upon precision and accuracy in answers and expla- nations. Their minds should not be too severely taxed, but what they do should be done well. In reciting, the pupils should have no books open. The teacher should read the question carefully and distinctly, and then call upon some one to repeat it and explain it. This will tend to secure the attention of all, and prove a good dis- cipline for the memory. It may require a little extra patience, at first, on the part of the teacher ; but its advantages will amply compensate for the same. If geography is the subject, let the teacher aim constantly to secure a clear and full understanding of all that is attended to. Let every definition and every term be properly explained. It is often the case *Hat scholars gn PRIMARY SCHOOLS. 159 GEOGRAPHY. POSITIONS. over much ground, without obtaining a single definite idea. I have known a whole class answer promptly and correctly many questions in geography, and yet, when asked where the earth was, or if they had ever seen it, they manifested entire ignorance. Like parrots, they could utter, "Geography is a description of the earth," but without the slightest idea that they had ever seen it, or played about its fields, and hills, and valleys. A very correct idea of boundary may be formed by requiring pupils to tell how their school-yard, or their parents' gar- dens or farms, are bounded. The names and boundaries of the towns in the county, the names of the counties of a state, and also the names of the states, may be, in due time, considered and learned. But let every step be made as intelligible and interesting as possible. It will be very interesting to the young to have their exercises interspersed with singing and changes of posi- tion. Indeed, some teachers teach the multiplication- table, and other tables, with the aid of music. A change of position, by some simultaneous movement, will be inter- esting and profitable. It is very tedious for small chil- dren to sit for a long time without change of position. It will be quite a pleasant relief for them, if, at the end of each hour, the whole school can go through with some changes of position similar to the following, the partic- ular exercise being indicated by a figure : 1. Sit erect, and fold arms. 2. Extend right hand. 3. Extend left hand. 4. Extend both hands. 5. Clap hands. 6. Place right hand on top of head. 160 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. CHILDREN SHOULD BE MADE HAPPT. 7. Place left hand on top of head. 8. All rise. 9. All turn half-way round. 10. All sit. 11. Place faces upon desks. The changes may be varied and extended by the teachei , and the frequent practice of them will serve as a recre- ation, and be promotive of health. Some teachers are accustomed to require their pupils to sit much of the time with their arms folded. This habit is a bad one, and should not be encouraged. It should be a prominent object of the teacher of a primary school to make the pupils happy ; and to com- bine, so far as may be, instruction with amusement. In order to gain the affection of pupils, a teacher must manifest a lively interest in all their affairs. It is some- times the case that an instructor, by her coldness, and formality, and reserve, destroys the attraction that should exist between her and her pupils. Some even feel that they must be so precise and dignified, in all their move- ments and expressions, that they fail of securing the hearty confidence of the young. Now, the teacher may exhibit pleasure in the amusements of her pupils, and sometimes take part in the same, without injury to her- self or them. A parent once expressed to Mr. Wright, the instructor of the Edinburgh Infant School, sur- prise at the idea that a schoolmaster could make him- self the object of love. Mr. Wright requested the parent to remain, and see how he treated his pupils. He did so; and saw the kindness, the cheerfulness and sport- iveness which never flagged, while he saw discipline and instruction, at the same -time. The children, at PRIMARY SCHOOLS. 161 ANECDOTE OF A SCOTCH SCHOOL. recess, went upon the play-ground, and, to the amuse- ment of the visitor, the teacher ran out, crying, "Hare and hounds ! hare and hounds ! " and, taking the first character on himself, he was instantly pursued by the whole pack, round and round the play-ground. At last, he was taken and worried by an immense act of coopera- tion. In his extremity, he rang his hand-bell for school ; instantly the hounds left their prey, rushed into the school-room, and. in less than a minute, were busy with their lessons. The visitor departed with a shrug, say- ing, " Na, the like o' that I ne'er saw." While it cannot be expected that all teachers can do as the instructor of this Scotch school did, it may be hoped that all will manifest an interest in the rational amusements of their pupils. By so doing, they will gain an influence which will be of great service to them. Such a course will enable teachers to obtain a knowl- edge of the habits and dispositions of pupils, which could not be so well learned in any other way. On the play- ground, children usually act themselves, without restraint, and exhibit individual traits of character more fully than in any other situation ; and, if teachers will manifest some interest in their sports, they will gain their confi- dence, and thus be enabled to work more understandingly and efficiently. Teachers should always aim to encourage and cheer their pupils, and make all their exercises as pleasant as possible. This will do them much good, and animate them with a spirit of persevering application. If the young are, in a proper way. made to feel that they do well, they will, by the very means, be incited to do stil] better. It will increase their confidence in their own 14* 162 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. THE BEST ORGANIZATION. ability, and inspire them with a happy spirit. The con- sciousness of receiving the approbation of those we esteem affords pleasure and encouragement. I have alluded to primary schools as they are usually organized, containing children between the ages of four and ten years. A more perfect and complete organiza- tion of schools would have primary schools embrace pupils from six to eight years of age, with an intermedi- ate school for children between the ages of eight and ten years, and a grammar school, into which all who are suf- ficiently qualified may enter after arriving at the age of ten years. Such an arrangement may be made in vil- lages where the children are sufficiently numerous tc require the attention of three teachers. CHAPTER XX. LESSONS AND RECITATIONS. IN the assignment of lessons, and in the mode of con- ducting recitations, it will be necessary to exercise much good judgment and discretion. One of the most desirable things in a school is, to keep the pupils properly em- ployed. If their time and attention are suitably directed to their lessons, they will be kept from many troublesome habits. Idleness is the source of most of the mischief in schools ; and he who wishes to have an orderly school, in a quiet way, must aim to give his pupils constant and regular employment. But, while the teacher seeks to assign lessons, the learning of which will require the close application of the members of his school, he should be careful that he does not overtask them, and check their ardor. Some pupils will learn a lesson much more readily than others ; and hence it will not answer to adapt the length of a lesson to the capacity of the best pupils. It should be brought within the ability of the more moderate members of a class ; but it should be such as will demand their close application and earnest attention. The teacher should strive to inspire them with a true thirst for knowledge, and cause them to feel that the highest pleasure will arise from the mastery of the greatest difficulties. The true design of lessons and school exercises should 164 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. THE OBJECT OF EDUCATION. not be lost sight of. It is not, to store the mind with words, and rules, and problems, but to discipline it. and fit it for grasping and comprehending whatever subject may come before it in life ; in other words, it should be trained to investigate and think. When one of the ancient philosophers was asked what a certain pupil should learn, he gave the following noble reply: "Let him learn that which will be of service to him when ho becomes a man.' 1 And, I add, he who has acquired the habit of close reflection, and examination, and a true spirit of self-reliance, has gained that knowledge which will be of essential service to him. life's journey through ; while he who has not formed these habits* will become a comparatively useless and inefficient man, though his head be stored with the mere contents of all the books ever published. I repeat again, that the true end of all lessons should be intellectual discipline. "The common impression seems to be, that the mind is to be distended with knowl- edge, rather than braced with discipline. And much of past instruction has been calculated to foster the idea, that the child, like his own passive verb, is ' to be acted upon.' He is to be taught, merely; and somehow, by the agency of talking and explanation, and, as it were, puncturing and rousing the dead flesh of ignorance with an interrogation-point, on the part of the teacher, and monosyllabic expressions of easy assent, on the part of the scholar, he can be raised to intellectual life, and trans- formed from the child in his folly to a man in intellectual things. I need hardly say that this is a mistake in fun- damentals; it is an error in doctrine. Do you, teacher, suffer your pupil to learn memoriter ? Do you LESSONS AND RECITATIONS. 165 KNOWING, BUT UNABLE TO TELL. allow him to suppose he has mastered a subject, while he has to rely on your questions in the recitation of it? Do you suffer him to proceed, for instance, in mathe- matics, without subjecting him to the habit of rigid analysis, and compelling him to see and assign, un- prompted, a reason for every step, without obliging him to construct his own rules, and thus grow in discipline every day ? Then you can never raise the little company of your disciples to the mount of clear vision, and make them strong-minded men ; you are, rather, in the great- est danger of sinking them a thousand fathoms deep in the Dead Sea." * The teacher should incite his pupils so to study their lessons that they may understand them, and give clear and unequivocal proof of their comprehension when called upon to recite. Let this be done thoroughly, and we shall not see so many school-rooms filled with pupils ' : who know, but cannot tell. Pupils who have the knowledge, but cannot find it. They know just where it is ; but, like a thief's honesty, in the moment of trial it is not there ! This genus is a large one ; and it de- serves what editors call a notice, though I think not a puff. They have studied all science and art, and know everything, and yet know nothing. They seem to be well versed, and 'ready to communicate,' so long as the question-asking teacher manages the 'discharging- rod.' They are so ready to answer, that they seem to overflow with knowledge. But, when without this assistance they are called upon for an exposition of what they know, ulas ! they suddenly find that their knowledge, like fare * W. C. GoldthwaiL 166 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. ANECDOTE OF A PUPIL. well emotions, ' lies too deep for utterance.' As it i* said of some cutaneous disorders, it has 'struck in,' though, I believe, without producing any congestion at the centre ! But, dropping the language of ridicule, we should remember that the pupil does not know till he can tell" Some teachers have a wonderful faculty of " carry- ing " their pupils over much ground, without going into it. It would answer about as well, if such should carry their pupils on their shoulders over the hook closed and sealed. Some parents, too, appear to be perfectly satisfied in knowing that their children are attending to a long list of studies, though they may not acquire any well-grounded, definite or thorough understanding of a single branch. The learning and repeating of certain stereotyped rules in a book are mistaken for a clear understanding and general application of principles. Pupils thus trained will resemble the youth in the fol- lowing case. Says a teacher : "A lad of seventeen years once said to me, with an air of considerable import- ance, ' I went through DabolV s Arithmetic three times last winter, sir; and lean do any question in the hardest cipher ing-book you can bring:' I did not dis- pute him ; for I did not doubt that he could, mechani- cally, obtain the answer to almost any question he could find in a book, set down under a specific rule. But, presuming that he, like many others, had made figures without thinking, I asked him if he could tell me what twenty pounds of beef would 'come to, at ten cents per pound, provided two-thirds of it was fat. After a mo- mentary and awkward hesitation, he said, ; If you will tell me what the fat comes to, I will do the question.' LESSONS AND RECITATIONS. 167 THE " TRYING-OUT " PROCESS. As I smiled at this, he said, with much spirit, ' If you will tell me what rule it comes under, I will do it.' I continued silent, for his ludicrous embarrassment pre- vented my speaking at the instant, when he$ with great earnestness, exclaimed, 'It is an unfair sum; I never saw such a sum in the book in my life.' ' And thus it is with many ; they do not examine, they do not think. They have not yet learned that thinking has anything to do with an education. The unfortunate lad, just alluded to, had never accustomed his mind to seek for the why and wherefore. No : that two-thirds fat he could not digest ; he could not put it under any rule ; indeed, he had never before seen a question that had any fat in it, and he was entirely unacquainted with the "trying-out" process. It is, often, a fault, with a teacher, that he confines his instruction to the strict letter of the text-book, and rests satisfied if his pupils answer the questions, or solve the problems, of the book, without making any attempt to test their ability to apply the knowledge thus gained. It is wonderful to see how much mere text-book knowl- edge one may have, and yet possess little or no ability to bring that knowledge to bear upon the practical, business operations of every -day life. A certain man had a son who was considered quite a prodigy in the mathematical department. The father prided himself on the facility and accuracy with which his son would perform all arith- metical calculations and operations. On a certain occa- sion he purchased, of a market-man, a load of turkeys. The seller of the turkeys readily reckoned the amount he was to receive for his load ; but this did not accord with the purchaser's views. His son Solomon was the only 168 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. TURKEY RULE. RECITATIONS. one who could do such questions with sufficient accuracy to suit him ; and Solomon was accordingly called, and requested to ascertain what the load of turkeys would come to. With slate in hand, he seated himself, and began making figures. After a suitable time, he was asked for the result. His reply was, "I have not quite got it yet." After a longer time had elapsed, the father again called, with some feeling of impatience, for the answer, when Solomon said, " To tell the truth, father, I cannot do the question, for I have never ciphered in turkey rule." Let the pupil be accustomed to receive questions of a practical nature, aside from those in the text- book, and he will study his lessons with the intention of under- standing them, and not with the mere design of repeating the words or rules of the book. RECITATIONS. Much depends upon the manner of conducting a recitation. From a visit to some schools, one might infer that it was the teacher's part to recite, and that, in many cases, to very inattentive listeners. Some teachers talk so much and so loudly, in their attempts to explain and simplify a lesson, as rather to confuse than enlighten. The scholar should be made to feel that it is his duty to recite his lessons, and that the greatest merit will con sist in the clearest and promptest answers and solutions. He should be made to feel that he must gain a clear and definite understanding of the subject under consideration, so that he may impart his knowledge in a plain and intel- ligible manner. He should be induced to regard that accuracy and positiveness in his explanations which can only emanate from a complete and thorough comprehen- LESSONS AND RECITATIONS. 169 ANECDOTE. CLEARNESS. sion of his subject. Many scholars acquire a habit of .ndefiniteness and confusedness in relation to their les- sons. They may feel pretty certain that one of two answers is correct, but they cannot with any degree of certainty say which. The color of the article under con- sideration is-either black or white, but which positively they know not. They are in a condition like that of the Irish recruit, who, on being asked, by his officer, what his height was, replied that the man who meas- ured him said it was five feet ten, or ten feet five, but exactly which it was he could not tell at all, at all, though sure he was that one of the two was right ; and all this, too, with a feeling that either would answer. Now, who cannot see that such indefiniteness is not knowledge, it is mere guessing? The following excellent suggestions are from the pen of Rufus Putnam, Esq., for many years principal of the Bowditch School, Salem, Mass. : " Recitations should be conducted in the manner best adapted to the cultivation of all the mental powers. In recitations in geography, for example, the drawing of maps is an exceedingly valuable exercise ; but it should be done without reference to the map, except as it was studied before coming to recitation The teacher should ever esteem it a duty, of the highest importance, to do what he may to invest his pupils with the power of fixing the attention. All else that the pupil may learn will be of little value, compared with this; and if he shall succeed in cultivating this faculty, and imparting a high degree of this power, he may consider himself amply repaid for any amount of labor it may have cost him. It is not always easy to secure the undivided 15 17ft COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. MODE OF CONDUCTING A RECITATION. attention of scholars in time of recitation : they will listen attentively to the remarks of the teacher ; but to listen to each other while reciting, so carefully as to notice their errors and omissions, is not so easy. I have found no mode of conducting recitations better adapted to secure the attention of the pupils, and to profit them in every respect, than the following : " The class should have all the time and assistance they need to enable them to learn the lesson assigned, so that no one shall come to the recitation unprepared, except in consequence of his own neglect. The teacher should propound the questions to the scholars, generally, not in any particular order, but promiscuously ; stating the question before naming the scholar who is to recite. If any scholar does not understand the question, he will make it known before any one is called to answer. If the scholar called on does not know the question, he is considered as failing, and another is called upon to answer. As a general rule, the scholar should be allowed to go through with his answer, right or wrong, without assistance or interruption by either the teacher or one of the class. If he commits an important error, neither the teacher, nor another member of the class, should notice it by any outward token whatever ; and the next ques- tion may be propounded just as if the last had been answered correctly. The scholar next called on to answer will correct the error made by the one who pre- ceded him. if he observed it. If he does not correct it, he, also, is charged with the error, although he should answer his own question correctly ; and so on, each scholar being charged with as many errors as he allows to pass unconnected ; though it may be best to require nc LESSONS AND RECITATIONS. 171 DEFINITE ANSWERS. ANECDOTE. scholar to correct more than one error. The teacher, all the while, remains, as much as possible, a silent lis- tener, until the recitation is finished, carefully noticing all the errors. Having thus exhausted the knowledge ot the class, as far as time will permit he will remark upon any error which remains unconnected ; decide who were right, and who were wrong, among those who differed in their answers ; and give such explanations and additiona, instruction as the case demands. By conducting the recitation in this way, a strong motive is presented to the scholar to study the lesson carefully before recita- tion ; to depend on himself, and not on his teacher, while reciting ; to watch, attentively, the whole recitation ; to discriminate between answers nearly, and those which are exactly, correct; and, at the close of the recitation, to listen with interest to the remarks which the intelligent and faithful teacher will, if left to himself, seldom omit. Good judgment will be needed in introducing such a mode of conducting a recitation to a class unaccustomed to it ; and it would not be expedient to observe this mode strictly in hearing recitations upon all subjects, and from pupils in every stage of advancement ; but I would rec- ommend as near an approximation to it as the circum- stances will admit" Pupils should be required to give clear and well-defined answers at the first trial. Many scholars have a won- derful faculty of recovering from an incorrect answer, after catching a hint of their inaccuracy from the class or teacher. They say one way, and then recall it. and say they " meant to say " so and so, which is often quite the reverse of what they had said or tnought previously. A Frenchman once said of a certain sword, ". Dis. ish .da 172 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. HOW SOME PUPILS DO. sword vich Balaam had." " But," replied a hearer, "Balaam had no sword; lie only wished he had one." "Well," said the pertinacious Frenchman; "I mean, dis ish de very sword dat he vish he had." Thus it is, often, with some scholars ; they discover their error, and the true answer, from some circumstances or expressions, and then undertake to assume a right position by "0, yes; I meant so." Of course, they .meant to give the true answer, even if they knew it not. Some teachers are much accustomed to having their pupils recite in concert. This, I think, should not often be encouraged. Some exercises may be recited by the pupils simultaneously to good advantage ; but this mode of reciting too often constitutes a shield for the idle and inaccurate pupils. Whenever it is adopted, the teacher should insist that all answer immediately and at the same instant, so that none may gain a " catch- word " from others in his class. The instructor should have the fullest assurance that all rules, explanations, and illustrations, in connection with a lesson, are perfectly comprehended. It is an excellent plan to encourage scholars to ask questions, and make observations, in reference to the passing lesson. Let them, if possible, be so trained that they will feel perfectly free to ask for any further explanation, or to make any suggestions that may occur to their minds At the close of a recitation, it may be well to request any member of a class to ask any question in reference to the lesson, or name any point upon which he would like to receive more or clearer information. It is of the utmost importance that the desire to gain a distinct and clear understanding of every subject be early and finnlv LESSONS AND RECITATIONS. 173 J. D. PHILBRICK ON RECITATIONS. formed, and, also, that a true spirit of self-reliance and self-possession be carefully and earnestly encouraged and promoted. J. D. Philbrick, for many years an efficient teacher in Boston, and now principal of the Connecticut State Nor- mal, uses the following very sensible remarks, in answer- ing the question, ' ' How shall the teacher proceed, in order to render a particular recitation as pleasant and profitable as possible 7 " " As a preliminary step, in attempting to reach this result, it is important to give pupils definite and partic- ular directions as to the manner of preparing their les- sons, and the manner in which they will be expected to recite. The difficulties they will be likely to meet should be anticipated, and, though not solved and cleared up, such hints should be thrown out as the case may require. The means of securing faithful preparation, on the part of pupils, does not come within the range of our present subject. But let us suppose that object attained, and the recitation commences. " Aftentio/i is the most important thing now to be required of the pupils, undivided attention, the atten- tion of the whole class as long as the recitation continues. I put an important question to one of my pupils a few days since, which he could not answer, and pleaded as an excuse, and with eyes filled with tears, that it was not in the book, and he had never heard it before. But the fact was, that it had been discussed and answered, in his presence, on the day previous, while he was inatten- tive, and so he Avas none the wiser for what had been said about it. Instruction is wasted on minds while in such a state. It is seed sown by the wayside. 15* 174 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. ATTENTION. ENERGY. " Attention is a fundamental requisite of a good reci- tation, and must be secured, at any cost ; for, without it, the best of instruction can neither be understood nor retained. The teacher should leave no expedient untried till he has succeeded here ; for it is idle to obtain other conquests while this victory remains t > be achieved. But he must not attempt impossibilities, and contend against nature, with the expectation of a complete mastery ; for there are some wits so wandering, that no art can keep them on the same subject for a long time. Pupils of this description need to have the kaleidoscope turned often before their mental vision. The attention of young scholars is soon wearied ; and it is very injudicious to drag their jaded minds through long recitations. Their mental repast should be short and sweet. They will come to them, then, with a sharp appetite, though often called. " Before dismissing this topic, it is proper to observe that there are two kinds of attention, that which is caused by an interest in the subject under consideration, and that which is yielded from a sense of duty, and under the pressure of necessity. The former should be aimed at when it is desirable to deposit knowledge in the mem- ory safely. The latter is useful as a mental discipline. When the Athenian orator was asked what was the most important thing in speaking, he replied, ' Action ; the second requisite, action; the third, action' And I would say the same of attention, in recitation. " Energy is another essential requisite in a good reci- tation. This quality should never be omitted. It should enter into every action, however minute and trivial. In rising up and in sitting down, in the posture of tho body LESSONS AND RECITATIONS. 175 THE TEACHER'S MANNER AND EXAMPLE. and holding the book, it should be constantly insisted upon. Indistinct utterance is. not unfrequently, the result of a slothful habit of using the organs of speech, especially the tongue and lips. In such cases, energy ia the only remedy. The organs of the body, as well as the faculties of the mind, should be trained to prompt and vigorous action in every exercise in the recitation where it is possible. A right use of the respiratory organs is an efficient means of promoting habits of energetic action. I suppose that it was on this principle that Na- poleon selected men for action who were provided with ample nostrils and capacious lungs. "But, in our earnestness and zeal for the for tiler in re, it is well, on the other hand, to guard against forget- fulness of the suaviter in modo. Energy should be well tempered with the attractive grace of gentleness. It may be useful, also, to bear in mind, that there is a marked difference between energy and noise, a differ- ence similar to that between lightning and thunder. The literal meaning of energy is inward-workingness ; and, where it really exists, it will make itself felt, though speaking in a ' still small voice.' " The example of the teacher is the best mode of secur- ing energetic habits in pupils. Energy is contagious. Let the teacher be active, brisk, and decisive, in his manner, and the same qualities will be reflected in his pupils. On the other hand, who ever found a class any thing but tame and listless in the hands of a teacher eminent for sluggishness and inactivity? There is no better rule on this subject than that in the holy proverb, * Whatever our hands find to do, let us do it with all our might 176 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. ENCOURAGEMENT. EXACTNESS. " Encouragement, when judiciously applied, is a powerful agent in promoting the objects of recitation. It is what scholars of all grades need. Children must have it, or they will not succeed. Encouragement, in educa- tion, is like the sun in the natural world ; nothing can supply its place. The teacher who knows how to dis- pense his smiles of approbation wields a greater power than ever slept in the rod, or was contained in the lan- guage of censure and reproach. Make a pupil think he can do a thing, and he can do it. Possimt, quia posse videntur. This is a consideration which requires partic- ular attention, as teachers are constantly prone to bestow the largest share of encouragement where it is least needed. How much more are the bright and bold schol- ars praised, and cheered on, than the dull and timid ! Scholars should be encouraged to ask questions and sug- gest the difficulties which occur to their minds ; for sensi- ble and pertinent questions require thought, , and promote mental activity. The skilful teacher will answer one question in sucb^a manner as to provoke many more,j and, when the appetite of 'h^pu^lh$^.;become sufficiently keen, he will be directed to the sources of information, and encouraged to work the mine of knowledge on his own account. "Exactness is a point which should be rigorously de manded in recitation. There can be no such thing as good scholarship, or good instruction, without it. In pronunciation, it is not enough to avoid inaccuracies : the utterance should be complete in every respect, and free from all defects. Fragments of sentences, and incohe- rent phrases, should not be received as answers to ques- tions. It fosters a slovenly habit of expression, and roba LESSONS AND RECITATIONS. 177 A MODE OF ANSWERING. the pupil of the hest practical means of acquiring readi- ness and correctness in the use of language. - It is an important rule to require the pupil to include the ques- tion in his answer, and form a complete sentence, which can stand alone. For example ; if the teacher put the question, ' What is the capital of France ? ' it is not enough to receive for the answer. ' Paris.' The answer should be thus, ' The capital of France is Paris,' or thus, ' Paris is the capital of France.' I am aware that it will be objected to this mode that it consumes too much time ; but, if a teacher will but adopt it, and prac- tise it for some time, he will find that it is well, some- times, ' to stay a little, that he may make an end the sooner.' "In every recitation, it should be the aim of the teacher to call into exercise as many faculties as possible ; for it is only by exercising them that they can be developed and perfected. When it is possible, principles should be deduced from the particular facts under consideration ; the pupils made to see how much more valuable the knowledge of one general truth is, than the knowledge of many facts. Every sort of routine in recitation should be avoided. The teacher who would be very successful must tax his invention to find out ways of varying the exercises, though always keeping the great end in view." CHAPTER XXI. EXAMINATIONS AND EXHIBITIONS. SCHOOL examinations, judiciously regarded and prop- erly conducted, have a beneficial effect upon teachers, pupils, and parents ; but, that they may answer their true design, and produce the favorable results for which they are instituted, their object should be clearly under- stood and wisely observed. An examination in the pros- pect should tend to stimulate both teachers and pupils so to perform all their school duties that they will, at any time, bear a strict and candid inspection. It should not. however, be considered as an end, but merely as an auxiliary, in the great work of education. It is sometimes the case that an instructor and his pupils look upon examination-day as the day for which all previous school days were made ; and they apply all their powers, and devote all their energies, to a formal preparation for its exarcisos. This is all wrong, as it tends to form incorrect views in relation to the true nature and purpose of all school training. Teachers and pupils should daily labor with a strong desire to do their work so faithfully that it will at all times bear the test of a close examination. Nothing can be more erroneous than the idea, which some appear to entertain, that the exercises and recitations of a single day, in the presence of a crowd of people, who have entered the school-room for the first time during the year, will afford a fail EXAMINATK NS AND EXHIBITIONS. 179 THE OBJECT OF EXAMINATIONS. criterion for deciding upon the condition of a school, and of the past fidelity of teacher and pupils. On such occa- sions, the very circumstances will tend greatly to modify the real appearance of a school, both as regards deport- ment and recitations. The unusual assemblage often tends to abash or confuse the best pupils of a school. Many a good scholar has had his spirits crushed, and his ardor checked, by failures resulting from embarrassment on the day of examination. On such occasions, the chil- dren are frequently subjected to an ordeal that would be trying to adults. Sometimes the mere excitement attend- ant upon an examination causes many pupils to appear to great disadvantage. The true object of an examination should be, to ascer- tain whether, under all the circumstances, teacher and pupils have performed their daily duties in a faithful and intelligent manner, so that they deserve the continued approval of committees and parents. The desired knowl- edge on this point can be more satisfactorily obtained by occasional and informal visits to a school, than on a set examination-day. I would, therefore, suggest, that, instead of the mode of examining schools now so com- mon, committees should visit the schools under their charge as frequently as may be, and without previous notice. At these visits, they should examine the several classes, with as much thoroughness as may be desirable, to ascertain their true condition. The teacher's methods of teaching and governing should also be carefully ob- served, and every step taken that may seem essential to gain a correct understanding of the true condition of the school. These occasional visits will afford an insight into the 180 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. EXHIBITIONS. every-day movements and state of the school, and give a more just view of the nature of the relation which sub- sists between the instructor and pupils. Results, in themselves highly satisfactory, as exhibited on examina- tion-day, may have been produced by methods and pro- cesses very unsatisfactory. At the times of these visitations, it should be the aim of the teacher to conduct the several exercises precisely as he does when no visitors are present, that the school may appear in its usual condition. If the committee wish to examine any class or classes more at length, the teacher should most cheerfully acquiesce, and do all within his power to impart a correct understanding of the condition of the school, with all its defects, as well as excellences. If pupils have been idle or heedless, let it be seen to their disadvantage ; if they have been diligent and attentive, let it appear to their credit. If these informal visits shall tend to satisfy the com- mittee that the schools have been laboring wisely and faithfully in all their relations, an opportunity should be afforded the teachers, at the close of their several terms, to present such an exhibition of the school as may best tend to interest parents and pupils. But it should be regarded as an exhibition, and not as an examination. It should be an occasion that will be alike gratifying to pupils and parents, a sort of assurance that school duties have been so satisfactorily performed as to entitle pupils and teacher to the privilege of exhibiting their more pleasing and less irksome exercises. The speaking of pieces, rehearsal of dialogues, and reading of composi- tions, may, in part, constitute the exercises on these occa- fions. Their true object should be, to show what the EXAMINATIONS Atft EXJ'^Ul-fONS. 181 THEATRICAL SHOW TO BE AVOIDED. pupils can do, to present the school in its most favor- able aspect. Such exhibitions will tend to interest parents, and induce many to enter the school-room who would not come, under ordinary circumstances, and, if rightly improved, they will furnish opportunities for calling the attention of parents to some of their school duties and obligations. It should, however, be the aim of all concerned to avoid every appearance of mere theat- rical show, and to have all the exercises such as have a salutary influence and leave pleasant impressions. 16 CHAPTER XXII. MULTIPLICITY OF STUDIES. THERE is a feeling quite too prevalent, in the commu- nity, that a multiplicity of studies is really essential to good scholarship. Hence, many branches are attended to superficially, while no branch is pursued systemat- ically and thoroughly. Parents and pupils frequently imbibe the impression that a long list of studies will pro- duce good scholars. But a more stupendous error can- not be conceived. Our schools, at best, can furnish but a foundation, upon which the whole subsequent life must erect a superstructure. It is vastly more important that this foundation be accurately, strongly, and fitly made, than that it contain a great variety of material. I would not be understood as undervaluing the higher branches, but merely as being opposed to substituting them for the elementary and indispensable ones. I would not have a pupil attend to geography of the heavens until he knew something of the geography of the earth ; nor would I allow Chemistry, Astronomy, Geometry, Botany, Geology, and a long list of other ologies, to take the place of Reading, Spelling, Arithmetic, and other fun- damental studies. Let a good foundation be well and thoroughly laid, and then the pupil has that on which ha may rear a superstructure of any desired nature and extent. But, how often is it that pupils are allowed to fritter away their time upon some of the more accoru- MULTIPLICITY IF STUDIES. 183 TOO MANY STUDIES. ANECDOTE. plished, though really less useful branches, and that, too, when they are sadly deficient in their elementary train- ing ! How many misses spend their time on music and embroidery, French and painting, who might, with more propriety, spend some time over the spelling-book, and in learning the uses of the needle and the flat-iron, or listening to the music of the broom ! A gentleman, who was for many years at the head of a popular academy, says : "A young lady once came to place herself under my care, with the intention of becom- ing a teacher. Upon examination, I found her exceed- ingly ignorant in the common branches of an English edu- cation; but, perceiving, from her appearance, that she had a course of study marked out in her own mind. I asked her what branches she wished to pursue while under my care. Said she, ' I wish to study Chemistry, Philos- ophy, Astronomy, and French. paint a mourning-piece, read Spanish, conjecture a map, and learn bigotry.' ' Thinking the last-named sufficiently abounded without culture, he very readily conjectured that there was some mistake in the nomenclature ; and, upon further examin- ation, he was induced to substitute botany for bigotry. And is it not true, that, in many schools, there are scholars who can neither pronounce nor spell the names of the branches they pursue ? The truth is, that nearly every man has some favorite study, which he wishes to have occupy a prominent place on the catalogue of school studies ; and, if the notions and whims of all should be gratified, it would require no inconsiderable effort merely to remember the names of the various branches to be pursued. I recently heard quite a discussion on the propriety of making agriculture 184 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. PROPER STUDIES FOR COMMON SCHOOLS. a distinct subject of school instruction. Now, though we have a very exalted opinion of farming, we can see no good reason why it should be singled out from the numer- ous other occupations as a department of common-schoo' study ; and, should such be the case, we should soon find other occupations clamorous for their share of attention, until it would be necessary to construct school-houses on entirely new principles. While, outside, a small farm would be needed, we should, within, in addition to the usual study-room, want one for a carpenter's shop, one for a smithery, another for a cooperage, another for a shoemaker's, with a basement for a cotton factory, and the attic for a tinman's shop. These, in full operation at one and the same time, under the superintendence of one man, would render all occasion for vocal music un- necessary ; and, if the young did not become qualified for the pursuits of life, they would certainly become familiar with the din of business. Our common schools, constituted as they are, should be limited as to the branches to be taught in them Reading, Spelling, Penmanship, Arithmetic, Geography and History, Grammar, including, of course, composition and letter-writing, single-entry Book-keeping, probably comprise all the branches that can be advantageously pursued in our public schools. These, thoroughly and properly taught, will fit the young for assuming a respect- able stand in life ; but the acquisition of higher branches, without a well-grounded understanding of these, will only subject one to constant occasions for mortification. What matters it, if one understands Chemistry, Geometry, French, and Latin, with many other branches, if he can- MULTIPLICITY OF STUDIES. 185 NO TEACHER SHOULD IMITATE SERVILELY. not read intelligibly, spell correctly, write legibly, or pen a neat and readable letter? Assuming that the above branches are all that can be profitably introduced into our common schools, I will proceed to speak of each of them separately, and impart such hints in relation to each as may seem most import- ant. It will not be my purpose to tell precisely how each branch shall be taught ; but I shall, rather, aim to make such suggestions in relation to each as may be of some value to those who may engage in the great busi- ness of educating the young. Every instructor, who would be truly successful, must constantly draw upon his own resources ; and, while he may profit much from the suggestive hints of others, he should strive, studiously and wisely, to improve from these hints, by modifying plans, and adapting them to the peculiar wants and cir- cumstances of his own school. It is the part of wisdom and prudence to draw instruction from every proper source, it is the part of folly servilely to imitate, in all particulars, the plans and movements of any one, regardless of circumstances. The hints I inay give, or the suggestions I may make, ^rill, it is believed, prove, directly or indirectly, service- able to others ; and, possibly, some of the modes of teach- ing that may be designated may be deemed worthy of adoption. If, in relation to a single branch, some new idea may be developed, or some new interest awakened in the mind of any one, the author will feel that his labor has not been wholly in vain, or useless. 16* O n. A > I IS R AA11A. READING. OF the several branches attended to in our schools, n one exceeds, in importance, that of reading; and, per- haps, it may be added, that none is so imperfectly taught. There are various reasons for this ; two or three of which I will allude to. In the first place, the number of those in the commu- nity who read but miserably, or indifferently, is so much greater than that of those who read with a good degree of excellence, that an imperfect model is constantly exert- ing its influence. Both teachers and pupils are unfavor- ably affected by this. It is not easy to over-estimate the good results of a correct example, nor to magnify the ill consequences of a wrong one. Again ; there is, on the part of the young, and also of many older persons, too much of a feeling, that a mere repetition of words constitutes reading, and that an ability to utter them with great rapidity is the highest attain- ment to be gained. This feeling, when it prevails, and it often does, stands directly in the way of all true advancement. It must be removed, before the first up- ward step can be taken ; and, to effect this, will require the patient, continued, and judicious efforts of the teacher, and particular care and perseverance on the part of the learner. Another obstacle in the way of good reading has been READING. 187 SET RULES NOT DESIRABLE. the small degree of prominence which has been attached to the exercise. In most schools, it has received a very formal attention, once or twice daily ; in but few have pupils been thoroughly and systematically trained in the science of reading ; in fewer still have they been inspired with a right estimate of the importance of the subject. The large number of pupils usually under the care of one teacher, and the variety of branches introduced into our schools, have made it almost impossible for the instructor to do all that has been desirable. In the press of school duties, reading, too often, receives a hurried attention, and is treated more as a merely prescribed study than as one of primary consideration. It will not be my aim to give specific rules for teach- ing this branch, but, rather, to give a few such suggest- ive hints as may be of some value to teachers. While it is admitted that formal and precise rules may be of service in many instances, it is also believed, that a teacher, who possesses the ability to read well himself, and to infuse the right spirit into his pupils, will form good readers, " in spite " of set rules, and, often, better without than with their aid. "Three things, only," says the Rev. J. Pierpont, "are required, to make a good reader. He must read so, in the first place, that what he reads shall be heard in the second, that it shall be understood ; and, in the third, that it shall be felt. If a boy has voice, and intel- ligence, and taste enough, to do all this, then, under the personal guidance and discipline of a teacher who can read well, he will learn to read well ; but, if he has not. he may study rules, and pore over the doctrine of 188 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. SOME ESSENTIALS FOR READING WELL. cadences and inflections, till 'chaos come again,' ha will never be a good reader." In relation to the same subject, R. G. Parker thua r-peaks : "I have long been convinced that a good reader was never made by rules. Under the guidance of taste, judgment, discrimination, and good sense, the pupil will arrive at a better style of reading than when cramped bj a rule, or confused by directions. The only rule that ] esteem of any value, to one who is learning to read, i&- this : Study the meaning of what you propose to read, and, when you thoroughly understand it, pronounce it with the same tones, emphasis, pause, and accent, that you would use if you were uttering the same sentiments in common conversation." It is one of the first essentials, that the young should be thoroughly and carefully trained to habits of accuracy and distinctness of utterance, articulation, and enuncia- tion. These should receive special attention in primary Schools ; but, if scholars pass through these without such elementary discipline, it should be imparted to them as soon after as possible, for the longer incorrect habits, of any kind, are indulged, the more difficult will it be to eradicate them, and to form good ones in their stead. Every faithful teacher knows how very hard it is to break up imperfect and indistinct habits of utterance. If a child is allowed, for any length of time, to read in a faulty tone of voice, it will require unwearied pains, on the part of the teacher, to effect a change. But, if any vrrong habits have, either from neglect or from inaccurate teaching, been formed, they should be studiously cor- rected, before any true progress can be expected. Pupils should early be made to understand, that good READING. 189 SUGGESTION ON READING. reading does not consist in the mere calling of words. They should be led to see and feel the difference between good and bad reading, and trained to a nice perception of correctness and incorrectness. It is only when one has a just appreciation of a good style that he will be able to read with the " spirit and understanding." In attempt- ing to form or improve a correct taste, and lead pupils readily and rightly to discriminate between an accurate style of reading and that which is otherwise, it will be well for the instructor to read a particular sentence, or stanza, in several different ways, each illustrative of some defect or excellence, and then call upon pupils to indicate the style which they consider least defective, and designate the errors in the other modes. Let us suppose, for illustration, that the teacher reads the fol- lowing stanza in the three or four different ways desig- nated : " Tell me not, in mournful numbers, Life is but an empty dream ! For the soul is dead that slumbers, And things are not what they seem." 1. Read it too rapidly. 2. Read it in a monotone. 3. Read it as nearly correct as possible. 4. Read in a "drawling" tone. After reading it in these -several ways, and perhaps oth- ers, call upon the pupils to name that which they con- sider the best, and, also, to specify the defects in each of the other modes. Much may be done by this course towards forming a proper estimate of correct reading, and such an estimate must lie at the very foundation of a good style. 190 COMMON 7 SCHOOL EDUCATION. IMPORTANCE OF EMPHASIS. ANECDOTE. It is a very common error, with teachers, that they attempt too much at once. The true course is, to gain one point at a time, to teach one thing clearly and thoroughly before passing to another. One of the most prevalent faults, in schools, is that of reading too rapidly. This habit usually has a train of evils connected with it, such as a neglect of emphasis, disregard of inflection, distinctness, &c. In order to eradicate this fault and its attendant evils, it will be useful, occasionally, to require a class to read short sentences in concert, the teacher reading first, with particular reference to slowness, clearness of enunciation, emphasis, &c. If a few sen- tences are selected, and used to illustrate the importance of due emphasis, good results will attend the same. Let us take an example : A lad was intrusted with a message like the following : ' Charles, go and inquire how old Mrs. Sensitive is thia morning? " Not being particularly attentive to the true force of the message, Charles put the emphasis on the wrong monosyllable, and returned for an answer, that "Mrs. Sensitive would thank her neighbors not to trouble themselves in relation to her age, as that was something she felt competent to take care of herself." Perhaps the short and common question, " Do you ride to town to-day? " will serve as well as any to illus- trate the importance of right emphasis. Let it be read distinctly, in the various modes indicated by the italicized words, and let the pupils be questioned and exercised antil they clearly see the qualifying effect of emphasis. " Do you ride to town to-day? " " Do you ride to town to-day? " " Do you ride to town to-day? " READING. 191 ONE THING AT A TIME. " Do you ride to town to-day ? " The skilful instructor will not be at a loss in selecting and using sentences which will illustrate this point of our subject, and he should do so at an early stage, as reading without due regard to emphasis is as uninvit- ing as a painting in which no attention has been given to light and shade. Let the above, and other similar sen- tences, be read with the various changes of emphasis, so that pupils will see that each change gives a new shade to the import of the line. A similar course may be taken in reference to inflection, pitch, tone, &c. ; the prominent object being to attend to but one thing at a time, and to do that in such a manner as will make everything perfectly plain to the learner. If a pupil has contracted an unpleasant tone, immediate attention should be given to its correction. To accom- plish this, let the teacher read a short sentence, and require the pupil to repeat it without looking upon the book, and to continue doing so until he gives each word its proper sound. A whole class may, sometimes, utter words and sentences in concert to some advantage; though all concert exercises should be conducted with much discretion and care, otherwise, they will serve to cover up existing defects. If the teacher is a good reader, and every one should be, he should often read to his pupils, that they may have the benefit of his example ; but, if his style is characterized by any prom- inent defect, the less frequently he reads, the better it will be for his pupils. In this respect, it can hardly be said that an imperfect model is better than none. It will prove interesting and profitable occasionally to conduct a reading exercise in poetry in the following 192 COMMON SCHOOL EDUJATION. PUPItS SHOULD UNDERSTAND WHAT THEY BEAD. manner. Let the first scholar read the first line, the second the next, and so on, through the class, each one being required to commence and end with the same tone and inflection as he would if he should read the whole. This method will tend to secure the closest atten- tion, and will be attended with some advantages. If the teacher can succeed in awakening a proper spirit of criticism, it will prove beneficial ; but he should strive to guard against the exercise of a selfish or unkind spirit in relation to this point. But, if he cannot secure a kindly feeling in this matter, it would be better not to seek its benefit. A little judgment and prudence will, ordinarily, produce right feeling and action. When this is the case, after a pupil has read a paragraph, let the other members of a class be allowed, under certain restrictions, to allude to any defects or errors that they may have noticed. This may help to form a watchful and discriminating habit. In order to read well, one should have a full and clear understanding of the piece which he attempts to read. He should, if possible, comprehend the feelings and inten- tions of the writer, that he may, for the time, make them his own. Hence, a teacher should incite his pupils to study their reading lessons, that they may gain a correct view of the writer's meaning. It is often the case, that teachers allow pupils to read too much at one time. It would prove much more beneficial, to require an entire class to read the same stanza or paragraph, and do it properly, than to allow them to pass over many pages imperfectly. If a class is large, and time will not suffice to give special drilling to every member, let the reading be confined to a less num- READING. 193 A PAPER OR STORY-BOOK USEFUL. ber, and be carefully attended to by them. The general remarks, criticisms, &c., will be for the benefit of all. In addition to the reading lesson of the regular text- book, it will be found interesting and profitable to allow scholars, occasionally, to read some interesting story or narrative from some other book or paper. As only the one reading will have the piece before his eyes, the others will feel the importance of distinctness, &c. It may be well for the teacher to name three or four scholars daily, from whom he will expect the reading of suitable extracts on the next day. This will allow them to study the same, with a particular reference to reading them under- standingly. Occasionally, the teacher may allow a whole class to make selection of stanzas or passages for read- ing, and allow them a short time for examining the same. This will tend to awaken an interest. The devoted and judicious instructor will ever aim to impress upon the minds of his pupils the true importance of good reading, and constantly strive so to conduct the exercise as to ecure the desired end. 17 CHAPTER XXIV. SPELLING. To the list of branches attended to in our schools, that of spelling is, almost universally, added ; and yet it is, probably, less thoroughly taught than most others. Many teachers seem to regard it as too simple to require their notice ; and hence, scholars may, often, be found quite proficient in some of the higher studies, when they are very deficient in their knowledge of orthography. One may be able to write a letter which shall be alike excel- lent in diction and penmanship, and yet, if it is marred by instances of bad spelling, its very excellences will seem like deformities. Beautiful thoughts, elegantly expressed and neatly written, may be entirely ineffective if set forth in a dress orthographically false, even as the beauty of a painting may be destroyed by a few inac- curacies, though the colors be ever so brilliant. Indeed, elegant writing and poor spelling seem most sadly at variance, when most closely connected. There is a very unequal and uncongenial " yoking together," which must at once attract the notice and pain the eye of every care- ful and critical beholder. Very ludicrous errors are sometimes made by inac- curacies in speWing. Many years ago, a few citizens of a district in a certain town sent a petition to the selectmen, requesting a meeting of the inhabitants to be called, for the purpose of making a division of the SPELLING. 195 ANECDOTE. ERRORS IN TEACHING SPELLING. town. This petition did not contain the legal number of names, and was returned by the chairman of the select- men, with the following answer: "Your request cannot be complied with, because there are not the necessary number of sinners [signers] on your petition." This rather aroused the feelings of the petitioners, who de- clared that their part of the town did not abound in sinners, and it was for that reason, in part, that they wished to be divorced from the other section. In itself, the exercise of spelling is dry and uninterest- ing ; and hence it is the more essential that the instructor should strive so to conduct, and vary the mode of conduct- ing it, as to make it attractive. With most young schol- ars, the usual oral method must be adopted ; but, as soon as pupils are able to write, much time may be devoted tc written exercises. Indeed, quite young scholars may be allowed to write, or print, words upon slates or black- boards. There will be a three-fold advantage in this, it will teach them to write or draw, keep them employed, and aid them in acquiring a knowledge of spelling. After briefly noticing one or two errors in the manner of conducting lessons in spelling, I will proceed to name two or three plans which may be found valuable and agreeable. Error 1. Many teachers pronounce words improp- erly, by endeavoring to speak them too distinctly ; as, va-rl'-a-tion, la-bo-rl'-ous, e-vap-6'-rate, &c. Words should be plainly pronounced, and precisely as they would be uttered by a correct speaker. An undue emphasis, or prolongation of the utterance of a* syllable, may enable the scholar to spell the word as 196 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. METHODS FOR SPELLING. pronounced, but will never make him an expert speller of words as properly spoken. Error 2. The practice of allowing pupils to try upon a word more than once. It is very common to meet with teachers who habitu- ally allow their pupils to try two or more times upon each word. I consider this entirely wrong. It only tends to confirm an uncertain knowledge in relation to words, and is not spelling, but mere guessing. Pre- cision, promptness, and accuracy, should be insisted upon, on the part of pupils, in all spelling exercises. If the oral mode is adopted, the teacher should speak the word once, distinctly and properly. The pupil should pro- nounce it after him, and then proceed to spell it, pro- nouncing each and every syllable as he spells. It is not workman-like style to spell a word without pronouncing the syllables. It may be well, at times, to require a whole class to pronounce a word in concert, after given out by the teacher, and before it is spelt by the pupil. This will tend to command the attention of the whole class. In spelling long words, it may sometimes be of service to pronounce a word, require the class to repeat it in concert, and then have the first scholar in the class give the first letter, the second the next, and so on, until all the letters are named. In this case, the syllables may be pronounced by the whole class as soon as com- pleted ; or, as soon as the letters of a syllable have been named in order, the next pupil may name the syllable, instead of giving the next letter, and so on. I will "take, for illustration, the word oc-ca-sion. The whole class may pronounce the word ; then the first scholar may utter o, the second c, the third pronounce oc, the SPELLING. 197 HINTS ON SPELLING. fourth c, the fifth a, the sixth ca, and the -whole class oc-ca, the seventh 5, the eighth i, the ninth o, the tenth n, the eleventh sion, and the whole class oc-ca-sion. This will animate a class, and be attended with some advantages. At all events, it will help to spice the exer- cise with variety. In order to secure the perfect attention of a class, the following methods will be found valuable : and, at the same time, they will aid in awakening an interest, and causing improvement. 1. Read a short sentence distinctly, and require every word to be spelt by the class, the first scholar pro- nouncing and spelling the first word, the next scholar the second, and so on, until all the words in the sen- tence have been spelt. After a little practice in this method, scholars will be able to go through with quite long sentences, Avith a good degree of accuracy and promptness. Many valuable truths and proverbs may in this way be impressed upon the mind, while attention is more directly given to orthography. The following may be samples : A good scholar will be industrious and obedient. If sinners entice thee, consent thou not. Take care of the minutes, and the hours will take care of themselves. A soft answer turneth away wrath. 2. It will be well, often, to make all the members of a class feel responsible for the accurate spelling of each and every word. If the first member of a class misspells the word given to him, let the teacher proceed and give out the next word, without intimating whether the first was correctly or incorrectly spelt. If the second scholar 17* 198 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. METHODS PROPOSED. thinks the first word was not correctly spelt, he will spell it, instead of the one given to him ; and so on, through the class, each being expected to correct any error that may have been committed. If the first spells a word wrong, and no one corrects it, let all be charged with a failure. This method will amply compensate for its frequent adoption. I will now proceed to speak of some points in relation to the mode of conducting the exercise by writing. Most experienced teachers have, latterly, often adopted the plan of writing words ; but, for the benefit of others, I will specify one or two modes. Let the teacher select words from some studied exer- cise, either in the reading-book or spelling-book, pro- nounce them distinctly, allowing time, after each word, for all to write it legibly. After all the words have been given out, each slate may be examined separately, arid all errors noted ; or, the members of a class may ex- change slates, and each examine his companion's slate, while the teacher spells the words correctly, and mark the number wrong upon each slate. Or, instead of either of these, the instructor may call upon some one to spell a word as he has written it, and then request those who have written differently to signify it by raising the hand. Neither of these methods will consume much time, and either of them will be preferable to the oral method. It will sometimes be the case, that scholars will prove themselves quite expert in spelling long or difficult words, and yet make sad mistakes in spelling those that are shorter, and, apparently, much easier. To remedy this, it will be well, occasionally, to read, slowly, an entire stanza or paragraph, and require the members of a class SPELLING. 199 PROPER NAMES. to write the same upon their slates. This course has its advantages. Again ; it is frequently the case that scholars are ex- ceedingly deficient in ability to spell the names of coun- tries, states, counties, towns, mountains, rivers, individu- als, &c. Any teacher, who has not exercised his pupils on such words, will be astonished at the number and nature of the errors that will be committed by a class on the first trial. Let teachers who have overlooked words of this description, in conducting the spelling exer- cise, commence by requesting their pupils to write all the* Christian names of their schoolmates, the names of the counties in their native state, towns in the county, and states in the Union. Though the result, at first, may be neither very satisfactory nor gratifying, the plan, if frequently adopted, will effect much improvement. It may be profitable, sometimes, to request the mem- bers of a class to select, from a certain number of pages in a book, some ten or twelve words, which may seem to them of most difficult orthographical construction, which shall, subsequently, be given to the class as a spelling exercise. The prominent advantage in this plan results from the fact that each scholar will, in searching for a few words, notice the orthography of a much larger number, selecting such only as appear to him peculiarly difficult. In this way pupils will, unconsciously as it were, study with interest' a lesson in itself unattractive to them. Favorable results will attend such a course. If a school-room is well furnished with black-boards, ' the words or sentences for the spelling exercise may be written on them. In this case, it may be well to have the exercise occur during the last half-hour of the day 200 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. BLACK-BOARD MAT BE USED. Let the scholars be required to write the words, legibly, as soon as pronounced by the teacher. After all have written, let the teacher examine the work, and draw a line over such words as are incorrectly written, and request that all errors be corrected immediately after school is dismissed. It is very important that pupils should be required to write all such exercises in a neat and distinct manner. At times it may be well to require scholars to divide the words into their appropriate syllables, and to desig- nate the accented syllable of each word ; as, an-ni-ver'- sa-ry, me-men'-to, la'-bor, la-bo'-ri-ous. Another method of conducting the exercise of spelling is the following; and we may add that, for more ad- vanced schools, it possesses some advantages over either of the others named. Let the teacher write, legibly, upon the black-board, some twenty or more difficult words, and allow them to remain long enough to be carefully studied by the school. A few minutes before the close of the school, let all the words be removed from the board. Now, let each scholar put aside his books, and provide himself with a narrow slip of paper. At the top of this, or upon one side, let him write his name, and then the words as dictated by the instructor. After all have written the list of words that had previously been placed upon the black-board, let the slips be collected, and taken by the teacher, who may himself, aided, perhaps, by some of his best spellers, examine the slips, and mark those wrong upon each. At some hour of the next day, let the teacher read the result to the whole school, stating the number of errors committed by the several pupils ; after which, the papers may be returned for correction. SPELLING. 201 A SPECIMEH. We will suppose, for illustration, that, on some day, the teacher gives out the names of the months, days of the week, and seasons of the year ; and that the following is a sample of one of the papers, as returned by the teacher, with errors marked : AMOS MASON. Eleven Errors. January. Feberwary. * March. April. May. June. July. August. Septembur. * Octobur. * Novembur. * Decembur. * Sundy. * Monddy.'* Tuesday. Wensday, * Thursday, Friday. Saterday. * Spring. Sumer. * Autuui. * Winter. In conducting this exercise, let the teacher insist upon perfect distinctness in the writing of the words, and let it be understood that every letter not perfectly plain will be considered as wrong, and marked accordingly. It will be readily seen, that a little skill, on the part of the teacher, in the selection of words, will make this a highly useful and interesting exercise ; and the time for the announcement of the number of errors will be looked for with interest. An attractive method, which may answer for oral or written spelling, is the following : The instructor pro- nounces a word, which is to be spelt by the first in the class, who will immediately name another, commencing with the final letter of the first word, which is to be spelt by the next scholar ; and he, in turn, will name another word, and so on, through the class. If the words are to bo written upon the slate, the same course may be taken. 202 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. OTHER METHODS. as to naming of words. Let us take, for illustration, the following words : . Commotion. Rhetoric. Nourishment. Circumstances. Theoretical. Sympathy. Language. Yellow. Endeavor. Wandering. An exercise of this kind will have its peculiar advan- tages, the more prominent of which will be, the awaken- ing of thought and interest. After a little practice, the members of a class will be able to name words with a great degree of promptness ; and an exercise of this kind will be made highly interesting and profitable. Another method, and the last I shall name, is the following, which may prove very useful in the higher classes of most schools. Let the teacher pronounce to a class several words of difficult orthography, or short sen tences containing such words, the pupils writing the same upon their slates, as fast as dictated. After the desired number of words and sentences have been written, the instructor may address his class as follows : " Schol- ars, the words and sentences which I have just pro- nounced may require from you some study. Examine them carefully, ascertain the correct spelling and mean- ing of each; and, when you have studied them suf- ficiently, rub them from your slates. To-morrow I shall give you the same exercise, and shall then expect you to write them accurately." Let us suppose that the following words and sentences should be given for an exercise of this kind : Aeronaut. Anchovy. Armistice. Acoustics. SPELLING. 203 A USEFUL METHOD. Bronchitis. Bead ideal. Colporteur. Guillotine. Hemorrhage. Hemistich. Thomas has an excellent daguerreotype likeness of his mother. The dahlia is a beautiful flower. He was a successful merchant and a skilful financier. The glaciers of Switzerland. There is a beautiful jet d'eau on the common. There was a beautiful giraffe in the menagerie. His loss caused great poignancy of grief. It was a successful ruse de guerre. The police exercised strict surveillance. This mode is well adapted for presenting words and phrases whose orthography is peculiarly difficult, and which occur less frequently than most words. CHAPTER XXV. PENMANSHIP. THE acquisition of a neat, legible, and rapid style of writing, is highly desirable, as a mere accomplishment, but much more so as a useful attainment. Yet how few, comparatively, are able to write in an attractive and plain style ! How often are the eyes caused to ache, in attempts to decipher illegible manuscript ! How many letters, in themselves pleasantly interesting, are perused with a degree of painful interest, on account of the effort necessary to make out the meaning of the various scrawls and hieroglyphical marks ! So great, often, is the illegibility of a letter or manuscript, that it is neces- sary to look it over repeatedly, in order to comprehend the contents, the matter, at first, being concealed by the indistinctness of the style in which it is expressed. Printers are frequently obliged to devote almost as much time to deciphering manuscript as they do in setting the same in type. All this merely proves that penmanship has not been properly attended to in our schools. The reason why it has been so imperfectly taught has been, in many instances, owing to the great number under the care of one instructor, but oftener, probably, to the want of true skill, ability, and system, on the part of the teacher. In how many schools does the writing exercise ssume a mere formality, regarded only because it is jne of the required exercises of the school-room ! Honcc PENMANSHIP. 205 A CLEAR DISCERNMENT . it is, that page after page, and book after bobk, are writ- ten, without any perceptible improvement. Indeed, in some schools, one might suppose that the chief aim was to write fast, and the chief merit to write through many books. If the teacher would have his pupils improve in pen- manship, he must himself feel, and cause them to feel, that the exercise is a useful and important one. In addition to this, if he can furnish evidence, in well- written copies, of his own ability and skill in writing, his efforts to teach will prove much more successful. I will proceed, briefly, to give a few hints, which may prove valuable to the instructor : 1. The pupils should be made to discern the differ- ence between good and poor writing. This is of the very first importance, and but little improvement can be, reasonably, expected without this. Let the teacher make frequent use of the black-board, in illustrating principles in writing, hi first, some time may be, very properly, spent in writing letters and words upon the board, which will tend to illustrate degrees of defect or excellence. For this purpose, let the teacher write a particular letter or word several times. Let one of these be as well made as can be, and the others repre- sent different degrees of mal-formation. Then let him call upon the pupils to point out defects, suggest improve- ments, &c. Let him call their particular attention to the importance of uniformity in the size and spacing of let- ters, and regularity in the sloping, and explain the dif- ference that should exist between the length of the looped letters and those not looped. Much may be done, in this manner, to awaken some thought on the part of the 18 206 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. A FIXED TIME DESIRABLE. learner, and to give him some definite ideas at the very outset. 2. A particular time should be appropriated to this exercise, daily; and, during- this time, it should receive the earnest and undivided attention of both teacher and pupils. About three-fourths of an hour will he quite sufficient for this purpose, and any time, excepting the first or last half-hour of either half of the day, will answer for the exercise. During the first half-hour, the muscles of the pupils will be somewhat affected by the sports of the play-ground ; and during the last half-hour, they will, often, feel less energy for engaging in the exercise. The instructor should keep the books, excepting during the period allotted for writing, and see that the copies are in readiness at the proper time, so that all may commence without delay, and at the same time. Much depends upon promptness, in this, as well as in all other depart- ments. During the continuance of the exercise, the teacher should constantly move among his pupils, and see that they sit correctly, and hold their pens prop- erly. He should frequently sit by a pupil, and write a few words, that the learner may see how he writes. If possible, let him cause the pupil to feel that the only merit in writing consists in the manner in which it is executed, and not in the amount. A few lines, well and clearly written, are much more to be commended than many lines, carelessly or illegibly written. Let him be made to feel that ^very letter in the copy is a little image sitting for its likeness, and that the chief merit of a like- ness consists in its resemblance to the original. If the letter is a. let it be made so accurately that no one can PENMANSHIP. 207 EXAMINATION OF BOOKS. possibly mistake it for an o or it. And so with all the other letters, insist that each and every one " look like itself." Let the pupils be urged to compare every word and every line with the copy, with a view to discover defects and amend them. 3. At the close of the writing exercise, let the books be collected and placed upon the teacher's desk, and let him devote a few minutes to their examination, expressing his approval or censure, as circumstances may seem to require. This may be done by dividing the school into classes, or by calling up individual pupils. As the several books are examined, peculiar faults or excellences should be pointed out, privately or publicly, as may seem most desirable. In alluding to defects of common occurrence, the black-board may be advantageously used. If it is found that any pupil has been grossly careless, ho should be detained after school hours, and required to write again, with more attention. 4. It is often the case that pupils become weary of writing the same copy for so many successive times , and it may be owing to this, in part, at least, that the bottom lines on a page are often more imperfectly written than any upon the page. To remedy this, let the pupils be allowed to go through their books and write one-half of each page, and then turn back and write the remaining half. In this way, several weeks will elapse between the times of writing the first and last half of each page. This plan will have the two-fold advantage, of showing the degree of improvement, and also of relieving from the monotony of continued repetition. 208 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. SIMPLE DIRECTIONS. 5. At or near the beginning of a term, let each, pupil be required to write a few lines upon a page of a blank book provided for the purpose, and, at the end of the term, write as many more, directly beneath fhose previously written. This will furnish the most indubitable evidence of im- provement, or want of improvement ; and will also serve as a stimulus to the pupils, and make them ambitious to furnish proof of having wisely improved their privileges. To faithful teachers and pupils, such a book would afford much satisfaction ; and it would furnish to committees and visitors, in a fair and concise form, an exhibition of any improvement that may have been made. It would also place in a true position the unsuccessful teacher arid the heedless pupils. The following brief suggestions and rules, in relation to writing, should be regarded by every teacher who would produce work of which he "need not feel ashamed." 1. Require that the pupil should "sit up," while writing. The eyes of beginners are, almost always, too near their paper or book. 2. Require all turns to be made without raising the pen. It is a very common, but very pernicious habit, to raise the pen. 3. The hair-stroke should always be made with the right-hand corner of the pen. 4. Insist that the scholar insert all marks of punc- tuation. 5. Insist that the pen be held properly, as in the fol- lowing cut : PEXMANSHIP. 209 DRAWING RECOMMENDED. 6. Only those fingers which hold the pen should move, in writing. 7. The end of the pen-holder should point towards the shoulder. 8. The hand should not be supported by the wrist, but by that part of the arm a little below the elbow. The teacher cannot be too careful, or too particular, in the observance of the suggestions that have been given. It is of the utmost importance that pupils commence right. A few hours of instruction, rightly given, at the outset,, will save many weeks of subsequent labor, and, at the same time, facilitate and expedite progress in writing. It is much more difficult to unlearn what has been wrongly taught, than it is to teach aright at first. In many schools, children are allowed to commence writing with pen and ink at too early an age. If, instead of this, they should be allowed to draw, upon slates or black-boards, such simple models as may be furnished, it would prove far more beneficial to them. Let them be allowed to copy letters, in this way, as soon as they are old enough to attend school ; and, after the lapse of two or three years, during which frequent attention may be given to such exercises, they will be prepared to com- mence the regular practice of writing under circum- stances much more favorable. 18* 210 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. WELL-WRITTEN COPIES IMPORTANT. It is very desirable that scholars should form the ability to write with rapidity ; but they should, in the first place, be taught to write well. If the hints above given are properly observed, if they do not tend to the formation of a perfect style of penman- ship, they will certainly do much towards the improve- ment of writing in our schools. The formation of a cor- rect appreciation of the work to be accomplished, and the awakening of a lively interest in the same, are, in the highest degree, essential, and should be carefully regarded at the very outset. The teacher should studiously endeavor to furnish well- written copies, and such as contain good moral sentiments, or express some important fact, or historical event. By judicious attention to this, many good impressions may be made upon the mind,, and many useful facts fixed in the memory, while the pupil is more directly engaged in learning to write. CHAPTER XXVI. GEOGRAPHY. THE methods of teaching Geography, adopted in most Bchools, are not calculated to impart much valuable information, or to awaken real interest in pupils. The memory is, often, rather taxed than disciplined; and the mind burdened with formal answers, rather than trained to take comprehensive and intelligent views of subjects. Names are learnt and repeated, but no well- defined and clear understanding of the localities and rela- tive positions of different countries, together with the peculiarities of each, is acquired, so that pupils, fre- quently, leave schools quite as ignorant, so far as relates to correct geographical knowledge, as they were when they commenced. A visitor at a primary school asked a class what geography was. The answer was very promptly given, " Geography is a description of the earth." " Very well," said the questioner; "and now, can you tell me what'the earth is ? " The answer from most was, "I don't know." "But," asked the visitor, "have you never seen it?" "No, sir," was the reply from most ; but one little girl said she had seen it, and, when asked where, pointed upward, to the sky. Another said .she saw it during her last vacation, and, when asked where, said, " Over at my aunt's, in Pelham." And thus it often is ; that words and definitions are committed to memory, without imparting clear information. iJl2 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. ERRORS IN TEACHING GEOGRAPHY. From an able and interesting report of the superin- tendent of schools for the State of Connecticut, I extract the following judicious and sensible remarks, in relation to some of the common errors in teaching Geography, and, also, some suggestions, which may prove of value to the teacher, in his attempts to impart instruction. "1. The indiscriminate use of Geography in schools, the habit of rushing through the book or atlas, learning a lesson one day, merely for recitation, and forgetting it the next, neither teacher nor scholar clearly perceiving the value of the study, is, certainly, very objectionable. " 2. Studying lessons about Kamtschatka and the Fejee Islands, before the contents of one's native country are known, seems rather absurd. " 3. Talking about seas, lakes, oceans, &c., when the learner deems every .puddle a lake, and every brooklet a river, and every inland lake he ever saw an ocean, may, indeed, be talking Geography, but it surely is not learn- ing anything either useful or true. 11 4. Describing the political divisions of Europe before the political divisions of one's native state are known ; learning the boundaries of New York ere the scholar has practical sense enough to describe the boundaries of the school-house, or the town in which he lives ; these, and similar upsettings of natural order, may, indeed, make a showy class, may win applause from an undis- cerning committee, but they, surely, do not give useful knowledge or discipline of mind to the learner. " Similar criticism may be justly passed upon many loose methods of teaching and reciting history. It is believed, firmly, that every study that belongs properly to our public schools may be shown to a class as, obvi GEOGRAPHY. 213 HINTS ON TEACHING GEOGRAPHY. ously, so useful and desirable, that no further motive or stimulation to industry will be needed. " 3. Singing classes, that, in unison, can sing all the names of the atlas in their proper order and place, give very showy results, and develop remarkable readiness in verbal memorizing. It is certain that little geography is learned. " Leaving this always easy task of fault-finding, some Affirmative suggestions may prove of value : '1. In early youth, it is always so unwise to talk about things whose realization in the learner's mind is, of necessity, imperfect, that the first labor in every study should be, to insure a perfect conception of the things, the names about to be used. Hence, Geographies always begin with definitions of terms. Let it be noted here, however, that, to early childhood, definitions are as blind and dark, oftentimes, as the thing defined. This holds true of all definitions, in every study offered to childhood. "Very rarely can a definition of a term be success- fully addressed to the ear of the young learner. Ear- knowledge must be explained to the eye ; eye-knowledge must have its definitions addressed to the ear ; and, in general, it is a law of early childhood, that successful definition or explanation must enter the mind by a different avenue from the one by which the thing explained seeks admission. As a scholar advances, and gains power of conception, and of language, of course, this law becomes less and less widely applicable, but it is never entirely forsaken. " All geographical terms, all expressions of size and distance, require express development by the teacher. The concise words of the b<5ok are always more easily 214 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. SUGGESTIONS ON GEOGRAPHY. learned ; but it is claimed here, that, in such a course, nothing is learned but the words. The hill, the valley, the puddle, the brook, the bounded field, &c., are little. geographical facts, which address the eye. These are available, therefore, as definitions. Maps of the school- room, of the yard, of the farm, of the village, should pre- cede maps of the world, &c. " 2. Relative size and distances. Here is a most diffi- cult subject to teach well. But it can be accomplished. Beginning with things known and measurable, and map- ping them (that is, beginning with the inkstand, next the desk, next the room, house, lot, field, town, county, state, &c.), it is easy to call the attention, intelligently, then, to the fact that maps of the same size are. often, the representatives of very various magnitudes. Finally, one large map of the world may then, with some hope of success, be used, to give some idea of the vast globe. " 3. The geometry of our maps the meridians and parallels may, in some progressive manner, be brought within the comprehension of a class. "4. Topical knowledge of boundaries, population, pro- ducts, &c., should begin at a centre, the school-house, and radiate, or, rather, circulate round it, in larger and larger arcs, as long as the study continues. It is not urged, in these hints, to throw aside the Geographies in use, as being useless. It is only required that the order of arrangement, followed by them, be thrown aside, and the books retained and used as we use a dictionary, not to be read straight through, but to consult when we wish to obtain some precise information. This is the use which a teacher should make of all text-be oks in schools. GKOUU.APiJY. 215 USE OF A NEWSPAPER. ' ' 5. Fifty copies of any commercial paper, all of one date, will be found suggestive of more interesting and useful geographical, arithmetical, and miscellaneous, yet useful questions, than any one term of study in a scnool will suffice to answer. The lad who can answer all the geographical questions that rise in any one copy of a well-conducted commercial newspaper, like the New Yor/c Tribune or Boston Mercantile Journal, is more truly proficient in the study, than one who can repeat a gazetteer word for word. The former has practical, use- ful knowledge ; the latter has only ' book-learning.' " As well here as anywhere, it may be remarked, that a good newspaper is about as cheap and useful a school- book as can be introduced into our schools. ' 6. In connection with History, Geography becomes very interesting and useful. A map of every battle- ground, drawn on the slate or black-board, goes far to break up the monotony of a memorized recitation in his- tory. A checker-board map of Philadelphia does more to teach its peculiar squareness of corner than any amount of recitation. "7. To cultivate the memory alone, in the study of History and Geography, is unwise. Yet it should not be neglected. Let a class be divided into two equal parts. Then let these two divisions alternate, one of them memorizing words closely, and the other reciting in their own language. Thus one half of the class will explain for the benefit of the other ; while, if the alternation be observed, no injustice will be done to either half. " 8. Map-drawing, from memory, is invaluable. Let it be done on the black-board, the floor, the marble- ground, and even (if need there be) upon the fence. COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. DEFINITIONS SHOULD BE PLAIN. " Finally ; when the teacher is assured that geograph- ical ideas are really in the mind, then, and not till then, is it profitable to memorize and recite definitions, which now stand as mere exercises in language. " Similar principles should guide the teacher in con- ducting recitations in History, Every town, in every state, has its local history ; and this local history, which every child may learn from its parents (at least, some single fact may be so learned by every child, so that the aggregate will form, at school, a local history), will be found to have very immediate connection with the his- tory contained in the book; and, just as soon as this connection becomes obvious to a class, so soon does the study cease to be mere memory of dry words. How and when the meeting-house and school-house were built ; how the nature and time of election, town and state, hap- pen to be as they are ; why some towns send more dele- gates, or representatives, than others, &c. &c." In teaching Geography, the instructor should be as- sured that every definition is perfectly understood, and that every explanation is thoroughly comprehended. It is, not unfrequently, the case, that pupils will be able to repeat the words of the book with great fluency, and yet have no clear and unequivocal knowledge of the subject under consideration. This learning of words, without acquiring definite ideas, is but little worth; it is not true information ; it is like wealth in the bottom of the ocean, not usable, because beyond grasp. The teacher should strive to excite an interest in Geog- raphy lessons ; and, to this end, he may unite History with the study, and, by connecting some interesting his- torical facts or narratives with the geographical features GEOGRAPHY. 217 All ILLUSTRATION. of each country, or section, he will awaken thought and secure attention. If possible, let him relate some simple fact or truthful incident in , connection with the passing exercise, and he will thus succeed in making vivid and lasting impressions. On this point, Wm. B. Fowle gives the following illustration, in his interesting and useful volume, " The Teacher's Institute : " " If you wished to impress the geographical outline of the Spanish peninsula upon the pupil's mind, would you tell him of Ferdinand and Isabella ; of the repulse of the Saracen invaders, and the invasion of Mexico; of the enfranchisement of Spain, and the establishment of the Inquisition ; of the slaughter of infidel Moors, and the more modern butchery of Christian hosts ? You might do all this, without giving the pupil any idea of the geography of Spain. But, if you should show the pupil a Spanish dollar, and call his attention to the shield, whose form is exactly that of the peninsula ; to the castle and the lion Castile and Leon, whose union freed Spain from the Saracens ; to the two pillars, em- blems of the pillars of Hercules, Gibraltar and Ceuta ; to the motto that entwines them 'Ac plus ultra * ' There is nothing beyond,' and then explain to him this limit of ancient geography, which Spain herself- was the first to pass, my word for it, you would not only give some definite ideas of the geography of Spain, but you would give an interest, that never existed before, to Spanish dollars." Allusion has been made to map-drawing. It would Oe difficult to over-estimate the importance of this exer- cise. It will tend to interest the learner, and, at the same time, impart instruction more definitely and perma 19 218 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. MAP-DRAWING. nentlj than can be given in any other manner. If a pupil spends time in drawing a map of the United States, he will fix in his mind the location of the several states, mountains, rivers, lakes, cities, capes, &c. &c., more clearly and surely than by any other method. In drawing maps, the first step should be to mark off the meridians and parallels. These will serve as guide-lines for locating the different sections. After a little careful practice, pupils will be able to go to the black-board and draw an outline map of a state or country with a degree of readiness, accuracy, and neatness, which will greatly surprise and delight one who has never before witnessed such an exercise. In the study of Geography, it will be found most interesting and profitable to commence with those sections nearest "home," and gain a well-defined understanding of them before proceeding to countries and sections which are more remote. Within a few years, most permanent schools have been furnished with outline maps. These may be advan- tageously used, or they may be used with but little ben- efit. If possible, pupils should be so thoroughly taught, that they will be able to go to any map, and point out the different countries, states, cities, mountains, lakes, rivers, &c., and, at the same time, give such particulars in rela- tion to each as may be important. If a country is spoken of, let something be said of its productions, climate, gov- ernment, &c. &c. If the subject relates to rivers, let their size, condition, &c., be topics for consideration and description. In fine, let all geographical lessons be con- ducted with a special reference to imparting a clear and practical knowledge of the whole subject, so far as relates to it in a topographical, physical, and historical sense. CHAPTER XXVII. ENGLISH GRAMMAR. THE study of Grammar is often spoken of as dry and uninteresting. As it is attended to in many schools, it certainly is so ; but, rightly taught, it may be made highly interesting and useful. Before proceeding to give a few hints, in reference to teaching this branch, I will, briefly, allude to two or three of the causes which have tended to render it unattractive and unprofitable. In the first place, pupils have been allowed to com- mence learning from a text-book at too early an age. There is. with the young, a very common and strong feeling, that there is something exceedingly great and charming in the study of English grammar ; and they are frequently indulged in their earnest desire to join the grammar class when quite young. The consequence is, that the reality falls so far below the ideal they had formed, that they sink into a condition of dislike, or apathy, from which it will ever after be exceedingly dif- ficult to raise them. Another reason why the study has been uninviting and useless, has been the fact that pupils have been allowed to repeat words without gaining ideas. Many a pupil has been able to repeat the words of a grammar, from beginning to end, without obtaining any definite understanding of the various subjects treated of. How many, for instance, will promptly define the various parts 220 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. HORSE-HAIR JUSTICE. of speech, without having any clear comprehension of the same ! Says S. G. Goodrich, "I once knew a boy, in the olden time of Webster's Grammar, who found this defini- tion in his book : ' A noun is the name of a thing ; as, horse, hair, justice.' But he chanced to misconceive it, and read it thus : 'A man is the name of a thing ; as, horse- hair justice.' He was of a reflective turn; and long he pondered over the wonderful mysteries of a noun. But in vain ; he could not make it out. It so happened that his father was a justice of the peace ; and, one day, when the boy went home, the old gentleman was holding a jus- tice's court. There he sat, in state, among a crowd of people, on an old-fashioned, horse-hair settee. A new light suddenly broke in upon our young hero's mind. 'My father,' said he, mentally, 'is a horse-hair justice, and, therefore, a noun ! ' In speaking of the early age at which the young com- mence the study of grammar, W. B. Fowle says : " The words of some manual are said or sung for a given time, until the chOd'arrives at that ne plus ultra of philology, a substantive or noun is the name of anything that exists or of which we have any notion, as ' man-virtue- London ; ' and then, if the child is at a loss to know exactly what sort of notion ' man-virtue- London ' is, he will not fail to learn what it is ' to be, to do, and to suffer' " Another objection to the study of grammar has been, that an attempt has been made to advance too rapidly, so that many subjects have been before the mind at once, so confusing it as to prevent the gaming of a well-defined idea in relation to any one ENGLISH GRAMMAR. 221 HINTS ON TEACHING GBAMMAB. The definitions of all the parts of speech have been recited at one time, without giving any attention to the correct understanding and true application of either, singly. Under these circumstances, it would be strange if grammar should not prove " dry and uninteresting ; " it surely must be so. Having alluded to some of the reasons which have tended to make grammar uninteresting and unintelligible, I will now endeavor to give a few hints in relation to teaching the same. I have said that pupils begin the study of grammar too soon, that is, from a regular text-book. Children may be taught many of the princi- ples of grammar, in an interesting manner, without look- ing into a text- book on the subject. The several parts of speech may be considered, and quite young scholars may be made familiar with these, without the use of a book. W. H. Wells gives the fol- lowing valuable suggestions on this point: "The classi- fication of words may be introduced by referring to the different kinds of trees, to the different kinds of animals, or to any other collection of objects that admit of a reg- ular division into distinct classes. Thus, when we go into a forest, we find that the number of trees about us is greater than we can estimate. But we soon observe that a portion of them have certain striking resemblances, while they differ, essentially, from all the rest. We also observe that others, which differ materially from these, have similar resemblances to one another. And, by extending our observation, we find that this countless multitude of trees all belong to a very few simple classes, which are easily distinguished from each other. Those of one class we associate together, and call them oak 19* 222 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. ADVANCE SLOWLY AND SURELT. trees ; those of another class we call pine trees ; and in this manner we proceed with all the different kinds. Just so it is with the words of our language. Though their number is about eighty thousand, yet we find, on a careful examination, that they all belong to less than a dozen different classes, called parts of speech ; so that we have only to learn the character of these divisions, and we shall be able to tell the class to which any word in the language belongs. By some such introductory illustration, the curiosity of a class of beginners may be easily excited ; and they will thus be prepared to enter with eagerness upon the labor of learning to distinguish the different parts of speech. The teacher should lead his pupils to take an active part in these lessons from the beginning, not only by proposing frequent questions for them to answer, but, also, by encouraging them to ask such questions as their own curiosity may suggest." It is very important that the several steps in grammar be made slowly and surely, that every definition and every explanation be made perfectly intelligible. The pupil should, for some time, be required to give the rea- son for every step he takes, and tell why "he thus recites. After a pupil has become sufficiently familiar with the various parts of speech, considerable time may be devoted tc writing simple sentences, illustrative of the knowledge he has acquired. The pupil should be pre- pared to designate the several parts of speech in each sentence, and tell all that may be important in relation to the same. If he has gained a clear understanding of the different parts of speech, with all their variations and ENGLISH GRAMMAR. 223 THE WRITING OF SENTENCES. modifications, he may be required to write short sentences, of the following description : 1. Write a sentence with a common noun in the possessive case. 2. Write a sentence containing a proper noun in the second person. 3. Write a sentence containing an adjective in the superlative degree. 4. Write a sentence containing an adjective in the positive degree. 5. Write a sentence containing an adverb. 6. Write a sentence containing a regular verb in the third person, singular number, indicative mode. 7. Write a sentence containing a verb in the impera- tive mode. The judicious teacher may vary and extend these, indefinitely ; and pupils will soon take great interest in writing such exercises. After scholars have become familiar with the difference between a simple and compound sentence, they may be required to write longer exercises. But, at the very outset, they should be trained to make a right use of capitals, and to insert all marks of punctuation. At this stage, it may be well to require a class to write sentences corresponding with the following : 1. Write a sentence containing a regular transitive verb, an adverb, a common noun, and an adjective in the comparative degree. 2. Write a sentence containing a relative pronoun, a preposition, a noun in the objective case, and a verb in the subjunctive mode. 3. Write a sentence containing a proper noun, an 224 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. ANALYSIS AND PARSING. interrogative pronoun, a conjunction, and a verb in the infinitive mode. By proceeding in this way, a class will make mor sure and pleasant progress than by giving their attentioi to prepare for a verbatim recitation from a text-book. As soon as sufficient advancement has been made, much time and attention may be given to the analysis of different sentences, and. also, to technical parsing, though the last named is of but little value, without the ability to comprehend the other points alluded to. At an early period, much attention may be very profit- ably devoted to the writing of sentences of a simple na- ture, which will prove useful, as preparatory to the more formidable exercises of composition and letter-writing, subjects which I shall reserve for consideration in another chapter. CHAPTER XXVIII. COMPOSITION AND LETTER- WRITI NO. THERE are so many individuals who have thoughts but cannot express them, " who know, but carjiot tell,' that it seems very desirable that pupils in our schools should be carefully and early trained in the practice of writing composition. I am aware that many teachers, and many pupils, regard the subject with a peculiar dread ; but it is, nevertheless, a subject of much import- ance, and may be made an interesting one. The reluc- tance with which this exercise is undertaken often pro- ceeds more from the manner in which it is treated, and from an injudicious selection of themes, than from any inherent difficulty. The exercise is usually delayed till too late a period of the pupil's life; and then it is treated in a man- ner so formal and repulsive, as to create a strong disrelish for the whole subject. If, instead of being delayed till scholars are nearly ready to leave school, it should receive attention much earlier, and in a less formal and less exacting manner, the general results would be much more satisfactory and gratifying. Let scholars, as soon as they are able to use a pen or pencil, and to spell with a fair degree of correctness, be required to write short sentences on some subject of interest to them, and, if they are judiciously managed, they will surmount many of the difficulties which usually though, in a 226 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. SUBJECTS FOR BEGINNERS. great degree, imaginarily hang around the subject, before they are aware of having taken the first step. For illustration ; suppose a teacher should say to a class of young pupils, " I wish each of you to write something about your school-house, and tell me all you can about it." Or, instead of this, either of the follow- ing, or similar subjects, may be given to a class, with a request that a description of each may be given : THE FARMER. THE CARPENTER. A WALK. A JOURNEY. A VESSEL. A TRAIN OF CARS. The wise teacher will not be at a loss in the selection of subjects ; and, if those are selected in which the pupils manifest an interest, they will acquire considerable skill in writing, before the direct exercise of composition is named. By pursuing a course similar to this, a sure and gradual improvement will be secured, and the whole subject will be divested of all its terrors and repulsive points. It is a very common fault with scholars, that they use words which are, strictly, above their comprehension. With a sort of impression that long words add to the attractiveness of an article, they, very frequently, mai that which they so studiously aim to beautify and adorn. If they are early taught to use plain, simple, and familiar language, and to give all their descriptions m an easy and natural style, they will more surely succeed in be- coming good and interesting writers. The exercise of composition requires a degree of ac- COMPOSITION AND LETTER-WRITING. 22? LETTER- WRITING. quaintance with so many particulars, that it is really deserving of more attention than it ordinarily receives. If especial attention is required in relation to spelling, use of capitals, punctuation, &c.,, the exercise may bo made as profitable as any of those introduced into our schools. No pupil should feel that he is prepared to leave school, until he has acquired the ability to write a legible and intelligible composition ; and no teacher should feel that he has discharged his whole duty, 'until he has imparted suitable aid and instruction in reference to the whole subject, and done what he could to inspire those under his charge with a just appreciation of the import- ance of the same. LETTER-WRITING. Intimately connected with the above, and, I may say, a part of the same, is the practice of letter-writing. Every individual in the community, who occupies any important station, and, indeed, every person, high or low, rich or poor, may have, and probably will have, occasion to write letters. To do this in a neat and easy manner is of no trifling consequence ; and yet, every one who has ever looked at the letters in any post-office must have observed the very general want of taste and neat- ness in the modes of folding and superscribing letters ; and, if the contents should be examined, they would be found to correspond with the external appearance. Now, it should be the aim of every teacher to impart instruction on the subject of letter- writing. General directions and explanations, in reference to the commenc- ing and closing of a letter, the manner of folding, super- scribing, and sealing, may be given to a whole school, bv 228 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. A LETTER OF RECOMMENDATION. using the black-board ; and it will not reqaire much of the teacher's time or attention to furnish all the instruc- tion that may be needed. It is to be hoped that more consideration may bo attached to this simple but useful exercise, and that all pupils may possess the ability, when they cease attend- ing school, to write letters which shall be accurate and natural in their style, correct in orthography, systematic and proper in all their parts. A letter neatly written, correctly expressed, and properly folded and superscribed, will always prove a "letter of recommendation" to its writer ; while the reverse will exert an influence in no respect favorable or complimentary. CHAPTER XXIX. AKITHMETIC. IT is, probably, true that more time and attention are devoted to the study of Arithmetic, in our schools, than to any other branch. Perhaps its practical importance Tenders this advisable. Be this as it may, no one will deny the great value of a familiar and thorough knowl- edge of the science of numbers. To give precise and spe- cific directions, in relation to teaching the various princi- ples and rules of arithmetic, would require more space than can be given to it, in this connection. It will be my aim, simply, to offer a few suggestive hints, in refer- ence to the subject. 1. I would urge the importance of careful training in mental arithmetic. It will be but the expression of a common feeling and opinion, prevailing among the best of teachers, to say that Warren Colburn did more for the science of num- bers, in the preparation of his " First Lessons" in mental arithmetic, than has been done by any other individual. Others have attempted to eclipse him, by improving upon his plan ; but we have yet to learn that any one has been successful in this particular. It is unquestionably true, that pupils, properly trained in exercises similar to those contained in the book alluded to, will make more intelli- gent and rapid progress in written arithmetic than those who have not had such mental discipline. 20 230 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. EXACTNESS IMPORTANT. But, in order that the greatest benefit may result from mental arithmetic, it must be attended to with great care and exactness. It is not merely essential that the correct answer be obtained, but, also, that the question be so stated, and the explanation so given by the pupil, as to afford the clearest evidence of a thorough understanding of the principle involved, and of the whole process of solution. To show what I mean by exactness in the explanation, I will take a single question, to illustrate a very common deviation from the true process of solution. This deviation may seem a trifling one, but trifles are important in arithmetical operations. Question: Thirty-five is | of how many times 117 The pupil says, "If thirty-five is |, one ninth will be of thirty-five, which is 7 ; and f , or a whole, will be seven times nine, which is 63." Now, the error here was, in saying seven times nine, instead of nine times seven; yet, as a departure from the true process, it should be rectified by any teacher who aims at perfect method and accuracy. After the pupil has advanced somewhat in the per- formance of mental operations, he may give attention to written ones, and the two may be continued together. I will merely say, that I think exercises in mental arith- metic may be profitably continued throughout a pupil's school course. The discipline of mind, and promptness in making calculations, which will result from the same, will amply compensate for any attention that may be given to them. In but very few schools, these exercises yet receive merited attention ; and, hence, we find many skilled in written performances, who are very slow in mental calculations. I will relate an instance, in il ARITHMETIC. 231 ANECDOTE OF MATHEMATICIANS. tration of this point. " Several mathematicians once met to dine at a hotel. When dinner was over, the waiter placed in the hands of the learned chairman of the party the aggregate of the bill, that he might decide how much each should pay. Not having a pen and ink, he was much puzzled, and passed it to a distinguished math- ematician on his right hand, who found himself compelled to pass it to the next, and so on, till it was returned to the president. In this dilemma, the matter was re- ferred to the waiter, who, after looking at the bill for a few seconds, named the exact sum which was to be paid by each. Now, it is probable that the knowledge of each of these savans was to that of the waiter what a park of artill Ty is when compared with the arrow of a savage; but their acquirements, like the former, could not readily and instantaneously be brought to bear upon a trivial object." The frequent and judicious practice in mental opsra- tions and calculations will enable quite young pupils to give results with a degree of readiness and accuracy that will be truly surprising to those who have never before witnessed the experiment. In commencing and in pursuing written arithmetic, the greatest care should be used to have every step per- fectly understood. It is not unfrequently the case, that scholars, in their undue anxiety to approximate toward the end of the book, pass over ground so rapidly that they acquire but little clear and well-fixed knowledge. They may repeat rules, and perform questions under the same, but they do not gain that information which will enable them, readily and accurately, to apply the prin- 232 COMMON SCHOOL EI/UCA1[ON. TOO MUCH RELIANCE ON KULES NOT WELL. ciples they have passed over to arithmetical operations, when presented disconnected from the book or rule. Many teachers require their pupils to repeat the rules of their text-book, verbatim et literatim, and will not admit of the slightest deviation from the same. In some instances, this may be well. Indeed, if the rules of the book are required at all, it is well to have them repeated with exactness; but it is often much more valuable to require pupils so to examine and analyze questions and problems, as to acquire such an understanding as will enable them to give a rule, or describe a process, in words of their own. When this can be done, it affords the most indubitable evidence of a clear and definite comprehen- sion of principles. Scholars who have been taught to rely upon the text-book rules in the performance of their work, are very liable to feel and manifest the utmost ignorance, when called upon to perform calculations without the aid of the customary rules and formulas. Much time and practice should be given to the funda- mental rules of arithmetic. These should be most thor- oughly understood ; and exercises under these several rules should be given so frequently, and for so long a period, that pupils Avill be prepared to work with the utmost rapidity and accuracy. It is hardly possible to give too much attention to the adding of columns of fig- ures. It would be useful if all the older pupils in schools should be required to devote a few minutes, daily, to the addition of figures upon their slates, or upon black- boards. As all can be at work at the same time, from five to ten minutes will be sufficient for an exercise of this kind ; and, if teachers would devote this amount, the result would be most gratifying. In performing such ARITHMETIC. 233 FUNDAMENTAL RULES. operations, let particular attention be given to making the 'figures with great distinctness, and putting them down in straight columns. These are quite important. The same method may be adopted in reference to mul- tiplication, division, and subtraction. By frequent and continued practice, in all these rules, pupils will attain a degree of facility and promptness which will be highly serviceable to them, not only in relation to all subsequent arithmetical operations at school, but also in the business transactions of life. Thousands have occasion to perform calculations under these rules where one is called upon to use the higher and more advanced rules of the science of numbers. Yet it is, too frequently, the case, that men can be found who are perfectly conversant with the more difficult and abstruse parts of mathematics, and exceed- ingly deficient as regards promptness and exactness in relation to the fundamental rules. While the former may be desirable and important, they should never be purchased at the expense of the latter. In advancing, let the same course be pursued, and let every step and every principle be thoroughly fixed upon the understanding, by the performance of a large number of practical questions. In this connection, I would recommend that teachers should often propose questions and problems not contained in the text-book, and have the same partake as much of the character of business transactions as may be. It will be useful, also, to request the pupils to propose questions for solution. If I mis- take not, much benefit would result from this course. They may engage in it reluctantly, at first ; but, after a few trials, they will become interested. In this way, the attention of a whole class may be directed to the 20* 234 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. A SUGGESTION AND EXAMPLE. seeking or preparing of questions, under a particular rule, or involving some principle. Suppose a class has been performing a question like the following : " A, B, and C, engaged in trade ; A put in $40, B $25, and C $75 ; they gained $180 ; what was the share of each? " After this question has received proper attention, the teacher may say : " Scholars, I have explained this ques- tion and you think you understand it. That we may be sure on this point, I wish each of you to bring to me, to-morrow, a question of a similar kind. : ' Perhaps one scholar may propose the following : " Amos, Charles, and Samuel, bought 500 marbles for 75 cents, of which Amos paid 30 cents Charles 25 cents, and Samuel 20 cents; how many marbles ought each to have?" I think it will be readily admitted, that a course like this, in reference to the various rules, will prove very valuable, in many particulars. At all events, it will counteract the unfavorable consequences of a sole reliance upon text- book questions. In arithmetical operations, particularly, scholars should be trained to rely upon their own resources. Many teachers help their pupils too readily ; they lift them over difficulties, rather than lead them to see their own way through them. Let scholars be made to feel that they can perform very complicated questions, if they will give their entire attention to the same, and, in most cases, they will find their own ability equal to the task required of them. Let them be taught to examine, to think, to compare, and, by persevering, they will soon acquire the power to surmount the greatest difficulties. It will sometimes, of course, be necessary for the teacher to render assistance. But, even then, it may be ARITHMETIC. 235 TOO MUCH HELP INJUDICIOUS. better to give it in an indirect manner, by asking some question or questions which shall lead the pupil to see for himself. It will seldom be desirable to perform a question for a pupil, or to tell him precisely how to do it. It will be far preferable to encourage him to persevere cheerfully, imparting, perhaps, a few suggestive hints, in relation to the difficulty before him. It is often the case, that a pupil may be led to com- prehend a difficult question, by proposing another, involv- ing the same principles, but more simple in its terms. Let us suppose the following question is in a lesson, and that it is not readily understood: "Three men D, E, and F bought a ship for $25.000. and sold the same for $30,000 ; D paid $8000, E $6500, and F $10.500 ; what was each one's share of the gain?" The pupil goes to the teacher for assistance. Instead of rendering direct aid, the instructor proposes the following question : " Charles, David, and Alfred, bought a knife for ^5 cents, and sold it for 100 cents; Charles paid 25 cents, David 15 cents, and Alfred 35 cents ; what part of the gain ought each to have? " The probability is, that the pupil would soon perform this, and, on being told that the same principles apply to the first, he will, without doubt, soon be able to perform that also. Let every effort be made to secure a thorough under- standing of every subject and every principle, and, if the pupil leaves school before reaching the middle of the text-book, he will be better prepared for business than he would if he had, nominally, been over the whole book a dozen times, without gaining an accurate and well- defined knowledge of the several rules and principles. Says Prof. Da vies, in his Grammar of Arithmetic : 236 COMMON SCHOOL EDU -vTION. THOROUGH ANALYSIS IMl-oRTANT "In explaining the science of arithmetic, great care should be taken that the analysis of every question, and the reasoning by which the principles are proved, be made according to the strictest rules of mathematical logic. Every principle should be laid down and ex- plained, not only with reference to its subsequent use and application in arithmetic, but also with reference to its connection with the entire mathematical science,- of which arithmetic is the elementary branch." CHAPTER XXX. BOOK-KEEPING : DECLAMATION. THERE is scarcely any situation in life, in which a knowledge of book-keeping may not be of much service. Its importance and general utility are such as to demand for it a more prominent place in our schools than it has, heretofore, received. It is a branch to which the atten- tion of the older pupils, of both sexes, in all our schools, may be very profitably given; for it not unfrequently happens that females have occasion for a practical use of knowledge thus acquired. But, if this should seldom or never be the case, the advantages of writing out a set of books, merely as a disciplinary exercise, would amply compensate for all time and attention devoted to it. I am aware that book-keeping has, in many schools, re- ceived a nominal attention ; but, in most instances, the exercise has consisted in making a verbatim transfer from a printed formula to a blank book. The amount of avail- able knowledge thus acquired is, of course, very incon- siderable and vague. In explaining the various terms used in a system of accounts, great care should be taken to insure a clear and perfect understanding, on the part of the learner. It is, often, the case that pupils attend to book-keeping blindly, for the want of a thorough comprehension of the first principles and appropriate terms. Teachers should not forget, that matters which are perfectly familiar and 238 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. TERMS SHOULD BE MADE PLAIN. plain to themselves may be shrouded in mystery to the young pupil. A great amount of information may be imparted by an instructor without the aid of a regular text- book, though it would be preferable to use one. The nature and object of the day-book, leger, cash-book, &c., should be fully and clearly explained, and everything in relation to each made as simple as possible. A little time, with the aid of a black-board, will enable a judicious teacher to make everything sufficiently plain and clear. In commencing, it may be best to require the pupils to spend a portion of time in writing exercises upon their slates ; and it will be well if these exercises are of such a nature as to interest them. Perhaps, at the outset, all transactions may be limited to cents in their amount, for, while boys, in their earnestness, often say,' to their mates, that they will give a million of dollars, if a thing is not so and so, the sum total of all their actual property, and of all their real operations, will seldom exceed a few cents. If the terms Dr. [debtor] and Cr. [creditor] have been properly explained, the teacher may, for first exercises, give questions like the following, and require a class to enter the same, in correct form, upon their slates : If Charles Adams buys of you a knife worth 20 cents, and a lead-pencil worth 10 cents, how will you enter the charge ? If John Dole buys a writing-book for 12 cents, and a slate for 25 cents, how will you charge the same 1 If Benjamin Hoyt buys 6 oranges for 4 cents each, a Testament for 20 cents, and an arithmetic for 33 cents. BOOK-KEEPING: DECLAMATION. 239 IMPORTANCE OF DECLAMATION. and pays you 25 cents, how will you enter the transaction in your day-book ? Questions like these, and others, calculated to illustrate every variety of transaction which would come within the limits of single-entry book-keeping, may be given by the teacher, until the pupil has gained some idea of the object of keeping accounts, and of the terms used. The form and object of bills, notes, receipts, drafts, due-bills, &c. &c., should be properly explained, and may be so, very readily, by using the black-board. DECLAMATION. Although the exercise of declamation has, of late, received more attention in schools than was formerly devoted to it, still, it is true that less consequence is attached to it than its real importance demands. The advantages of frequent practice in "speaking" are so many and so great, that it should receive more promi- nence, in all our schools. If scholars, at quite an early age, should be trained in the rehearsal of pieces, as a regular school duty, it would, doubtless, tend to produce a degree of freedom, force, and naturalness, in reading, which could be obtained in no other way ; and, if the very favorable influence it exerts, in promoting distinct- ness and energy, in this and other branches, was the only benefit to be derived from its practice, it would be entitled to particular consideration. But there are other advantages resulting from the exercise ; and not the least in importance is that which comes from the habit of committing selections to memory a custom much less common now than formerly, but none the less beneficial. 240 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. CORRECT MANNER AND EXPRESSION. I am confident, that, if most of a half-day, every fort night, should be devoted, in all our schools, to the re- hearsal of dialogues and "speaking pieces," the result would prove gratifying and profitable ; that is, if proper instruction as to manner, tone, &c., is given by the teacher. Great and constant effort should be made, to secure a correct understanding of every piece to be spoken, so that a pupil shall be made to feel and act in a suitable and appropriate manner. At the very outset, and ever after, let care be taken to eradicate every faulty tone of voice, and every manifestation of awkwardness in manner, and indistinctness of utterance. Every individual who possesses the ability to speak, in public, with a good degree of force, ease, and propriety, will be able to exert an influence much more potent than he would if not accustomed to express his views and opinions in the presence of others. CHAPTER XXXI. SINGING. WITHIN a few years much attention has been devoted to vocal music in schools, so that, in many places, it has become a regular exercise. Yet the question is often asked, "What good results from it? " It is well, in respect to everything that calls for an expenditure of time or money, to inquire what beneficial results may be obtained therefrom, as it would be both extravagant and foolish to spend time and money for naught, or waste energies on that " which satisfieth not." Believing, as I do, that instruction in vocal musio may be made both interesting and useful, I will briefly name a few particulars, on account of which I consider it a desirable exercise in schools. 1. // will prove useful as a disciplinary exercise. The principal object of education should be to disci- pline the mind, to train it to habits of patient thought, close attention, and scrutinizing investigation ; in fine, to make it an active, thinking mind. It is not so much to store it with important knowledge and truths, as to fit it properly to examine and use whatever may come before it. Therefore, any branch not in itself objectionable, that will tend to fix the thoughts, and lead to correctness and preciseness of action, may be pursued with advan- tage ; and, if I mistake not, instruction in vocal music, properly imparted, is admirably adapted to fix the atten- 21 242 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. INFLUENCES OF SINGING. tion and impart wholesome mental discipline in a pleasing manner. 2. The influence of music upon the moral feelings is highly salutary. If, as the poet says, " Music has charms to soothe the savage breast," ft will certainly require no poetic imagination to show that it has a soothing and refining influence over the feelings and passions of heedless boys in Christian lands. No one, who has witnessed a school when engaged in singing some pleasant moral song, can have failed to observe its salutary and subduing effects . No angry look or morose feeling can exist at such a time. 3. Singing will tend to promote good order in school, and increase the happiness of the pupils. In every school there will be more or less of monotony. An occasional song will do much to relieve the tedious- ness often attendant upon the regular routine of school duties. When a school becomes restless, listless, or dull, nothing will so readily and effectually restore a good feeling, and produce " sweet union," as the devotion of a few minutes to music. This will dispel every unhappy feeling, cheer every heart, and light, with joyful expres- sion, every countenance. I would, therefore, consider it extremely desirable to have attention given to vocal music in schools, if for no other reason, because it would increase the attractions of the school, and add to the happiness of the pupils. 4. Attention given to vocal music, in schools, will tend to prevent the indulgence of those idle, foolish . , . . SINGING. 2415 THE YOUNG DELIGHT IN MUSIC. and sinful song's, which are so common and so bane- ful in most communities. In every city and village, there are many, whose highest enjoyment appears to consist in singing, or listen- ing to, vulgar and immoral songs. A most deleterious influence proceeds from such practices, and by them, un- questionably, many a mind has been hopelessly debased. The power of music is great and universal. Music of some kinds all will have, and how important is it that the young be trained to sing cheerful and happy moral songs ! Who has not witnessed the eagerness and interest with which children will follow the miserable and vagabond singers and musicians, that often appear in our streets ? Who, that has any regard for what is good and lovely, has not been pained at beholding a crowd of youthful and susceptible minds gathered around some noisy person in the street, and listening, with apparent delight, to his bawdy and pestiferous songs, all destitute of real music though they be ? " The introduction of music into some of our schools, as a distinct branch of instruction, I consider highly beneficial. To say nothing of the facility with which it may be taught to pupils of tender age, or the advantages which would follow from an increased taste for this acquirement in a community, it is not to be despised as a means of discipline. Music itself is not destitute of power over . the moral feelings ; and, when associated with suitable sentiments, and sung by the ' many-voiced throng of a busy school,' I have never known it fail of producing good results. It may be pursued without detriment to progress in other branches, as, when judi- ciously managed, it fills up those portions of time wV ich 244 COMMON SCHOOL EDUC^TIOK. THE iO\GS OF A PEOPLE. would be otherwise lost in idleness. It serves as a pleasant recreation, after the closer duties of the school, and, seasonably introduced, often serves as a ' safety- valve] through which a love of vociferation and activity, that would otherwise find an escapement in whispering and bustling, is allowed to pass off in a more harmless and more pleasing way. For these, and many other reasons, I consider the introduction of music into our public schools a decided improvement.' 7 * Well was he acquainted with human nature, and the springs of action, who said, " Let me make the songs of a people, and I care not who make their laws." I would, then, urge the introduction of vocal music into our schools, that the minds of the young may be well stored with appropriate songs, whose moral influences will purify and elevate the feelings ; and that our youth 'may make melody in their hearts' to God, their Creator ; and that they may be preserved from the debasing and soul-destroying influences of those baser songs, which possess no true melody, and whose effects are ' evil, and only evil, and that continually.' " The tranquillizing, refining influence of vocal music has too long been known and practised, to need recom mending. In no place does the cheerful song fall more gratefully upon the ear, than in commencing or closing the duties of the iay, or occasionally breaking out in the midst of the busy scenes of the school-room." D. P. Page CHAPTER XXXII. MISCELLANEOUS. IN every school some portion of time should be devoted to exercises in relation to topics not definitely presented in the text-books. To explain my meaning, I will suggest a few lessons of this description. In most schools, pupils are able to answer the common questions in relation to the common abbreviations, and yet but few, comparatively, can properly apply these. In order that their true use may be understood, it will be well to give exercises like the following : " Write sentences, and make a right use of insf., ult., Gov., Esq., A. M., Hon." On the first trial, it will, very probably, be found that there is, in many instances, an utter ignorance of the proper use of these abbreviated characters. Perhaps sentences like the following may be written : " Come to me this inst. It was the ult. month. He was Gov. of the state. The man was Esq., &c." Such exercises will show to the teacher the deficien- cies, and will afford him an opportunity to explain the correct use and application of these characters. Another general exercise may be in relation to a " Review of the market," as it may be found in the newspapers. For example, the following occurs : 21* 246 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. REVIEW OF MARKET. REVIEW OF THE BOSTON MARKET, For the week ending April 16, 1853. ASHES. No change in previous quotations ; demand and receipts continue limited. CANDLES. For Sperm the market exhibits a feeble demand, and prices are a shade lower ; sales Nantucket made, 39c. ; New Bedford, 39 1 40c. per lb., 6 mos. Questions like the following may be asked, in relation to the above : What is meant by "Review of Boston market"? Of what are ashes made ? For what purposes are they useful? Which most valuable, coal or wood ashes? What is meant by "previous quotations"? What is meant by " demand and receipts continue limited " ? Of what are candles made ? . What is meant by "sperm"? Where is Nantucket? New Bedford? What is meant by a "shade lower"? What by " 6 raos. " ? The above will suggest the extent to which this may be carried, with interest and profit. A similar method may be pursued with the following : MARINE JOURNAL. PORT OF BOSTON. Wednesday, April 13. Arrived Ship Wm. A. Cooper, Lincoln, Cadiz, March 6. March 30, lat. 40 58', Ion. 49 30', passed brig Avon, Webb, from Boston for Malaga ; 2d inst, lat. 43 63', Ion. 53 30', spoke ship James Wright. 30 days from Liverpool for New York. MISCELLANEOUS. 24'.' MARINE JOURNAL. IMPORTS. In relation to this single item, the following questions may be raised : What is meant by "Marine Journal"'? In what places, usually, are marine journals kept and pub- lished ? What is a ship ? What names are applied to different kinds of vessels, and give some account of each. Where is Cadiz ? What is meant by Latitude ? Lon- gitude? Nearest what land was brig Avon passed? Where is Malaga ? Liverpool ? Why should the meet- ing of vessels be reported, more than meeting of cars or carriages 1 A list of imports and exports will furnish items for many lessons, e. g. : IMPORTS. From Arabia. Aloes, coffee, frankincense, gum arabic, myrrh. Suggestive Questions. Where is Arabia? What is its capital, government, &c. ? How would you go from New York to Arabia? For what are aloes useful? What can you tell about aloes ? For what is coffee used ? Is it a mineral or vegetable production ? &c. &c. It will readily be seen, by the above, that any commer- cial newspaper will furnish an abundance of material for miscellaneous exercises in the school-room ; and the practical value of instruction on these points must be apparent to all. It will be found that pupils will be much interested in receiving information in relation to such items as have been given in this chapter. 248 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. THE FARMER. THE CARPENTER. The active and devoted teacher will ever aim to intro- duce valuable miscellaneous exercises, which will, at once, tend to instruct, interest, and arouse the minds of hia pupils. There will be no necessity for great labor in searching for material for such lessons. The topics, already alluded to, may be, almost indefinitely, extended. The following may serve as additional suggestions, on the point under consideration : THE FARMER. How is the farmer employed ? Name some of the kinds of work which he performs, and tell, as nearly as you can, how each is performed. What are some of the tools or implements used by a farmer ? For what is the plough used ? The harrow ? The spade? The rake? The scythe? The roller? &c, THE CARPENTER. What is a carpenter? Wbat tools does he use ? For what is the saw used ? The adze ? The auger ? The square ? The compass ? The level ? The chisel ? &c. The various trees and plants of any section may affotvt useful lessons for awakening thought and inquiry. For illustration ; suppose an instructor should ?ay, " Schol- ars, I wish each of you to come prepared, to-morrow, to write upon your slates the names of the different trees to be found in this town, and to give some account of each, and tell its uses. Also, be able to tell what is meant by ornamental, forest, shade, fruit trees," &c. &c. A similar course may be pursued in reference to plants, shrubbery, vegetables, &c. Various manufac- tured articles will, also, furnish material for a great num- ber and variety of useful exercises, and may be made instrumental in awakening a true spirit of inquiry and investigation on the part of pupils. The true importance MISCELLANEOUS. 249 RECORDS AND FORMULAS. of miscellaneous exercises in schools lias not yet been properly considered. If they should furnish no useful information on the topics proposed, they would still pos- sess great value, by inducing pupila to think and exam- ine ; and, with the additional advantage of imparting useful, practical information, their worth is greatly en- hanced. EECORD OF DEPORTMENT AND RECITATIONS. The favorable influences resulting from the keeping of a daily account, or record of deportment and lessons, ren- der such a record desirable. It will readily be seen, that, if the teacher keeps a book, in which he makes, daily, an entry, against the name of each scholar, of the character of his recitations and conduct, the effect will be salutary, especially if it is understood that this record is always open to the inspection of the committee and visitors. Perhaps no precise model can be given which will answer for all schools ; but something like the following may be of suggestive value : RECORD OF DEPORTMEST. Names. Mo. lu. W. Th. Fr. Sat. Mo. Tu. W. Th. Fr. Sat. Anna Weston, 3 3 2 3 3 2 1 3 2 3 3 3 Hannah F. Osborne, 3 3 3 3 3 3 2 3 3 3 3 3 D. P. Northend, 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 1 3 3 3 Arthur Poole, 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 George H. Clark, 3 2 3 3 3 1 3 3 3 3 3 3 Maria Putnam, 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 Mary Wheeler, 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 1 3 3 Benj. E. Hovt. 3 3 3 2 3 3 3 8 2 1 a Elizabeth Wells, 3 1 2 3 1 3 3 3 3 2 3 3 In the above, 3 indicates correct deportment, and 2, 1, and 0, different degrees of deviations from the same It may be considered preferable to take a higher number 250 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. FORM OF KEPORT. as indicative of excellence. If 5 should be used, as the maximum, it would allow more degrees of deviation. A similar record may be kept of recitations, absences, and tardinesses. Of course, each teacher must adapt such a record to his OAvn wants, and to the peculiar cir- cumstances of his school. If such records are properly kept and preserved, they will not only be subjects of special present interest, but will, hereafter, be examined with much interest. It will also be found useful, if a monthly report is sent to parents. This will require some time and care, on the part of the teacher ; but will prove of sufficient utility to compensate for the same. The following is a very convenient form : REPORT TO PARENTS. EPE3 SCHOOL, SALEM. Whole number of scholars, 75. Number not absent once during the term, 28. Num- ber not tardy once, 60. Monthly Report of CHAS. A. NOHTHEHD. J J 1 j" ** j. i- , 1853. -is5 l| = \i.\ sl- DEPORTMENT. RECITATIONS. * iUed to study. CHAPTER III. CHILDREN SHOULD NOT BE SEN1 TO SCHOOL TOO YOUNG. CHILDREN are often sent to school, and, as it were, forced in their learning too soon. On this point, the author is aware that many will differ from him. Nevertheless, he does not hesitate to express the opinion, which he has long and honestly held, that most children are sent to school, to learn from books, at too early an age. In this, he would not be understood that the young can too soon commence the acquisition of knowledge ; but merely, that they should not be sent to school, as pupils, at a very ten- der age. A child who has but just commenced lisping the simplest and most common words has enough to learn, and enough to exercise its susceptible and opening mind, without being urged with dull, and, to him, unmeaning sounds, to repeat his A, B, C, or to pronounce his a-b, ab. He has but just' commenced his existence, in a world full of novelty to him ; and, which way soever he may turn his eye, he will find enough to exercise his young mind and awaken thought, and the words and names which he hourly hears will prove quite sufficient for his memory to retain. And if within the doors of the parental roof he hears and sees enough to excite his curiosity, and exercise his thinking powers, how much more which is to him new, interesting, and wonderful, will he behold when he wanders "out cf doors" ! As SCHOOL-GOING AGE. 263 WHAT A CHILD MAY LEARN. he gazes, with childish delight, upon the rattling carriages of the streets, think you that the momentary glance leaves no impression on his mind, or excites no thoughts or ideas before dormant? As he walks into the fields and gardens, and, with infam rapture, beholds the pretty flowers, the springing grass, the waving grain, and stately trees, think you that his little mind is inactive or unaf- fected ? As he looks, with simple and natural wonder, upon the water, and, perhaps, sees some noble ship moving majestically along over ocean's rolling billows, has not his young mind enough whereon to feed and grow 1 As he beholds, with pure amazement, and, per- haps, terrific astonishment, a whizzing, puffing, flying train of cars upon some railroad, think you that his mind can suffer from want of food] And, when he raises his eyes to " heaven's blue vault," and views the golden orb of day, and the moon and countless stars, those "lesser lights " that rule the night, have we not reason to appre- hend danger from excess, rather than from deficiency, of action 1 Who, that has taken some prattling child upon his knee, and undertaken to answer his earnest and almost numberless interrogatories, has not been, as it were, struck dumb by the artless and sincere manner in which his little questioner will finally ask, t: Where is God, and who made Him? " And can a child, who is thus inter- ested in all these matters, and is, at last, left to think, to conjecture, to wonder who, what, and where the great First Cause is, receive any better exercise for his expand- ing mind ? Ought he, until his wonder, and amazement, and delight, and curiosity, have, in a measure, subsided, or become gratified, be required to go over the dull and 264 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. HOW TO TEACH THE ALPHABET. unmeaning repetition of letters and words? Certainly not. Let him be aided to understand all that he sees \vith inquiring interest, let him be assisted to compre- hend, in some degree, the meaning and use of the lan- guage he daily hears, let an attempt be made to solve all his queries and wonders ; and when he has, in some measure, become able to understand these affairs of every-day occurrence, he may be prepared to acquire knowledge from letters and books. But at what age ought children to commence their school course? Probably never before the age of five years. seldom before six. It is true, that, at an earlier age, they may, by the aid of their parents, learn all the letters of the alphabet, as a mere pastime. Parents may, for instance, take a slate, and make the letter A, and then assist the little ones in copying it, and learning its name, &c. Thus the entire alphabet may be taught, as a pleasant exercise. The alphabet should always be taught in this manner, whether by parents or teachers. In the usual way, it is not uncommon to meet with chil- dren who can repeat every letter of the alphabet in regu- lar order, and yet be unable to recognize a letter, taken separately. They learn them by rote, and not ty having a correct and clear impression of the looks and shape of each letter made upon the mind. They cannot even equal the lad who, being asked what a certain letter was. answered that "he knew him very well by sight, but could not think of his name." The children alluded to know the names, but not the looks of the individual owners. But, let every letter be made as I have pro- posed, and the looks and names will become so thor- oughly fixed in the mind, that the child will never be at SCHOOL-GOING AGE. 265 ERROR IN TEACHING. ANECDOTE. a loss in naming every individual member of the alpha- bet, whenever and wherever he may meet with it. If children are sent to school to learn their letters, the teacher may use the black-board to great advantage, and the time usually spent with a single child would suffice for instructing a dozen or more. Let the instructor make upon the board the letter A, tell its name, and request the "little ones'' to copy it upon the board or upon their slates, often requiring them to give its name ; and, when fully fixed in their minds, let the next letter be taken in the same manner, and so on, to the end. Children will thus learn the alphabet more readily, more surely, and more pleasantly. It is sometimes the case, that children are taught easy words from books containing picture representations. Such ones may manifest a remarkable degree of accuracy in some cases ; but it will sometimes happen that a child will leaning on the picture say. C-a-t. kitten ; R-a-t, mouse. A father once attempted to cover the picture of a cow while he asked his little son to spell and pronounce the name printed under it, which he did cor- rectly. "How do you know," said the father, "that c-o-w spells cow 1 " " Because," said the child, " I can see her horns." Such " helps to read '' are, often, worse than valueless. They may make "kitten" of "cat," " mouse " of " rat, ' " puppy " of " dog," or " cow '' of "ox." I have frequently noticed, that those children who were the most forward at the age of five or six years were comparatively backward at the age of twelve years. Having been pressed onward when quite young, they became weary of learning and repeating unintelligible 23 266 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. THE YOUNG SHOULD HAVE AN OBJECT IN VIEW. lessons before their expanding minds were capable of com- prehending fully what they met with in their daily exer- cises. They learned to read before they were able to understand the object of reading, or the meaning of the words they uttered. They had been incited on by flat- tery and the novelty of the exercise ; and, as soon as these lost their effect, as they soon did, they fell into a state of apathy, or positive dislike towards all school exercises, which it would be no easy task to change. But, let a child's mind be well exercised, by explain- ing to him the meaning and use of everything he sees around him ; let his curiosity to know be encouraged, and he will soon be anxious to read, that he may, from the books he sees, obtain new information and new delight. Instead of regarding the repetition of his early lessons as dull and useless, he will look upon them with much interest, and consider them as keys which will unlock for him treasures of untold value and beauty ; in other words, he will commence learning with a definite and reasonable object in view. But, it may be said, the law provides for the admis- sion, to our schools, of children at the age of four years, and parents are quite ready to comply with this legal indulgence, more so than with some others. This is true; and "pity 'tis 'tis true." Until, then, something can be done, either to change the views of parents in relation to this subject, or to modify the character and exercises of schools for children, the teacher must meet the case as best he can. If the "little folks" will claim their right to come, the teacher must receive them pleasantly, treat them kindly, and do all he can to make them comfortable and happy during six hours daily, and, SCHOOL-GOING AGE. 267 WHAT MAY BE DONE. possibly, something to exercise their minds and awaken thought. But he should not take them through the dry routine of school-room exercises. He should, if pos- sible, cause them to be furnished with slates, and give them such simple copies for drawing as they can readily make. This will interest them; and in this way the judicious instructor may do something to advance them towards the hill of science, without taking, imperfectly, steps which must be retraced before the first ascending step can be advantageously taken. CHAPTER IV. IT IS THE DUTY OF PARENTS TO PROVIDE COMPETENT AND EFFICIENT TEACHERS. EVERY observing mind will see that the number of schools kept is much larger than the number taught. There are, and always have been, more nominal teach- ers than real ones. The inducements held out, as regards permanency of employment, or reward of services, are not such as will engage the heart, the time, and the energies, of men of talents and attainments of a high order. In no department, probably, is there so much need of ster- ling worth in every good qualification ; and yet, in no department is the premium awarded to real merit so paltry and inadequate. Hence, we frequently meet with those who are teachers from necessity, or misfortune, rather than from a real love for, and devotion to, the occupation, emanating from a just conception of the important and responsible nature of the duties to be per- formed. The profession of the teacher has, often, been a kind of "city of refuge" for such as had no abiding employment, and who, too often, were unfit for any. The influence of a teacher, for the weal or woe of those intrusted to his care, is almost inconceivable. From his every action, word, and even look, they will receive impressions, gooi or ill, which will remain as long as the susceptibility of the mind to retain impressions shall exist EMPLOYMENT OP TEACHERS. 261) INCOMPETENT TEACHERS. ANECDOTE. How solemn the thought, and yet how true, that the teacher's influence will extend through time, and into eternity ! And how melancholy the fact, that people often try to drive a closer bargain in the engagement of him to whom they commit the training of the young, than they do in the employment of him who is to manage their horses and cattle ! The following case may be illustrative of the point under consideration : Stouber, the predecessor of Ober- lin, and pastor of Waldbach, on his arrival in the parish, desired to visit the principal school. He was, accordingly, conducted into a miserable cottage, where a number of children were crowded together, without any apparent occupation. He inquired for the " master." " There he is," said one, as soon as silence could be obtained, point- ing to a withered old man, who lay on a little bed in one corner. " Are you the ' schoolmaster,' my good friend ? " said Stouber. " Yes, sir." " And what do you teach the children?" "Nothing, sir." " Nothing ! how is that?" "Because," replied the old man, "I know nothing myself " Why, then, were you appointed schoolmaster? " "Why, sir, I had been taking care of the Waldbach pigs, for a great number of years ; and, when I got too old and infirm for that employment, they sent me here, to take care of the children." And has it not been too true, that men who were unfit for any business have been "pensioned off" with the charge of a school, while the well-qualified teacher has been rejected, merely because he could not afford to labor for a mere pittance ? In the establishment and support of good Normal Schools, a great and noble work has been done. a work which must tend to the elevation of the 23* '270 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. JOHN LALOK ON TEACHER'S VOCATION. teacher's profession. But, still, unless the sentiments and feelings of the community shall be such as will ex- clude from the teacher's desk all temporary and incom- petent teachers, and afford a reasonable and adequate compensation to those whose qualifications and inclina- tions lead them to adopt teaching as a permanent voca- tion, or, in other words, unless the well-qualified and professional instructor shall be well received, and well remunerated by the public, the money now expended for the support of Normal Schools might as well be sunk to fathomless depths in the ocean. John Lalor, in his excellent prize-essay, published in London in 1839, uses the following truthful language, in reference to the instructor : "If there be any art, which, more than another, requires in those who practise it a high union of skill and character, that art, beyond a question, is education. In no department of exertion does success so absolutely depend on the personal qualifications of the workman. ' As is the master, so is the school,' says the Prussian maxim ; a few words, saturated, as it were, with truth. The system is, indeed, truly important; but the main part of a system is, what is in the master's mind. The form the external material adjuncts of a system, are, of themselves, nothing ; its living spirit that part of it which has got into the thoughts and feelings of him who is to work it is everything. " The process of education, whether at home or in school, is perpetually going on. The instructor may guide, but cannot stop it. Whether he is attentive or neglectful, observation is at work, intellect is developing, jharacter is forming, and all under the most powerful EMPLOYMENT OF TEACHERS. 271 THE TEACHER'S POSITION AMD LNFLUENCK. influences from him, whether for good or evil. What he says earnestly, and, above all, what he does, is graving itself on the tenacious memory of childhood. His incon- sistencies, partialities, ill-temper, tyranny, selfishness, leave lasting traces. If his dispositions are unfavorable, no check from without can remedy the evil. Parents can control him little. They are managed, through their prejudices, at the expense of their children. A superior authority, with the most perfect machinery of inspection, will fail to get the work of good men performed by bad ones. Its laws will be no restraint on him to whom their execution is intrusted ; its best systems fruitless, where they cannot insure states of mind according with their spirit. The government of children must be a despotism ; and it must have all the vices of a despotism, if we cannot purify the depositories of supreme power. But, if the instructor be one who is .filled with a consciousness of his duties, how mighty is his influence ! He is the fountain of instruction, and the prime source of enjoyment, to his pupils. Their little difficulties are brought to him, and in his solution rest. His casual remarks sink into their minds. His opinions on men and things make their way by the double force of authority and affection. His com- panionship, his sympathy, are, above all things, delight- ful. The imitative principle, so powerful in early life, is incessantly in action. The children are daily assimi- lating parts of his nature making it one with their own. What an influence is his over their future destiny ! " If such is the teacher's position and power, with what care should parents select him to whom they intrust, so unreservedly, their most precious interests the train- ing of their children ! Nor is it, alone, important that 272 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. THE TEACHER SHOULD BE KINDLY TREATED. caution should be exercised in the selection. If this duty is faithfully performed, it leads to another, no less important ; and that is. to keep a teacher in a good con- dition. The best of instructors may be disheartened by cold treatment, or discouraged by receiving inadequate compensation for their services. It is the duty of parents to treat the teacher of their children so kindly, and reward his services so liberally, that he will feel con- strained to labor cheerfully .and zealously for the best good of those committed to his charge. If a mechanic has a valuable machine, he knows that its perfect operation and full force can be secured only by keeping it in an excellent condition. If a farmer ha.s a serviceable horse, he knows that kind treatment and good feeding will make him still more valuable. Let not a less wise policy be pursued in the treatment of those to whom are intrusted such momentous concerns as are committed to teachers of youth. Let the good instructor be properly respected, kindly treated, and liberally compensated, and he will be greatly encouraged and strengthened in the performance of his arduous labors ; and, for all cheering aid which he receives, he will declare, for taose who invest in his favor, dividends of the most satisfactc ry nature. CHAPTER V. II IS THE DUTY OF PARENTS TO PROVIDE FOB A JUDICIOUS SUPERVISION OF SCHOOLS. A SUPERVISORY control of schools is so intimately connected with their very existence and usefulness, that it is of the utmost importance that a wise, judicious, and efficient mode be adopted. While a well devised and properly executed plan will tend greatly to elevate and advance the schools, a poor and inefficient one will retard their progress, and impair their usefulness. If it is important that any supervision be exercised over them, it is, certainly, the part of true wisdom to provide for die very best that can be devised. Of late, the friends of popular education have said much against the existing mode of school supervision, and spoken freely of its defects. But it is, often, much easier to see and speak of errors, than it is to cause their removal. To effect any change in a long-established institution, or course of management, is no trifling task ; and it is not the part of true wisdom to abandon old ways, though not in all respects satisfactory, unless new and better ones are clearly open before us. The present mode of school supervision has been long in vogue. It was devised by good and true men, and has been sus- tained by many of the wisest and best ; and, for the times and circumstances, it has accomplished a vast 274 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. THE DEMANDS OF SCHOOLS. amount of good. But times and circumstances have materially changed. The number of schools has greatly increased, their continuation has been lengthened, the branches taught in them multiplied, and the duties required of school committees greatly augmented. On the other hand, the appropriate duties and cares of clergymen, and other professional men, from whom the schools have been wont to receive supervisory support, and influence, have become more numerous and press- ing, so that, while the schools actually demand much more at their hands, they are really unable to do as much for them as formerly. It is now extremely diffi- cult, in many places, to find men who, at once, possess the requisite qualifications and the needed leisure. In order that a man may be an efficient and useful school super- visor, he should not only be a man of varied knowledge. Bound judgment, good common sense, and a candid mind ; but he should possess a good degree of familiarity with the several branches taught in the schools, and, above all, he should feel a deep, lively, and abiding interest in the cause of popular education, and have a heart of sympathy for both teacher and taught. He should also be a man who will both merit and command true respect, and one whose daily walk and conversation are of a truly exemplary nature. He should also have much leisure time, ^hich he can devote to the uninter- rupted examination of the schools under his charge. Are not these views correct ? If so, let us see how the ex- isting state of affairs comports therewith. Is the committee-man a clergyman? He is, undoubt- edly, a most worthy man, but his school visitations are liable to constant interruptions by calls from the sick SCHOOL SUPERVISION. 275 WHO SUPERINTEND SCHOOLS. the dying, the afflicted or the marrying ones of his pas- toral charge; or, if he remain, bodily, in the school- room, his mind may be upon some half-constructed sermon, or upon some parochial duty. Is the committee-man a physician 'I Who can tell when, or where, to find him ? On the very day that his attention may be most wanted in the school-room, the more imperative calls for emetics and cathartics, bleeding and blistering, or for relief to some mortal ache or ail- ment, may have possession of the whole man, both doctor and committee. Is the committee-man a lawyer ? He will be very likely to attend to school duties, if no retaining fee calls his mind in another direction; but, as a matter of course, he will strive more to gain a suit at law than he will to suit the demands or meet the wants of the public schools, and, if he spends an hour in visiting schools, it will be with the constant fear that it may be at the loss of a client. Is the committee-man a farmer ? His thoughts will be more intent upon the training of horses and cattle, or the shootings of trees, vegetables, and grains, than upon the training of boys, or the shootings of the young ideas in our schools. Is the committee-man a merchant ? The rise and fall in the prices of goods will be far more prominent in his mind, and musical to his ear, than the rising and falling of the voices of the young, whom he may, nominally, superintend, and a good bargain in prospect may blind his eye and close his ear to a good recitation. Is the committee-man a mechanic ? He will think much more of the easiest and cheapest method of driving 276 COMMON SCH001 EDUCATION. OBJECTIONS TO PRESENT MODE. nails into boards, pegs into sole-leather, or money into pocket, than he will of driving ideas into, or out of, boys' heads. Above all. and beyond all, is the committee- man one of those creatures who have just "nothing at all " to do 1 Then, he will prove the most complete " do- nothing" that can be found. He may talk, and bluster, and fret ; but his very do-nothing habits will unfit him for a do-something man. If, seemingly, he labors like the mountain, he will bring forth the most insumifi- ' O O cant results. He may feel that the weight of the nation is upon him ; but the schools will feel his weight, and all that he bears, really or imaginarily. Is it not. in the very nature of things, must it not be so? In my allusions to different classes of men, I have not intended the slight- est disrespect. All will admit that he who would be truly successful in any vocation or pursuit must enter upon it with a devotion of heart, and energy of purpose. Hence, the good minister, the skilful doctor, the efficient lawyer, the successful merchant and mechanic, the pros- perous farmer, and the useless do-nothing, are what they are, because they give their time and attention to their respective and peculiar callings. But, in addition to what I have said, the present mode is objectionable in that the responsibility of inspecting the schools is divided among several, and, consequently, there is not that strong individual re- sponsibility which is essential to give energy, fidelity, and success. To divide the care and oversight of our schools among a board of ten or twelve men, is much like intrusting the care of a railroad to a board of directors, instead of to a special superintendent. In order that a- man. -should feel a deep interest in any SCHOOL SUPERVISION. 27' A SPECIAL SUPERVISOR BEST. movement, and labor successfully for its advancement, it is quite important that he should feel that much of its degree of progress, or want of progress, depends upon his action and interest, or deficiency thereof. If the care of the schools in a town devolves upon some ten or twelve men, we may see that no one will assume to himself a very large share of the responsibil- ity, while each will almost excuse himself from acting, under the impression that the greater fidelity and fitness of his associates render his efforts unimportant. Again : The frequent change of school-committeea is very unfavorable to the best good of the schools. In many towns, the same men do not compose the board of school-committee for two consecutive years. Hence, there is a constant liability to change, in reference to the general regulations and management of the school ; and modes of government, and methods of instruction, which meet the hearty approval of the members of one board, may be entirely discarded by their successors ; and those teachers who have succeeded in gaining the approbation of the committee, one year, may, while pursuing the same course, receive the severe and unqualified censure of those in authority the next. Every one knows that famil- iarity with peculiar duties renders their performance comparatively easy. Hence, a man who has devoted one year to the discharge of school-committee duties is, usu- ally, much more competent to spend another year than a stranger would or could be. He has become acquainted with teachers and pupils, and knows how to say and do things in the best wny, and at the right time. Indeed, if he is the right kind of a man, his entire influence and efforts will be more efficient thin a stranger's cot/id be 24 278 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. A NEW METHOD PROPOSED. A.nd yet, comparatively, how few good men are retained in office for consecutive years ! They either find the duties too onerous, the task too thankless, or the votes, at the annual election, too few. But I have already sufficiently enlarged on this point; and, assuming the position that the present mode does not accomplish the desired amount of good, I will proceed to designate one which, it is believed, will be more efficient and useful. I. Each town shall, annually, elect a board of school- committee, to consist of three, five, or more members, to whom shall be intrusted the money raised for educational purposes, and also the general interests of the schools within the town. II. This board shall, as soon as may be, after its organization, appoint some suitable person, from its own number, or otherwise, as special superintendent of the schools, with the following specific duties : 1. To select and contract with all teachers, and make such examination into their qualifications as may seem necessary, or as the board may direct. 2. To visit the several schools within the town, as often as once each month ; and, as often as practicable, examine into the progress of the several classes. 3. To hold meetings of the parents in the several school-districts, and address them in reference to their school duties and obligations: 4. To hold occasional meetings of the teachers within the town, for the consideration and discussion of topics pertaining to their vocation. 5. To aid in the adjustment of any difficulties, or misunderstandings, that may arise between parents and SCHOOL SUPERVISION. A PROPOSED METllOD. teachers ; and, generally, to promote the peace and har- mony of districts 6. To contract for, and superintend all repairs, build- ings, &c. ; and to provide fuel, and all other necessary articles for the schools. 7. To meet the board of school-committee quarterly, for the purpose of making a detailed report of his doings, and conferring with them in relation to future plans and operations. 8. To make, annually, a detailed report of his doings, and of the condition of the schools ; first, to the school- committee, and, subsequently, to the town. CHAPTER VI. PARENTS SHOULD ENCOURAGE THE TEACHER. IN many instances parents are too ready to leave all the affairs of the school in the hands of committees and teachers. This will not answer. Unless parents mani- fest a special interest in the school, and all its exercises, it will require more effort, on the part of the teacher and committee, to promote the advancement of the pupils. The young are very quick to discover any feeling, or want of feeling, on the part of their parents ; and they will not often deviate much from the same. If, then, parents would have their children manifest a judicious, strong, and abiding interest in all their school perform- ances, they must first themselves exhibit a lively interest in the same. From an interesting volume,* published within a few years, we gather the following truthful, and illustrative incidents : Locke Amsden was an earnest, faithful, and devoted teacher, one who labored heartily, and wisely. He was engaged to instruct a school in a district noted for the apathy and neglect of parents, and, of course, for the backwardness and indifference of the children. Enthusi- astic and active, as he always was, he determined to *" Locke Amsden; or, The Schoolmaster." 12 mo., 231 pp. Published by B. B. Mussey & Co., Boston. A very interesting vol. um, that should be read by every parent and teacher PARENTS SHOULD EXCOURAUE THK TEACHER. 281 ANECDOTE OF LOCKE AMBDEX. strive, in every suitable "way. to arouse some interest on the part of parents and pupils. In the school-room, he did what he could ; and when out, he called at the homes of his scholars, conversed with the parents, and affection- ately and earnestly invited them to visit the school, an invitation always accepted verbally, but never regarded practically. When his patience was nearly exhausted, he determined upon one more effort. Said he, "I will have an Exhibition, and have some exercises which will, assur- edly, interest parents ; and, by inviting them to come on a particular afternoon, they will do so, for the sake of seeing each other, if not for encouraging me and their children." He, accordingly, made the necessary arrangements. With much patient perseverance, he succeeded in* en- listing the interest of the pupils, who worked as they never worked before. When the appointed day ap- proached, Amsden called upon the parents, and gained from them assurances that they would certainly attend. Ha was greatly encouraged and animated, and his pupils were unusually industrious and ambitious. Everything appeared auspicious and cheering. At length, all was ready, and the eventful day dawned, with as clear a sky, and bright a sun, as were ever seen. Full of hope and encouragement, the teacher was early on his way to the scene of his labors, congratulating himself that he had, finally, succeeded in awakening the desired interest. On his way, however, his attention was arrested by numerous showy handbills, posted in every conspicu- ous place, announcing that, on that very afternoon, the far-famed Potter, a professed juggler of those times, would give an Exhibition, m which, as usual, he would 24* 282 COMMOX SCHJUL -EDUCATION. THE SCHOOL EXHIBITION AND JUGGLERIES. display the astonishing feats of swallowing swords and jack-knives, hatching chickens, frying eggs in his hat, together with sundry like miraculous feats. As the school Exhibition and Potter's were to com- mence at about the same hour, the teacher, at first, felt a slight apprehension that his performances might be thrown into the "background;" but a moment's reflec- tion induced him to feel that no people of sense and character, and, especially, that no parents, would think of putting such pitiful shows in competition with the more praiseworthy performances of their own children. But, on opening his school, his fears and doubts were greatly increased. He soon discovered that the heads of his pupils were so completely bejuggled, that they could think of ne thing but Potter, live chickens, &c. *Ai recess the whole conversation turned on the subject which, so evi- dently, engrossed their thoughts. The teacher could hear nothing but " Potter, real live chickens, great sharp swords, handle and all /" and, on passing around the room, he noticed the name of Potter written on nearly every slate, to which, on some, was added a representa- tion of a man with a half-swallowed sword ; and some had exhibited no inconsiderable artistic skill in drawings of h&tsfull of chickens. On returning to school in the afternoon, he found matters worse than ever. He called a boy to read, who, after being shown his place, which he had forgotten, commenced, B-a yes, a k-e-r Potter. ' ' What ? ' ' said the teacher, earnestly. ' ' Potter, baker, I mean, but I was thinking," and so were all thinking, not of their own exercises, but of Potter, and of his juggleries. The afternoon passed, but no parents came ; and the disheartened teacher dismissed his pupil* PARENTS SHOULD KNCOURAuE TUE TEACHER. 28b MUKE INTEREST MIEDE1). who were not long in making their way to Potter's show, where their more childish and foolish parents had gone cefore them. And how many teachers can relate experiences equally disheartening ! In how many instances are the most trivial and unimportant matters allowed to interfere with the nobler and worthier objects and exercises of the school-room ! In relation, to the school exercises and advancement of their children, how few parents exhibit an interest equal to that manifested in relation to other concerns ! What individual would intrust the construc- tion of an important piece of machinery to another, and feel no interest in watching its progress towards comple- tion 1 What farmer would think of sending his oxen to perform at a " cattle-show " exhibition, without designing to be present to witness their performances ? But. is he equally interested to witness the school exercises of his offspring, which, in importance, as far excel those of the oxen, as the nature, interest, and destiny of man, are higher and nobler than those of the brute ? It is no less true than disheartening, that the brute's performances often attract more attention and admiration than do those of the children ; and no wonder that a stranger, at a recent public-school examination, at which few or no parents made their appearance, should express his aston- ishment, at seeing so many fatherless and motherless children, for well may they be considered as orphans, who are thus left to toil and struggle on, uncheered by a mother's smile or a father's approval. CHAPTER VII. SPECIFIC DUTIES. ALL who feel any degree of interest in the education of the young cannot fail of appreciating the beauty and force of the following remarks, from the pen of Horace Mann. In alluding to the numerous school-houses, which are scattered over our country, he says : " Though not always an architectural ornament, yet they are a moral beauty to the land in which we dwell. Enter with me, for a moment, into one of these import- ant, though lowly mansions. Survey those thickly- seated benches. Before us are clustered the children of to-day, the men of to-morrow, the immortals of Eternity ! What costly works of art, what splendid galleries of sculpture or of painting, won by a nation's arms, or purchased by a nation's wealth, are compar- able in value to the treasures we have in these children 1 How many living and palpitating nerves come down from parents and friends, and centre in their young hearts ; and. as they shall advance in life, other living and palpi- tating nerves, which no man can number, shall go out from their bosoms, to twine round other hearts, and to feel their throbs of pleasure or of pain, of rapture or of agony ! How many fortunes of others shall be linked with their fortunes, and shall share an equal fate ! As yet. to the hearts of these young beings, crime has not DUTIES. 285 ?UAT 3DTTCATION MAY DO. brougV- -rf iu 'cvnue of fears, nor disappointment its sorrows. Ttei* joys are joys, and their hopes more real than our realities ; and, as visions of the future burst upon their imagination, their eye kindles, like the young eagle's at the morning sunbeam. Grouping these children into separate circles, and looking forward, for but a few short years, to the fortunes that await them, shall we predict their destiny, in the terrific language of the poet 't " Thete shall the fury pacs'.o^J taut. The vultures of the mind ; Disdainful Anger, pallid Fear, And Shame, that skulks behiUl. " Ambition this shall tempt to rise ; Then whirl the wretch from high. To bitter Scorn a sacrifice, And grinning Infamy. " The stings of Falsehood those shall try ; And hard Unkind ness' altered eye That mocks the tear it forced to flow ; And keen Remorse, with blood defiled, And moody Madness, laughing wild, Amid severest woe ;" or, concentrating our whole souls into one resolve, high and prophetically strong, that our duty to these children shall be done, shall we proclaim, in the blessed language of the Saviour, " IT is NOT THE WILL OF YOUR FATHER WHICH is IN HEAVEN THAT ONE OF THESE LITTLE ONES SHOULD PERISH"? With what feelings ought these considerations to fill the hearts of parents ; and with what untiring zeal should they induce them to labor to secure the wise education 286 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. A TEACHER'S APPEAL. of their offspring ! The united, judicious and well-timed efforts of parents and teachers will, with the blessing of God, lead the young onward and upward in wisdom's ways. In view of this, will not parents earnestly ask themselves what they can do to promote the true advancement of interests at once so desirable and important 1 Every parent has weighty and responsible duties resting upon him ; and a wise discharge of them will bring a glorious and soul-cheering recompense. When the author of this work was engaged in teach- ing, he wrote the following appeal to parents, soliciting their cooperation in the particulars named. If parents will consider it as addressed to them by the instructor of their children, and read it with a spirit of candor, it will, it is hoped, prove beneficial. It was published in a tract form by the Hon. Henry Barnard, then Superin- tendent of Schools in Rhode Island, and somewhat extensively circulated. A few alterations and additions have been made. A TEACHER'S APPEAL TO THE PARENTS OF HIS PUPILS. Respected Friends: The intimate relation which subsists between us, as parents and teacher, induces me to address you in relation to some of our mutual duties, upon the proper appreciation and due performance of which depend, in a great degree, the future success and welfare of your children. I feel that we are mutually engaged in a great work; a work which demands our most serious consideration, and one which loudly calls for the exercise of our united wisdom and hearty coop- eration. This work is the training and disciplining the objects of your dearest affections, so that they may A TEACHER'S APPEAL TO PARENTS. ^oT CONSTANT AND SEASONABLE ATTENDANCE. become virtuous and happy citizens, and "act well their parts" on the stage of life; alike an honor to themselves, to you, to me, to the community, and to their Creator. As, therefore, we are engaged in a work at once so important and so interesting in its results, it seems to me extremely desirable that a good understanding should exist between us, and that we should cooperate in every suitable manner, and on every proper occasion. In send- ing your children to my school, you have placed them under my care, and expect them to spend many precious hours of their youth under my immediate instruction and influence. You, doubtless, expect much of me; and, if you faithfully perform your duties, you have a right to expect much. I feel, I trust, to some extent, the immense responsi- bility of my situation, and will seek to labor " with all diligence" in the discharge of my arduous duties; and I hope I shall be enabled to answer every reasonable expectation on your part. But, that I may labor more successfully, as well as more cheerfully, will you allow me. in a plain, familiar manner, to call your attention to a few particulars in which your cordial cooperation is most earnestly and affectionately solicited ? I will endeavor, on my part, not to ask for anything which will not tend to the greatest advancement of your chil- dren, and to the promotion of their welfare. I. / respectfully invite you to aid me in securing the constant and seasonable attendance of your chil- dren. I have reason to believe that some parents have riot given merited attention to these points. Do you not think that children are often kept from school, or sent 283 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. EVILS OF FREQUENT ABSENCE. late, without any sufficient reason 7 Perhaps you have never fully considered the evils incident to inconstant or unseasonable attendance ; and, if so, allow me to call your attention to one or two of them, and others will readily suggest themselves to your minds. Let us, then, notice the tendency, or some of the consequences, of frequent absences. 1. If children are allowed to be absent, for insufficient reason, they are, virtually, taught to look upon their school and its duties as of quite secondary importance. If the doing of some trifling errand, the making or receiving visits, or the participating in some pleasure excursion, is allowed to interfere with school exercises or obligations, your children will, most assuredly, consider the engrossing object, or objects, as of paramount value. Of course, their interest will be diminished, and their progress retarded, in a degree proportionate to the extent and frequency of the infringement upon the claims of the school. If you wished for a lad to assist you on your farm, in your shop, or counting-room, you would insist upon having his undivided time and attention. This would be requisite for his good, as well as for yours. If you had in your employ an apprentice, who should frequently absent himself, and allow unimportant engage- ments or amusements to absorb the time and attention which should be devoted to gaining a knowledge of his trade, you would, at once, conclude that he would never become a proficient in it. And will it not be the same in school affairs 1 Are not your children appren- tices in the school of knowledge, which is designed to prepare them for the work of life? And have you ever considered that only the prompt and faithful discharge of A TEACHER'S APPEAL TO PARENTS. 289 AN ILLUSTRATION. the duties of apprenticeship can qualify them for work- men, that need not be ashamed of their work, when they shall have served out their time, and taken their stand with the free actors on the stage of life ? If you have not, let me beseech you, as you prize the good of your children, and wish their greatest advancement, to pause and reflect. 2. If children are often absent, they will fall behind their classmates in their studies, and, consequently, lose much of their interest in them, and perhaps acquire an actual dislike for school, and all its exercises. Of neces- sity, most of the instruction, in large schools, must be given to whole classes, and not to individual scholars. Your children receive their school-knowledge in this way. It is very essential, for the progress of a class, and its individual members, that no scholar be absent from a single recitation; for, frequently, the loss of a single lesson may affect a scholar's interest and advancement for a whole term. Let me take an instance to illustrate this. I have a class in Arithmetic, and it is often necessary for me to explain some principles, the clear understanding of which, by the pupil, will serve as a key to subsequent lessons. To-day I occupy some time in explaining some principles, to a class of twenty, of which your child is a member, but, unfortunately, an absent one. To-morrow he comes to school, but is unable to comprehend and perform the exercises of the day, on account of his absence the previous day. What, there- fore, must be done'? Certainly one of two things. I must either devote time and strength, which belong to the whole school (and which the school needs), and repeat the explanations given in his absence, or I must 25 290 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. FREQUENT ABSENCE PREVENTS IMPROVEMENT. leave him to grope along in the dark, as best he can, and, probably, to become disgusted with his school and its studies. He will not only droop himself, but will exert a withering and disheartening influence upon the other scholars. Our schools cannot accomplish the highest amount of good, unless the children are regular and constant in their attendance. How often is it, that scholars of good natural abilities are connected with a good school, month after month, and year after year, and yet make but little, if any, progress ! They retain seats in school, and, when perfectly convenient, and consistent with other arrange- ments, they occupy them, and do little else. They are neither prepared to enter a regular class, nor to continue there, if allowed to join. They feel no interest in the school, nor in the studies thereof; and often, by their habits of idleness and inattention, they become a positive injury to the whole school. Teachers are incompetent to impart any new light to such comet-like pupils as some are ; comet-like in some respects, but most unlike in others, they appear and disappear, but when and how they will reappear, no mortal can predict, with the slight- est degree of certainty. A desirable interest and fail improvement cannot be exhibited by children, who are allowed to be frequently absent. If the making or receiving of visits, the performance of some unimportant errand, or an engagement for some momentary pleasure or gratification, is allowed to trespass upon school-duties, children will be taught, in the most unequivocal manner, to look upon their school as of trifling imj>ortance. It is a duty the most imperative, on the part of parents, to train up their sons and daughters to regard their - scho i] A TEACHER'S APPEAL TO PARENTS. 291 THE TRUANT S COURSE. and its exercises, for the time being, as paramount to all things else. By being allowed to absent themselves, at first by permission of parents, for some inconsiderable purpose, they will soon be tempted to let some favorite amusement draw them from the school-room, and that, too, without the consent or knowledge of their parents or guardians, as truants. Could parents but realize the dangers that cluster around the truant's path, with what care and watchfulness would they labor to secure the regular attendance of their children ! How earnestly and perseveringly would they endeavor to instil into their minds a love for school, and its wholesome regula- tions ! Let us, for one moment, consider the truant's downward course. Think of him as, for the first time, disgusted with lessons which his frequent absences have rendered him unable to comprehend or commit, with a trembling and faltering heart he so far stifles the voice of conscience, as to disobey parents and teacher, and spend the hours of school in idle pleasure or wanton mischief. See him as he goes on, from step to step, until he totally disregards the kind monitions and advice of his best friends, and becomes the associate of kindred and more depraved spirits, and, with them, becomes an outcast from respectable society. He hates his school and his teacher ; disregards, and even abuses, his parents ; forsakes the house of worship and the Sunday-school ; violates the Sabbath, and becomes a seven days' truant ! Is not his case a lamentable one? But the worst and darkest of the picture is yet in prospect. From dis- obedience and truantism, he goes on to dissipation and crime. He disregards truth, becomes profane and dis- honest, and plunge^ into the very vortex of revelry and 292 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. A SAD PICTURE. vice, becoming the vilest of the vile, and basest of the base. Behold him, after the lapse of a few short years ; his mind corrupted and enervated, his talents prostrated, and his physical constitution a mere wreck of what it should have been, and might have been ! His associates and partners in degradation have abandoned him. In view of his wretchedness and loneliness, he becomes the desperate author of some crime, which will call upon his ruin-devoted head the just vengeance of an outraged community and violated laws. His confinement as a base criminal recalls, in some degree, his long-lost senses, and arouses him to a state of consciousness and remorse. He reflects on the past ; thinks of his once happy home, of his beloved though much-abused parents, brothers, sisters, and friends. He thinks, too, with bitter anguish, of the district school, whose slighted privileges consti- tuted the first step in his downward career. Then, from what was, and what might have been, he ponders the reality, and his future prospects. He views himself as a ruined, wretched, forsaken, miserable outcast. His guilty conscience, whose voice has been so long stifled or unheeded, now haunts and goads him. deepening his misery and anguish, until, at length, in a fit of despera- tion, he seizes the suicidal steel, and, in a moment, it pierces his throbbing and aching heart, and his disem- bodied spirit goes unbidden to Him who gave it ! Call this no fancy-sketch, for it has often been made a real- ity by many who have been more than lost to society and friends. And, methinks, if you will visit yondei prison-house, now crowded with wretched and doomed victims of i^rime, and, as you call upon them in their gloomy and lonely cells, ask them where commenced A TEACHERS APPEAL TO PARENTS. 293 EVILS OF ABSENCE. their downward career. The answer from many would be, " We were truant boys, and from that we trace our present condition of guilt and degradation." And. if such is ei'er the case, and who can doubt it? with what diligence should parents watch, to counteract every influence which may have the least tendency to teach their children that their school is unimportant, and may be made secondary to amusements, or trifling engagements of any kind ! Some one has thus "summed up" the unfavorable results of unnecessary absence : 1. If a boy learns to feel that he may leave his duties as a scholar for trivial causes, for causes equally trivial he will forsake his business \vhen a man. 2. The time of the teacher and the whole school ia wasted, while this absence is being recorded. 3. The teacher's time is wasted, in reading and record- ing the delinquent's excuse, when he returns to the school. 4. He interrupts the exercises of the teacher, or some part #f the school, in finding the places at which his various lessons commence. 5. He has lost the lesson recited yesterday, and does not understand that portion of to-day's lesson which depends upon that of yesterday ; and such dependence usually exists. 6. Tli3 teacher's time and patience are taxed in repeating to him the instructions of yesterday ; which, however, for want of study, he does not clearly appre- ciate. 7. The rest of the class are deprived of the instruction of their teacher, while he is teaching the delinquent. 25* -94 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. UNSEASONABLE ATTENDANCE. 8. The progress of the rest of the class is checked, and their ambition curbed, by waiting for the tardy delinquent. 9. The pride of the class is wounded, and their interest in their studies abated, by the conduct of the absentee. 10. The reputations both of teacher and school suffer, upon days of public examination, by failures, which are chargeable to the absence, and not to the instruction. 11. The means generously provided for the education of the delinquent are wrongfully wasted. 12. He sets a pernicious example for the rest of the school, and usually does some actual mischief while absent. But, leaving this point, on which I have enlarged, in view of its great importance, let us briefly consider one or two of the more prominent objections to unseasonable attendance. 1. If children are allowed to be tardy in their attend- ance at school, they will be prone to undervalue punctuality in other affairs. Children should be taught to look upon their school as of paramount importance, and regard the school-room as their workshop, the place of business for them ; -and no concern of a second- ary nature should be allowed to interfere, in the least degree, with its appropriate exercises. It is extremely desirable that you impress strongly upon the minds of your children the fact, that whatever is worth doing at all should be done well, and at the proper time. Teach them that punctuality in the discharge of every duty is of the highest importance; and, if you train them to observe it punctiliously in relation to their school, they A TEACHER'S APPEAL TO PARENTS. 295 EVILS OF TARDINESS. will be likely to do the same in every duty of subsequent life. In this way, they will form a habit of inestimable value. But I have considered the evils of unseasonable attend- ance only in relation to its effect upon him who trespasses. I will briefly allude to another objection to the habit, which is, 2. That children who enter the school-room at a late hour interrupt the order of the school, and inter- fere with some passing exercises, in which, perhaps, they should have a part. Thus a whole school is often made to suffer from the deviation of a few. In some schools, much time is actually lost, on every half-day, by the dilatoriness of individual members. You have,, doubtless, noticed the effect upon a congregation at church caused by the late entrance of persons ; and I will leave this point, by merely suggesting the analogy, between the two. to your own mind, being convinced that due reflection will induce you to regard the whole matter in its true light, and act accordingly. Before closing this subject, I will call your attention to one more evil, similar in its effects to that we have just considered. I allude to the habit of leaving school before the regular hour of dismission. Children very frequently bring notes from their parents, requesting their dismission at an early hour; and, if all such requests, in some schools, should be complied with, the exercises of the last hour woula be constantly inter- rupted by those who should thus leave. 3. Encourage your children to respect and obey the rules and requirements of their teacher. This is highly necessary for their proper advancement 296 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. THE TEACHER'S FAMILY. and happiness while at school. Induce them to look upon their instructor as your and their friend, and to regard all his regulations as designed for their good. If, in any of my arrangements, or in the execution of my plans, you shall think I have erred, or that your chil- dren have suffered, or been neglected, you will confer a favor by making known to me, freely, your feelings or apprehensions. Come in the spirit of kindness, and I will promise to receive you kindly, and answer every reasonable inquiry. I may sometimes err, it will l-e strange if I do not. Perhaps you feel that you some- times misjudge, or act unwisely, in the management of your own children. Will you consider that I am called upon to control arid instruct the collected families of the neighborhood 7 I have under my care a multitude, whose home influ- ences and discipline are widely different. The children from no two families are alike. Yet they must be united and governed as one large family. Some are mild, kind and affectionate, ever anxious to know, and ready to obey, every wish of their teacher; while others are rough, uricourteous, and obstinate, apparently most pleased when they are doing wrong, interrupting the school, and annoying their instructor. These opposite characters and elements actually exist, in most schools ; and it would be wonderful, indeed, if teachers could decid j and act, upon every occasion, and in every emergency, in such a manner as t meet universal approval. I fee! that I may sometimes do wrong. Let us remembe.- that " To err is human, to forgive, divine!" But so long as yo have sufficient confidence in the school and ite operations, to induce you to send your children, let A TEACHER'S APPEAL TO PARENTS. 297 OBEDIENCE AND REGARD FOR RIGHT. me beseech you to teach them to regard every rule and requisition with conscientious strictness. In this way, you may do much for me and much for them. If you hear reports from your children (and this should be done with much caution), or otherwise, reflect- ing upon the management of the school, or treatment of individual members, do not too readily confide in all you hear. If, however, you really think there is good ground for such reports, call upon me, and ascertain all the particulars, remembering the somewhat trite sayings, that, " There are two sides to a question," and that. " Circumstances alter cases." If you pursue this course, in the spirit of love arid kindness, you will, in most cases, find that great exaggerations and perversions have been made ; sometimes, perhaps, intentionally, but, more frequently, from the misunderstanding or miscon- ception peculiar to childhood. 4. Encourage your children to be orderly, and studiously to regard right. Youth are frequently tempted, by the example of vicious associates, to violate the rules of good behavior, and spend their time in idle mischief, or vain pursuits. As you cannot always keep them removed from per- nicious influences, and depraved companions, do all in your power to form in them an abhorrence of all that is evil, and a deep regard for everything that is " lovely and of good report." So train them, that they may come in contact with vice without being contaminated ; nay, more than this, that their own upright conduct, and pure conversation, may exert a salutary influence upon those who manifest no love for virtuous acts. Imjrove every fit opportunity to impress upon their 298 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. STUDIOUS HABITS. minds the ruinous consequences of vice and idleness ; and, at the same time, show them that, " Wisdom's ways are pleasantness, and all her paths are peace." Teach them to avoid trifling deviations, to do right at all times and on all occasions, because it is right, and because, by so doing, they will be more happy and useful. Teach them that it is better to " suffer wrong than to do wrong;" and that the fact, that wrong has been done to them, is no reason why they should do wrong in return. Tell them that kindness will allay wrath, and that it is more noble and manly to return "good for evil," than to give "reviling for reviling." Teach them to feel that if they would be truly wise, and great, and happy, they must first be truly good. As you meet your children at the cbse of the day, occupy a few minutes in conversing with them respect- ing the manner in which they have spent the day. Ask them to reflect, and consider if they have not done some works which " need to be repented of ; " and direct them to the Author of their existence for pardon, and to the fountain of all wisdom for future guidance and support. Then may you hope to see them become an honor and a blessing to you, and to the community. 5. Encourage your children to be studious, by manifesting an interest in their lessons. Improve every suitable occasion to converse with them concerning their studies : and do all you can to convince them, that the more diligent and faithful they are now, the brighter will be their prospects for future usefulness and happiness. Do all in your power to inspire them with a love for knowledge, as a source of gratification and improvement. In the morning, enjoin upon them A TEACHER'S APPEAL TO PARENTS. 299 VISITING SCHOOLS. the great importance of diligence during the hours of school ; and at night, inquire respecting the studies of the day, and ascertain what new ideas have been acquired, what facts have been stored up, what difficul- ties overcome, what kindly acts performed. Induce them to examine, to investigate, to think. In a word, do all you can to cause them to feel the great advantages of education, and the necessity of patient application to obtain it. You will thus increase their interest, and cause them to regard with pleasure exercises that would, otherwise, appear dull and unimportant. 6. Improve every convenient occasion, in visiting the school. In this way, you can do much to stimulate and cheer your children and their teacher. I do not ask you to come, that you may assist in conducting the exercises of the school, but come to see and to hear, and thus give some real evidence that you feel an interest in the sub- ject of education. Children often attend school month after month, and see no parent within the room. The teacher urges upon their consideration the great value of knowledge day after day, and repeats his earnest desire for their improvement ; but often his words and interest are almost neutralized by the indifference and inattention of their dearest friends. They begin to think that education is of little consequence, and that it matters not whether they are industrious or idle. As they never see their parents within the school-room, they begin to think that their teacher is the only individual interested in their progress, and that he is so, because it is in the way of his business. Hence a teacher's injunctions. and example often fall powerless, for the want. of the quick- 300 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. GOOD EFFECTS OF SCHOOL VISITS. ening influences of a parent's interest, and a parent's endorsement. In passing through manufacturing villages, we fre- quently notice over the doors of certain buildings, in large characters, " No ADMITTANCE, EXCEPT ON BUSI- NESS." Plain and positive as this inscription appears to be, it does not always prove effectual. Yankee curiosity, and Yankee ingenuity, will contrive to gain entrance. I have sometimes thought that, if the word " SCHOOL- HOUSE" should be inscribed over the entrance, those within would never suffer the slightest annoyance from visitors. I trust, however, that, so far as our school is concerned, the writing over the door-way may be, " EVERY PARENT AND CITIZEN HAS AN INTEREST IN THE BUSINESS TRANSACTED WITHIN, AND MAY AT ALL TIMES HAVE A FREE ADMITTANCE, AND FEEL AT PER- FECT LIBERTY TO INSPECT THE OPERATIONS OF THOSF WITHIN ! " If, therefore, you have never been in the habit of visiting your children's school, let me affectionately invite you to begin the practice. It will increase your own interest, and redouble theirs. Whenever you may have a leisure hour, will you not come and spend it with your children, and listen to their recitations 1 Depend upon it, if you will adopt this course, their zeal and studl^us- ness will be greatly increased ; and they will cheerfully apply themselves to prepare their daily exercises, when they feel that their father or their mother may be present when they are called upon to recite, for what child will not be ambitious to do well at such a time ? But I must leave the subject with you, hoping that you will carefully consider its importance. A TEACHER'S APPEAL -TO PARENTS. 301 THE BOOKS TO BE READ. 7. Have a regard to the character of the books your children read, and see that they read under- standingly. Of making books there is no end ; and, if all books were good books, we might wish there would be no end. It is, however, a lamentable fact, that many books and pamphlets are published, of which every philanthropist would wish, not only that there might be an end, but also, that there had never been a beginning. The press is teeming with publications, not of ques- tionable utility merely, but of a character truly immoral and licentious. These are printed in an attractive and cheap form, and scattered broadcast through the commu- nity, contaminating and ruining the susceptible minds of the young. The fruits of these productions may be silver and gold to the makers and venders ; but, to the community, they are vanity, idleness, intemperance, licentiousness, anarchy, poverty, misery, and destruction. I feel that I am safe in asserting, that many a noble mind has been lost to itself, to friends, and to the public, through the influence of light and immoral reading. Precious time has been frittered away, bright talents have been prostituted and perverted, health has been impaired, property wasted, and the happiness of whole families and neighborhoods destroyed, by the perusal of the publications to which I allude. I need not name particular books. I fear some may be found on the shelves of our most respectable book-stores. Many of the " Tales," and "Mysteries," &c., stories of "shocking murders and piracies," and even many of the " Almanacs," that are so freely circulated, are unworthy of a place in any 26 302 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. SUITABLE BOOKS AND HABIf OF READING. respectable house ; and I hope the day will come, when our principal booksellers will have a conscientious regard to the character of the works they sell. The man who, at the present day, sells intoxicating drinks, is regarded as an enemy to mankind ; and why should we not look upon that man in the same light, who, for the sake of gain, aids in circulating books which will poison the mind, and deaden, or pervert, all the finer and nobler sensibilities of the soul'? But, so long as there exists in the community a demand for trifling and 6ctitious reading, so long, I fear, will the demand be supplied by men, whose chief object is gain. But I wish, at the present time, merely to call your attention to the subject, as regards your own children. It is very desirable that they should spend a portion of their time in reading ; and, if they read suitable books in a proper manner, they cannot spend it more profit- ably. Therefore, I most earnestly urge you to see that your children read only such books as will impart to them useful information and wholesome moral instruction, such books as will tend to make them wiser and better. Do what you can towards the establishment and support of school-libraries, and, in this way, you may do much for the improvement and happiness of the rising genera- tion. I also invite you to do what you can to keep them from a hasty and superficial manner of reading. Such reading cannot be productive of much good, and only tends to distract and weaken the mind. Induce them to read with a strong desire to acquire knowledge. Ques- tion them often respecting what they have read ; and, if their views are vague and indefinite, urge them to re-peruse, in order that they may gain and impart A TEACHER'S APPEAL TO PARENTS 03 KINDNESS AND COURTEOUSXESS. knowledge. If you will pursue this course, I feel con- vinced that you will exert a most salutary influence, not only upon your children, but, through them, upon the community. 8. Aid me in my endeavors to check selfishness and promote a spirit of kindness and forbearance. Much of the unhappiness and trouble of life come from a spirit of selfishness, a feeling that everything must yield to one's own desires, regardless of time or circumstances. It is sometimes the case that children are indulged in every real and imaginary want while at home, and, when they go to school or elsewhere, they feel sadly injured and abused, if they cannot have the same indulgences. Such ones will find trouble and dis- appointment at every step. May I not ask that we may cooperate in endeavoring to train the young to regard the rights of others, and to treat all with a true spirit of kindness and forbearance ? May we not do what we can to lead them to seek for that which will be for their true good and happiness, rather than for the indulgence of some favorite notions or wishes? May 'not their happi- ness be increased, by leading them to feel an interest in the desires and rights of their associates, and, at times, to give up their own wishes, in order to gratify or oblige others? May we not, then, strive to convince them that in many cases it is really " more blessed to give than to receive," more conducive to true happiness to do a favor, than it is to receive one. 9. Cultivate, in your children, habits of tr ue polite- ness and courtesy. True education requires the full development and exercise of the better feelings, of the heart, and the 304 COMMON SCHOOTi EDUCATION. EFFECTS OF POLITENESS. proper culture of these will exhibit themselves in out- ward actions and expressions. Indeed, we are much inclined to form an estimate of those with whom we meet or associate, from their mode of address, and from exter- nal appearances. If they are coarse and rude in their manners, rough and undignified in their salutations and remarks, or uncourteous and abrupt in their answers, we are inclined to avoid them, and regard them as unkind and uncompanionable. We do not expect to find much that is attractive in them; and. if they possess some worthy qualities, their first appearance is so repulsive, that we are hardly prepared to witness any subsequent evidence of real humanity and goodness. Again, we meet with those, whose dignified and manly demeanor, social and free manner, combined with true politeness and civility, at once attract and charm us. In every act and expression, they furnish such indubitable evidence of good breeding, and so kind a regard for the feelings of others, that we look upon them as noble speci- mens of a noble race. We can hardly imagine that they can or will be guilty of any wrong or undignified act. By their pleasant and obliging manners, they command the respect and esteem of all with whom they associate, and gain an influence which will be really irresistible. Inasmuch, then, as true courteousness contributes so much to make one an agreeable companion, and thus adds to his pleasant influences, is it not worthy of our united efforts to do what we can to instil, into the young, feel- ings of true politeness, so that they may, at all times, in all places, and under all circumstances, act a "manly part"? While unkind words, and abrupt answers and expressions, never do good, pleasant tones, kindly word? A TEACHER'S APPEAL TO PARENTS. 305 THE DEFINITION OF "GENTLEMAN." ami civil answers, always command admiration and attract attention. So much of the happiness of a family, school or community, depends upon the proper manifestation :>f kintlly expressions, in relation, even, to every-day greetings, that too much care cannot be taken rightly to train and influence the young, so that they may become gentlemen in the truest and best sense of the term. "A gentleman," says Bishop Doane, "is gentle. A gentleman is modest. A gentleman is courteous. A gentbnrm is generous. A gentleman is slow to tako offence, as being one that never gives it. A gentleman is slow to surmise evil, as being one that never thinks it. A gentleman goes armed only in consciousness of right. A gentleman refines his tastes. A gentleman subdues his feelings. A gentleman Cuntrols his speech. A gentlomun deems every other better than himself. Sir Philip Sidney was never so much a gentleman, mirror though he was of England's knighthood, as when, upon the field of Zutphen, as he lay in his wn blood, he waived the draught of cold spring-water that was brought to quench his mortal thirst, in favor of a dying soldier." Let me, therefore, affectionately invite you to induce your children to be respectful, obliging, and gentlemanly, in all their actions and expressions. The true spirit nirl exercise of politeness will deter them from the commis- sion of many rude acts, and exert a controlling and salutary influence over their whole conduct. Before I close, allow me to repeat the points 1 have placed before you, the observance of which will be most beneficial to your children, and, through them, tc all with whom they associate. 26* 306 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. "THE SUMMING UP." 1. Send your children to school seasonably and con- stantly. 2. Encourage them to respect and obey the rules and requirements of their school. 3. Encourage them to be orderly, &c. 4. Encourage them to be studious. 5. Visit them at school. 6. Have a regard to the character of the books your children read, and see that they read understandingly. 7. Aid me to check selfishness, and promote a spirit of kindness and forbearance. 8. Cultivate in your children habits of politeness and courtesy. These duties, and others growing out of them, perform faithfully, and you will find a most abundant reward in the increased interest of your children, and their growth in knowledge and virtue. With affectionate regard, Your friend, and your children's TEACHEB. CHAPTER VIII. PARENTS SHOULD BE CANDID AND CHABI- TABLE. PARENTS are sometimes too ready to listen, approv- ingly, to the complaints of their children, and often censure the instructor without sufficient reason. I would not be understood to say that teachers always pursue a course above censure, or that they always do things in the best or most prudent manner. They are but men, with the infirmities of men, and need the heartfelt sym pathies, the encouragement, and cheerful cooperation, of their patrons. In the formation and execution of their plans, they must be allowed to pursue their own course, nor should they be expected to coincide with the views and wishes of all. This would be impossible, as there are widely-differing views among their patrons. Parents are often unconsciously, I doubt not guilty of causing much injury to schools, by manifesting an interest in all the little antipathies which their children may have con- tracted, and by sympathizing with them in all the little wrongs, real or imaginary, to which they have been subjected. Probably there is no individual whose motives and proceedings are so often and so grossly misconceived and misrepresented, as are those of the school-teacher. This, we may readily see, arises from the very nature of his employment. H has to deal with the mind and 303 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATFON. UNREASONABLE COMPLAINTS. passions in all their various workings, and that at a i age when reason and prudence have but a very limited sway. As his pupils differ in disposition and undar- standing, so his efforts to secure order and obedience, and his incentives to exertion, must vary. To one a mere look or word of reproof will be as effectual as the most severe discipline to another ; and yet, is not the faithful, prudent, and skilful teacher, often severely censured, and accused of partiality, while endeavoring to adapt his mode of discipline to the peculiar disposition of an offender ? A conscientious and wise instructor will consider it an important part of his duty so to study the character and peculiar disposition of each pupil that he may be able to pursue that course of discipline which will best secure the reform or best good of every one. But. from a want of proper consideration on the part of many parents and guardians, this is made a fruitful source of com- plaint and fault-finding. A teacher may pursue that course which experience and observation dictate as the best, and which an interest in the welfare and improvement of his pupils prompts him to pursue, and, while thus acting, and thus influenced by the purest motives, he is, perhaps, represented by one as being too severe, by another, too lax, and by many as partial in his discipline ; this parent complains that his children have not studies enough, and that because his has too many. And whence comes all this complaint with parents ? Does it proceed from frequent visits to the school-room, and from actual observation while there? By no means; but from the distorted statements of interested and ex varte witnesses, the PARENTS SHOULD BE CANDID AND CHARITABLE. 309 PUPIL LIABLE TO BIASED JUDGMENT. pupils themselves ; and many a poor teacher is tried, found guilty, condemned, and almost executed, without being afforded the least opportunity for self-defence, and. perchance, entirely unconscious of the crimes or devia- tions for which he is under sentence. "But." says one, "shall parents always submit to what the teacher does ? Is he always in the right, and parents and children in the wrong'?" Certainly not ; the teacher is not infallible ; but does he not, or ought he not, best understand his own business ? At all events, will it always answer to rely on the pupil's judgment ? Will he not often be influenced by motives similar to those of the lad, who. when asked by his teacher in what way he should prefer to be punished, replied, with much readiness, ' ' If you please, sir, according- to the Ital- ian system of penmanship, heavy strokes up, down ones light" 1 If parents really feel that the teacher has erred, and their children have been injured or neglected, would it not be better to go directly to him, and, with a spirit of candor and kindness, make known their feelings ? Pos- sibly, they have not been rightly informed ; or, perhaps, a false coloring has been given, or some circumstances withheld ; and, upon hearing the whole story, they may become fully satisfied that no injustice or wrong has been intended or committed. In most cases, such would undoubtedly be the result. I do not intend to assert that most children design to make false statements ; but they are so easily biased and prejudiced, that they, fre- quently, imagine many things which exist only in imagination. A wrong word, an improper emphasis 310 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. EARLY PREJUDICES : ANECDOTES. a slight omission or addition, often very materially affects an account. Parents, probably, are not always aware of the nature and extent of their influence, directly and indirectly, upon their children, who are prone to like or dislike what their parents like or dislike, and endeavor to express the same sentiment that they hear expressed at the fireside, though not always correctly. Few realize how many notions and prejudices children form, under the influence of those with whom they spend most of their time. A child, being asked by his Sabbath-school teacher, "Who killed Abel?" promptly replied, "Gen. Jack- son!" In one of those periods of high political excite- ment (whose influence upon the young is most deleterious), she had heard so much said against the general, that she thought, as a matter of course, that he was a general murderer, and was the only man bad enough to commit the first homicide Another, being asked in what state man was left after the " fall," readily answered, " Vermont." Having always lived in that state, and having heard its name more frequently than any other, he thought it the only state in which any important event could happen. Parents should feel an interest in the results of the teacher's labors. With many, perhaps we may say. with most parents, there is a ready inclination to render the instructor of their children cheerful and prompt cooperation in every desirable particular ; but it is not so with all. In most communities may be found those perverse dispositions which know not what it is to lend aid in any good work PARENTS SHOULD BE CANDID AND CHARITABLE. 311 LIMITED INTEREST. THE DUTCHMAN. Capricious, captious, and uneasy,, they can find nothing to their liking. They view all objects and operations with a jaundiced eye. With such, the only desirable thing about schools is, that they are standing objects, about which they may daily vent their bitterness. The children of these parents never hear their teachers alluded to, except it be in language the most derogatory and abusive ; and they enter the school-room not only without a single prepossession in its favor, but with heads full of distorted views and ill-conceived preju- dices. There is another class of parents who are perfectly willing to throw all responsibility upon the teacher, with little or no interest in the result. They are ready to furnish books, and supply all the external school- wants of their children ; and, beyond this, manifest no interest. In employing a teacher, and sending their children to school, they feel that their entire obligation ceases ; and, if things go to destruction, it is no concern of theirs, and they feel no interest in preventing it. They are, in some respects, AS independent and regardless of results as was the Dutchman, who, having given very willingly the sum of five hundred dollars to aid in the erection of a church, was subsequently called upon to contribute for the purpose of procuring a lightning-rod for the better security of the building. Assuming a very decided manner, he refused to give, saying, " I have help build de Lord a nice house ; and now, if he pe mind to dunder it down, let him pe welcome to do it, and I will be sure to put noting in de way of it." So the parents alluded to seem to say, by their actions, "We hare sent our children to school, and. if the teacher 312 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. EXTRAVAGANT EXPECTATIONS. does not take o.no ofirftem, and educate them, it is no concern of ours ;" and, like the Dutchman, they appear perfectly willing to sacrifice their investment, rather than extend any aid which will seem designed to assist in preserving the same from loss or injury. Parents should not be extravagant and unreason- able in their expectations. Every parent wishes his children to excel : and if they do not, he is prone to censure the teacher and accuse him of neglect. Now, it is sometimes the case that a boy may attend school month after month, and season after season, receive every possible attention, and yet make but little progress. The best of teachers cannot make first-rate scholars from second or third rate stock. But it frequently happens, that a boy of very ordinary abili- ties and those blunted or stunted by neglect or mismanagement in his physical training is sent to school occasionally, and, if he does not learn rapidly and make a " right smart " scholar, it is entirely charge- able to the poor teacher. But it should be known that no mortal influence can cause such pupils to advance under such circumstances, or create life or replenish the strength for a boy whose entire energies have been tasked to their utmost in counteracting the indulgence of an excessive appetite, or the gross abuse of his phys- ical nature, in any way. A lady once called upon an instructor, and asked him how her daughter succeeded. " Why," said he, "not very well; she lacks capac- ity." "0! if that is all," said the lady, "you buy har a first-rate capacity, and charge it in her next quarter's bill !" Now, while it should be known by all that teachers PARENTS SHOTTJ) BE CANDID AND CHARITABLE. 813 CAPACITIES CANNOT BE PURCHASED. can neither make nor purchase capacities, it should also be remembered that, with the kindly, prompt and con- tinued, aid of parents, they may do much to improve and develop capacities which are naturally far from being brilliant or powerful. 27 CHAPTER IX, HIGH AND HONORABLE MO' . '/S FOB ACTION. IT is very desirable that a true s'/.!?j of right and wrong, and correct ideas of propriety, should be early and carefully impressed upon the young, thac they be induced to love and pursue the right, and detest and shun the wrong, and to perform every act an^ every duty from high and honorable motives. Thus trained, chil- dren will grow up free from those debasing and selfish influences which are now, so frequently, developed in society. How often is it that parents and teachers, thought- lessly, do injury to the young, by holding before them unworthy motives for action ! Who, in this money-seek- ing and dollar-grasping age of ours, may not trace an over-anxious desire for riches to the injudicious practice of some parents of influencing the child's mind by the proffer of a few cents, as an inducement to perform some duty ? Or, who cannot trace the development of erro- neous views, and of bigoted or superstitious feelings, to the prevalent habit, with parents and others, of relating to children extravagant and unreasonable stories ? The young should early be impressed with the im- portance of exercising a charitable spirit, and of delight- ing, rather, in the merits, than in the errors and frail- ties, of others. How many have been lost to society mid HONORABLE MOTIVES. 316 A COMPASSIONATE AND FORGIVING SPIRIT. usefulness, by the coldness of the world, in the way of downright slander, or of sly insinuations, which are, often, worse, in their eflfects. than slander ! How many have been made morose and misanthropic, on account of ill-treatment received ! Let the young be taught to feel that there may be some good traits in all, and to exercise a compassionate and forgiving spirit towards the frail and erring, ever preferring to speak kindly, and think charitably, towards all and of all. If, as will sometimes be the case, children go to parents to complain of real or imaginary wrongs, on the part of their teacher, let not those parents be instrumental of cherishing a capricious spirit by coinciding with all that may be said ; but let them rather aim to discover and assign a good reason for every act complained of. The young may thus be taught the importance of exercising a charitable spirit. A few years ago, there died, in one of our southern cities, a man possessed of immense wealth. He had lived a secluded and miserly life, his one and only appa- rent desire seeming to be, the accumulation of riches. Denying himself every rational enjoyment, he bent all his energies to the accomplishment of the one purpose of his heart. Without manifesting the slightest interest in the welfare of those around him, he " toiled and moiled, poor muck- worm,'' to increase his store of wealth. De- spised and shunned, he lived, lonely and neglected, he died ; and, were it not for the last clause of his will, we might have been left to believe that human sympathy, in any form, never possessed his heart. But, from that, we may infer that his mind, from some early ill-treat- ment, had received a misanthropic turn, from which it could never recover, yet, down deep in that miser's S16 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. CLAUSE OF A RICH MAN'S WILL. heart, there seems to have been some kindly and sympa- thetic feeling, which developed itself in view of approach- ing death, in a wise distribution of the wealth acquired by life-long self-denial and toil. After specifying the objects to which his immense wealth should be appropri- ated, a large part of which was for the support of frei schools for poor children, he thus speaks: "And (I was near forgetting that) I have, still, one small request to make, one little favor to ask, and it shall be the last. It is, that it may be permitted, annually, to the children of the free schools situate . the nearest to my place of interment, to plant and water a few flowers around my grave ! This little act will have a double tendency ; it will open their young and susceptible hearts to gratitude and love to their divine Creator, for having raked up, as an humble instrument of his bounty to them, a poor frail worm of earth like me, and teach them, at the same time, what they are, whence they came, and whither they must return." What an impressive lesson ought we to learn from these few lines, as emanat- ing from a heart, apparently, callous and indifferent to all those tender feelings and sympathies which usually bind man to his fellow-man, and prompt to those little acts of kindly aid which tend so much to strew life's pathway with flowers ! If possible, the young should be trained to feel that they have duties to perform, and that, if they labor with fidelity and earnestness, they may rise to exalted stations of influence and usefulness. In a government like ours, with the means of knowledge so widely diffused, the highest posts of honor are alike attainable by the rich and poor "The great poet, the illustrious statesman thr HONORABLE MOTIVES. 317 HIGH POSITIONS ATTAINABLE BY ALL. eloquent orator, is as likely to go forth from the brown- faced laborer's cottage over the way, as from the sump- tuous palaces of the capital. The future ruler of an empire may be unconsciously digging in yonder field ; and this very school may be, under God, the appointed means of revealing his unsuspected destiny to him and to the world." * If the young are early trained to habits of persevering industry, if they are rightly taught the nature of their obligations and the extent of their capa- bilities, and, at the same time, are made to feel that they must, with certain aids, carve their own fortunes, they will be instructed in the true steps and principles of pro- gressive usefulness and increasing influence. We are blessed with a noble country ; a goodly heri- tage is ours. It is for us, in a great degree, to answer the momentous question, "What is to be the future of this magnificent country? " " On this point, mournful voices are already beginning to be scattered upon the air. Men, and women too, are predicting evil issues. It may be so. It may be that our experience is to add to the warnings and admonitions of history ; that the voice of the past is to sigh through the shattered walls and broken arches of our social fabric. It may be that our sun is to go down in blood ; that violence is to rend asunder the chain of our union, and scatter its links in wild disorder ; that our soil is to be drenched with fraternal blood ; that the pleasant gardens of our prosperity are to be uprooted by the whirlwinds of anarchy, or iron-bound by the polar frost of despotism. It will be so, if our material civilization is always to keep far in advance of our men- *C. Felton. 27* 318 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. OCR PROSPECTS. BRITISH ADMIRAL. tal and moral cultivation ; if prosperity is to make ua selfish, if wealth is to make us hard- hear ted, if power ia to majce us tyrannous. But not thus would I cast the noroscope of our country's fortunes. There arft two great houses in the world, the house of hope, and the house of fear ; far be from me and my friends the badges and the livery of that latter house ! I will not believe that the life of nations is like the life of trees ; that, by an inevitable law, they, too, have their periods of growth, maturity, and decline ; but I hold that it is sin alone that makes a people weak, and wickedness that makes them old, and that in the fear of God and the keeping of his commandments there is perpetual youth. " Upon us, and those Avho are to come after us, upon the young, especially, who are ever the patriot's hope and the good man's trust, and upon those to whom the training of the young is intrusted, whether as parents or teachers, does this great responsibility rest. The life of man should here reflect the spirit of our institutions, and be cast in a mould of greatness analogous to the physical features of our country. It should be grave, simple, earnest, and manly. It should be dedicated to high pur- poses, and governed by a spirit of moral thoughtfulness. There is no place, here, for the idler, the trifler, the scoffer, and the voluptuary. Every man's life is of con- sequence, as forming a part of the life of the state. " The last signal made by the British admiral, on the morning of the battle of Trafalgar, was in words which have become historical and immortal : ' England ex- pects every man to do his duty ! ' Would that we could carve upon our hearts the spirit of these words ; for. though the storm-cloud of battle does not lower upon our HONORABLE MOTIVES. 819 QLOniOUS AND LASTING KESULTS. path, yet peace has its dangers and its trials, no less than war. Would that each of us, when our country's flag is floating upon the breeze, could see, with the mind's eye, written in letters of living light upon its ample folds, ' AMERICA EXPECTS EVERY MAN TO DO HIS DUTY ! ' Would that the contemplation of our present and our future might inspire us, not only with patriotic pride and gratitude, but with a firm resolve- to set upon the brow of our country a more than regal coronet, with the virtues of her children for its sparkling gems ! With this spirit and this resolve, we shall construct her pros- perity from elements as indestructible and unchanging aa the laws of falling bodies, or the impulses of maternal love." * In concluding this volume, I would, once more, ear- nestly entreat parents to consider the nature and magni- tude of the responsibilities which devolve upon them. The -duties they owe to the young are of no trifling con- sideration. The happy results of the wise performance of them will be far-reaching, never-ending; the evil effects of wrong influences or of neglect will be as exten- sive and as lasting. Parents ! will you look at the sub- ject in its true light? Will you view it in all its realities, and contemplate its height and depth, its length and breadth ? Will you consider it as affecting the condition of your children, and of the community? Will you regard it in the light of your accountability to God, and strive, in every way, to assist in training the youth intrusted to your care so that they will, in their lives, honor and glorify their Creator? Will you do what you * G. S. HillartL 320 COMMON SCHOOL EDUCATION. COXCLUDINO REMARKS. can to prepare them to act wisely and well their parts in life? If you will, then yom may be the humble instru- ments, in God's hands, of accomplishing a great and good work for the community, and for the dearest objects of your affection. If you will, then will you contribute your part towards the discharge of the duty resting upon every citizen of our country. If you will, then will you do something towards the dissemination and perpetuity of those republican blessings and virtues which we now enjoy. If you will, then will you prove yourselves the worthy citizens of a noble republic, promoting its best interests, and increasing its power and influence. And thus " Let each generation sweep majestically on, in an increased and increasing current, each living upen, and growing upon, the granaries of the past, and heaping up resources for the future. Let each succeed- in.; generation more fully develop the true principles of life and action, hushing the evil propensities of man, and leading him gently by the hand into the paths of virtue and wisdom. Above all, in this free and Christian re- public, let the power and influence of intellect be ever guided by the conservative and invigorating principles of religion and morality." * Thus may each generation faithfully perform the obligations implied in the noble sentiment introduced into the first chapter of this volume, a sentiment that should be regarded and cherished by every citizen of our land : "EDUCATION: A DEBT DUE FROM PRESENT TO FUTURE GENERATIONS." *W. D. Northend. APPENDIX APPENDIX A. IT should be the aim of every teacher to become the owner of a library. The number of works designed especially for teachers has greatly increased within a few years, but is still quite limited. Below is a list of books which are deserving a place in every library. Many of them relate directly to the profession of the teacher, and oth- ers contain information of value to every one. It is not, of course, my purpose to give a complete catalogue of suitable books, but to desig- nate many that should form a part of such a catalogue. Theory and Practice of Teaching. By David P. Page, M.A., late Principal of the New York State Normal School. New York : A. S, liarnes & Co. 8vo. pp. 349. An excellent work, by a most sensible man and an eminently useful teacher. Every teacher and friend of education should own this volume. The School and the Schoolmaster. By Alonzo Potter, D.D., Bishop of Pennsylvania, and George B. Emerson, A.M., President of the American Institute of Instruction. Boston : William B. Fowle. 12mo pp.552. This work is too well known to need comment. Lectures before the American Institute of Instruction, from 1830 to the present time ; 20 vols. Boston : William D. Ticknor & Co. Normal Schools, and other Institutions, Agencies and Means, de- signed for the Professional Education of Teachers. By Henry Bar- nard, Superintendent of Common Schools of Connecticut. Hartford Case, Tiffany & Co. 8vo, pp. 657. This volume abounds in valuable suggestions, and should be in the library of every teacher. The Life and Correspondence of Thomas Arnold, D.D., late Head Master of Rugby School, and Regius Professor of Modern History in 322 APPENDIX. the University of Oxford. By A. P. Stanley, A.M. London and New York , 1846. 8vo. pp. 4UO. History of Education, Ancient and Modern. By IT. I. Smith, A M. Harpers' Family Library, No. 156. Teaching a Science ; the Teacher an Artist. By Rev. Baynard B Hall, A.M New York : Baker & Scribner ; 1848. 12mo. pp. 305. Common Schools and Teachers' Seminaries ; embracing a Report on Elementary Public Instruction in Europe, and an Article or. Normal Schools and Teachers' Seminaries. By Calvin E. Stowe, D.D., Pro- fessor in Lane Seminary, Cincinnati. Boston : 1839. 12mo. pp. 12f>. Report on Education in Europe. By Alexander D. Bache, LL.D. Philadelphia : 1839. 12mo. pp. 666. Hints on a System of Popular Education. By Prof. E. C. Wine* Philadelphia : 1838. 12mo. pp. 225. The Teacher Taught ; or, the Principles and Modes of Teaching. By Emerson Davis, D.D. Boston : 1839. 12mo. pp. 7i). The Teacher's Manual ; containing Practical Suggestions on Teach- ing and Popular Education. By Henry Dunn, Secretary of the British and Foreign School Society. London : edited by Rev. T. II. Gallau- det. Hartford : 1839. 12mo. pp. 223. Lord Brougham on Education. Edited by J. Orville Taylor. New York: 1839. 12mo. pp. 91." The Teacher's Institute ; or, Familiar Hints to Young Teachers. By William B. Fowle. Boston : 1817. 12mo. pp. 258. The Teacher; or, Moral Influences employed in the Instruction and Government of the Young. By Jacob Abbot. Boston: 1833. 12mo. pp. 293. Some Thoughts Concerning Education, by John Locke, and n Treatise on Education, by John Milton. Edited by William Russell. Boston: 1830. 12mo. pp. 317. The Teacher's Manual. By Thomas H. Palmer. Boston : 1840. pp. 263. The District School as It Was. By Rev. Warren Burton. New York: 1838. Confessions of a Schoolmaster. By William A. Alcott, M.D. New York. 12mo. pp. 316. Account of the Edinburgh Sessional School. By John Wood. Bcs- ton: 1830. School Architecture. By Hon. Henry Barnard, Commissioner of Schools for the State of Rhode Island. New York : 1846. Prize Essay, on the Improvement of the Common Schools of Connect tout By Prof. Noah Porter Hartford : 1846 APPENDIX. 323 The Student's Manual. By John Todd, D.D. 12mo. pp. 392. Dr. Channing on Self-Culture, and Miss Sedgwick on Self-Training The Schoolmaster's Friend. By Theodore D wight, Jr. The Common School System of New York. By S. S. Randall. Lectures on School-Keeping. By Rev. S. R. Hall. Boston : 1829. Transactions of the Western Literary Institute and College of Pro* fessional Teachers, from 1834 to 1840 ; six vols. 8vo. Cincinnati. American Annals of Education Locke Amsden ; or, the Schoolmaster. By D. P. Thompson. Bos* ton : B. B. Mussey & Co. 12mo. pp. 281. The Architecture of Country Houses. By A. J. Downing. New fork : D. Appleton & Co. 8vo. pp. 484. This is an admirable work, containing so much information on architecture, styles of furniture, modes of warming and ventilation, that it is well deserving a place in every library of our land. Smyth's Lectures on Modern History, with additions, by J. Sparks. Boston : B. B. Mussey & Co. 8vo. pp. 738. Taylor's Manual of Ancient and Modern History, revised by C. S. Henry, D.D. New York : D. Appleton & Co. 8vo. pp. 797. A Dictionary of Arts, Manufactures, and Mines. By Andrew Ure, M.D. New York : D. Appleton & Co. 8vo. pp. 1644. History of Modern Philosophy. By M. Victor Cousin. Translated by 0. W. Wright. New York : D. Appleton & Co. 2 vols. 8vo. pp. 891. How shall I Govern my School ? By E. C. Wines. Philadelphia : W. Marshall & Co. 12mo. pp. 309. American Institutions, and their Influence. By Alexis De Tocque- ville, with notes by J. C. Spencer New York : A. S. Barnes & Co. 8vo. pp. 460. Earth and Man. By Arnold Guyot. Translated by C. C. Felton. Boston : Gould, Kendall & Lincoln. 12mo. pp. 300. The Constitution of Man. By George Combe. Boston : B. B. Mussey & Co. 12mo. pp. 396. Thomson's Seasons, with Notes by James R. Boyd. New York : A. S. Barnes & Co. 12mo. pp. 335. Paradise Lost, with Notes by James R, Boyd. New York : A. 8. Barnes & Co. 12mo. Young's Night Thoughts, with Notes by James R. Boyd. New i'ork : A. S. Barnes & Co. 12mo. pp. 516. The above are very interesting editions of three standard volumes. Chambers' Information for the People, Philadelphia: J. & J. L. Gihon. 2 vols 8yo. pp. 1685. 324 APPENDIX. Graham's English Synonymes, with additions by H. Read, LL D. New York : D. Appleton & Co. 12mo. pp. 344. American Education, its Principles and Elements. By E. D. Mans- field. New York : A. S. Barnes & Co. 12mo. pp. 330. Popular Education. By Ira Mayhew, A.M. New York : Harper & Brothers. 12mo. pp. 467. The Massachusetts Teacher. By a Committee of the Massachusetts Teachers' Association. Boston : Samuel Coolidge. 8vo. pp. 384. 6 volumes already published. Transactions of Massachusetts Teachers' Association. Vol. I. for 1845-47. Boston : Samuel Coolidge. 12mo. pp. 34 . The Elements of Political Economy. By F. Wayland, D D. Bos- ton : Gould & Lincoln. 12mo. pp. 406. Journal of R. I. Institute of Instruction for 1846-47 ; 2 vols. Ed- ited by Henry Barnard. Providence : C. Burnet, Jr. 8vo. Miscellaneous Works of Thomas Arnold, D.D., late Head Mastei of Rugby School. New York : D. Appleton & Co. 8vo. pp. 645. Lectures on Modern History. By Thomas Arnold, D.D. New York : D. Appleton & Co. 12mo. pp. 428. Atlas and Gazetteer of the Holy Scriptures. By the Rev. William Jcnks, D.D. Boston : Jenks, Hickling & Swan. 4to. pp. 157. The Illustrated Atlas and Modern History of the World, Geograph ical, Political, Commercial and Statistical. Edited by R. M. Martin Esq. London and New York : J. Tallis & Co. Essays on Ancient Literature and Art. By Barnas Sears, B. B. Edwards, and C. C. Felton. Boston : Gould & Lincoln. 12mo. pp. 413. The Massachusetts System of Common Schools. Boston : Dutton & Wentworth. 8vo. pp. 212. The Elements of Geology. By Justin R. Loomis. Boston : Gould & Lincoln. 12mo. pp. 198. Chambers' Miscellany of Useful and Entertaining Knowledge. 10 vols. Boston : Gould & Lincoln. Chambers' Cyclopedia of English Literature. 2 vols. 8vo. pp. 2400, and more than 300 elegant illustrations. Boston : Gould & Lincoln. A Compendium of English Literature. By Charles D. Cleveland. Philadelphia : E. C. & J. Biddle. 12mo. pp. 72. Essays on Education. By the Central Society of Education 8 rols. 12mo. London. Logic of Mathematics. By Charles Da-vies, LL.D. New York : A S Barnes & Co APPENDIX. 325 The Common School Journal. Edited by Horace Mann. There are ten or twelve bound volumes of this valuable work. They contain a great variety of matter of interest to teachers and friendt of education. Outlines of Universal History, from the Creation of the World to the Present Day. By George Weber. Boston : Jenks. Hickling & Swan. 8vo. pp. 559. The American Eneyc.oped;a. McCulloch's Geographical and Commercial Dictionaries. Brande's Dictionary of Science, Literature and Art. Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities. Duychink's Cyclopaedia of American Literature. Hudon's Lectures on Shakespeare, 2 vote. Lives of the Chief Justices of the United Suites. The Puritans and their principles. Progress of Nations. American Orators. The six works last named, are published by Charles Scribner, 377 Broadway, N. Y. Putpam's Cyclopaedia of Chronology : or the World's Progress. Antisell's Cyclopaedia of the Useful Arts. Cyclopaedia of Literature and the Fine Arts. Davies' Dictionary of Mathematics : an invaluable work. The four works last named, are published by A. S. Barnes & Co., 51 John Street, New York. Lippincott's Universal Gazetteer, published by J. B. Lippincott, Phila- delphia. In addition to the above works, teachers should take and peruse edu- cational journals. In several of the states the teachers have established periodicals devoted to the interests of their profession ; and all engaged in teaching should see that they do their part in sustaining these works. The States of Massachusetts, New York, Ohio, Missouri, Michigan, Wis- consin, and others, now have such journals, which reflect much credit up-m those who sustau them. 28 BOOKS FOR THE YOUNG. I HATE spoken of the importance of cultivating in the young a taste for reading, and urged attention to the character of the books put into the hands of youth. The number of books prepared for the youthful reader is very large, and many of them are worse than valueless. I shall give a list of a few works that may safely be read by any. In a future edition this list will, probably, be extended. The Rollo Books ; The Lucy Books ; Abbott's Histories ; Franconia Stories, &c. No writer has surpassed Mr. Abbott, in writing good books for the young ; and all of the many volumes prepared by him may be safely recommended, as interesting, instructive and moral, hi their char- acter. Land and Lee ; Sea and Sailor ; Three Years in California ; and Deck and Port, by Rev. W. Colton ; Lives of the Signers of the Dec- laration of Independence ; Sandwich Islands. These interesting volumes are published by A. S. Barnes & Co. New York. Pleasant Pages for Young People. Boston : Gould & Lincoln. Arthur's Library for the Household ; complete in 12 vols. 18mo. Philadelphia : by Lippincott, Grambo & Co. Containing the following volumes : Woman's Trials ; The Ways of Providence ; Home Scenes ; Stories for Young Housekeepers ; Lessons in Life for all who will read them ; Seed-Time and Harvest, or, whatsoever a "nan soweth, that shall he also reap ; Stories for Parents ; Off-hand Sketches a little dashed with Humor ; Words for the Wise ; The Tried and the Tempted, &c. Arthur's New Juvenile Library, beautifully illustrated : Who is Greatest ; Who are Happiest ; The Poor Wood-cutter ; Mr. Have n't- Sfot-time and Mr. Don't-be-in-a-hnrry ; The Peace Makers ; Unol BOOKS FOR THE YOUNG. 327 Ben's New Tear's Gift ; The Wounded Boy ; The Lost Children ; Our Harry ; The Last Penny ; Pierre, the Organ Boy, &c. Arthur's Cabinet Histories of the States. New York, Virginia, Georgia and Kentucky, already published. These are very interest- ing volumes, very neatly bouud, and will form a most valuable addi- tion to books for the young. All the works of Mr. Arthur may be put into the hands of the young with a perfect assurance that they tend to promote a high moral tone Novelties of the New World. By Joseph Banvard. 1 vol. 18mo pp. 324. Boston : Gould & Lincoln. Romance of American History. By Joseph Banvard. 1 vol. 18mo pp. 306. Boston : Gould & Lincoln. American Miscellany. By Francis C. Woodworth. 12rao. pp. 288. Boston : Phillips, Sampson & Co. A Kiss for a Blow. B. B. Mussey Co., Boston. Hernan Cortez ; Henry Hudson ; Daniel Boone ; Hope on, hop? ever ; The Two Apprentices ; The Clock-maker ; My Own Story Which is the Wiser ; Alice Franklin ; Sowing and Reaping ; Work and Wages ; Love and Money ; Stride and Thrive ; Little Coin, Much Care ; The Winter Evening Story Book ; Dangers of Dining Out ; The Minister's Family ; Somerville Hall ; Settlers in Canada ; William Tell ; Scenes in Africa ; Good in Everything ; Guide to Knowledge ; Never Too Late ; The Gold-maker's Village ; The Paris Sketch Book, 2 vols. ; Story of a Genius ; Peasant and Prince ; Philip Randolph ; Domestic Tales ; Rural Tales ; Looking-glass for the Mind ; Ocean Work ; Dawnings of Genius ; Oliver Cromwell ; Poplar Grove ; Chances and Changes ; The Farmer's Daughter ; Crofton Boy Early Friendships. These pretty and interesting volumes are published by D. Appleton & Co., New York. Young Americans Abroad. Boston : Gould & Lincoln. Mitchell's Planetary and Stellar Worlds ; Annals of the Queens of Spiiin ; Washington and his Generals; The Second War with England ; India and the Hindoos; Venice City of the Sea; Domestic History of American Revolution ; Life of Cromwell; Napoleon and his Marshals. These and others are published by Charles Scribner, Broadway, New York. Ricord's Empire of Rome ; Ricord's Kings of Rome ; Republic of Rcme. By A. S. Barnes & Co., John Street, New York. 1 afe of Nathan Hale, by Siuart. F. A. Brown, Hartford, Conn. of COMPLETE IN TWO INDEPENDENT I. THE NATIONAL READERS. By PARKER & WATSON. No. i. National Primer, 64.pp., I6mo, $o 25 No. 2. National First Reader, . . J2S pp., /eio 38 No. 3. National Second Reader, . 22&pp., femo, 63 No. 4 National Third Reader, . . 2SSpp.,J2mo, \ oo No. 5. National Fourth Reader, . . 32 pp., f2mo t \ 50 No. 6. National Fifth Reader, . . eoo pp., /2mo > \ 88 II THE INDEPENDENT READERS. By J. MADISON WATSON. The Independent First Reader, . . sopp.,t6mo t 25 The Independent Second Reader, . too pp., f6mo t 50 The Independent Third Reader, . . 24.0 pp., femo, 75 The Independent Fourth Reader,. . 204. pp., f2mo t \ oo The Independent Fifth Reader, . . sse pp., f2mo, \ 25 The Independent Spelling Book, . faopp., /e of a material and process known only to themselves, in common with all the publications of this house, the National Reader* are war- ranted to outlast any with which they may be compared the ratio of relative du- rability being in their favor as two to one. 2 National Series of Standard School-Sooks. WATSON'S INDEPENDENT HEADERS, C 31133 is designed to meet a general demand for smaller and cheaper books t'uaa the National Series proper, end to cervc as well for intermediate vol. umes of the National Readers in large graded schools requiring more books than one ordinary series will supply. B Ja'ltj- The most casual observer is ot once impressed with the unparalleled mechanical beauty of the Independent Headers. The Publishers believe that tha swthetic tastes of children may receive no small degree of cultivation from their very earliest school books, to pay nothing of the importance of making stuuy at- tractive by all such artificial aids that are legitimate. In accordance with this view, not less than 025,003 was expended in their preparation before publishing, with a result which entitles them to be considered "The Perfection of Common School Books." , SslsstloHS. They contain, of course, none but entirely new selections. There are arranged according to a strictly progressive and novel method of developing the ebmentary sounds in order in the lower numbers, and in all, with a view to topics aud general literary style. The mind is thus led in fixed channels to profi- cieacy in every branch of good reading, and the evil results of ' scattering ' cs prac- tised by most school-book authors, avoided. Th3 Illustrations, as nay be inferred from what has been said, are elegant beyond comparison. They arc profuse in every number of the series from the lowest to the highest. This is the only series published of which this u true. Th.3 TypD is semi-phonetic, the invention of Prof. Watson. By it every letter having more than one sound is clearly distinguished in all its variations without in any way mutilating or disguising the normal form of the letter. E105UtiO!l ii taught by prefatory treatis:? of constantly advancing gradv and completeness in each volume, which are illustrated by wood-cuts in the lower books, and by black-board diagrams in the higher. P.-of. Watson is the first to introduce Practical Illustrations and Black-board Diagrams for teaching this branch. Foot Not33 on every page afford all the incidental instruction which the teacher ia usually required to impart. Indices of words refer the pupil to the place of their first use and definition. The Biographies of Authors and others are in every sense excellent. Although the number of pages in each volume is fixed at the minimum, for the purpose recited above, the utmost amount of matter available without overcrowding is obtained in the space. The pages are much wiilcr and larger than those of any competitor and contain twenty per cent more matter than any other series of the same type and number of pages. All tho Great Features. Besides the above nil the popular features of the National Readers are retained except the Word-BuiMincr fy^tem. The latter gives place to an entirely new method of progressive development, based upon eome of tho best features of the Word System, Phonetics and Object Lessons. 3 The National Series of Standard School-ftooks. The National Readers and Spellers, THEIR RECORD. These books have heen adopted by the School Boards, or official authority, of the following important States, cities, and towns in most cases for exclusive use The State of Minnesota, The State of Texas. The State of Missouri. The State of Alabama. The State of North Carolina. The State of Louisiana. New York. New York City. Brooklyn. Buffalo. Albany. Eochester. Troy. Syracuse. Elmira. &c., &c. Pennsylvania. Reading. Lancaster. Erie. Scranton. Carlisle. Carbondalo. Westchester. Schuylkill Haven. Williamsport. Norristown. Bellefonte. Wilkesbarre. &c., &c. New Jersey. Newark. Jersey City. Paterson. Trenton. Camden. Elizabeth. New Brunswick. Phillipsburg. Orange. &c., I have examined 160 teachers in the last year, and those having studied or taught Clark's System have universally stood fifty per cent better examinations than those having studied other authors. From M. II. B. BCUKF.T, Principal Masonic Institute, Georgetown, Tennessee. ' I traveled two years amusing myself in instructing (exclusively) Grammar classei with Clark's system. The first class I instructed fifty days, but found that this was more time than was required to impart a theoretical knowledge of the science. During the two years thereafter I instructed classes only thirty days each. Invariably I proposed that unless I prepared my classes for a more thorough, minute, ami accu- rate knowledge of English Grammar than that obtained from the ordinary bucks and in the ordinary way in from one to two years, I would make no charge. 1 never failed in a solitary case to far exceed the Lopes of my classes, and made money and character rapidly as an instructor. From A. B. DOUGLASS, School Commissioner, Delaware County, \ew York. I have never known a class pursue the study of it under a lice teacher, that has not succeeded ; I have never known it to have an opponent in an educated teacher who hud thoroughly investigated it; I have never known an ignorant teacher to examine it ; I have never knowu a teacher who has used it, to try any other. From J. A. DOIHJB, Teacher and Lecturer on English Grammar, Kentucky. We are tempted to assort that it foretells the dawn of a brighter age to our mother- tongne. Both pupil and teacher can fare sumptuously upon its contents, however highly they may have prized the manuals into which they may have been initiated. *nd by which their expressions have been moulded. Front W. T. CHAPMAN, Superintendent Public Sihnols, Wellington, Ohio. I regard Clark's System of Grammar the best published. For teaching the analysis of the English Language, it surpasses any I ever used. From F. 9. LVON, Principal South Xorwalk Union School, Connecticut. During ten years' experience iu teaching, I have used nix different authors on the subject of 1'itgiish Grammar. I am fully convinced that Clark's Grammar is better calculated to make thorough grammarians than any other that I have seen. From CATALOGUE OP ROIIBKB'S COMMEBOIAL COLLRUK, St. Lmiiit, Jfi/uunin. We do not hesitate to assert, without fear of successful contradiction, that a better knowledge of the English language can be obtained by this system iu six weeks than by the old methods in as many months. From A. PIOKKTT, President of the State Teachers' Association, Wisconsin. A thorough experiment in the use of many approved authors upon the subject of English Grammar has convinced me of ;he superiority of Clark. When the pupil ha* completed the course, he is left upon a foundation of principle, and uot upon the die* 'nin of the author. Prom GBO. F. MCFABLAND, Prin. McAllisterville Academy, Juniata Co., Penn. At the first examination of public-school teachers by the county superintendent, when one of our student teachers commenced analyzing a sentence according to Clark, the superintendent listened in mute astonishment until he had finished, then asked what that meant, and finally, with a very knowing look, said such work wouldn't do here, and asked the applicant to parse the sentence right, and gave the lowest certifi- cates to all who barely mentioned Clark. Afterwards, I presented him with a copy,' and the next fall he periuil ted it to be partially used, while the third or last fall, he epetiiy commended the system, and appointed three of my best teachers to explain it at th two Institutes and one County Convention held since September. t&~ Fur further testimony of equal force, sue the Publishers' Special Circular, X current uuiubers of the Educational Bulletin. National Series of Standard School-'Books* GEOGRAPHY. NATIONAL GEOGRAPHICAL SYSTEM, THE SERIES. I. Monteith's First Lessons in Geography, . . . $ C5 II. Monteith's New Manual of Geography, . . . 1 10 III. McNally's System of Geography, 2 00 ESrTEI?M:ED T ATE OR ALTERNATE VOLUMES. '"". Monteith's Introduction to the Manual, .... 63 2*. Monteith's Physical and Political Geography, . . 1 88 ACCESSORIES. Monteith's Wall Maps (per sst) *20 00 Monteith's Manual of Mjp-Dravving (Allen's System) . 25 Monteith's Map-Drawing and Object-Lessons, . . 75 Monteith's Map-Drawing Scale *25 1. PRACTICAL OBJECT TEACHING. The infant scholar Is first introduced to a picture whence he may derive notions of the shape of the earth, the phenom- ena of day and night, the distribution of land and water, and the great natural divisions, which mere words would fail entirely to convey to the untutored uiind. Other pictures follow oa the same plan, and the child's mind is called upon to grasp no idea without the aid of a pictorial illustration. Carried on to the higher books, this system culminates in Physical Geography, where such matters as climates, ocean cuneuts, the winds, peculiarities of the earth's crust, clouds and rain, are pictorially explained and rendered apparent to the most obtuse. The illustrations used for this purpose belong to the highest grade of art. 2. CLEAB, BEAUTIFUL, AND CDRUECT MAPS. In the lower numbers the Hiaps avoid unnecessary detail, whila respectively progressive, and affording the pupil new matter for acquisition each time he approaches in the constantly en- larging circle the point of coincidence with previous lessons in the more ele- mentary books. lu the Physical and Political Geography the maps embrace many new and striking features. One of the most effective of these is the new plan for displaying on each map the relative sizes of countries not represented, thus obvi- ating much confusion which has arisen from the necessity of presenting maps in th3 same atlas drawn on different scales. The maps of " McNaJly" have long been celebrated for their superior beauty and completeness. This is the only school- book in which the attempt to make a complete atlas also clear and diftinct, has been successful. The map coloring throughout the series is also noticeable. Delicate and subdued tints take the place of the startling glare of Inharmonious colors which too frequently in such treatises dazzle the eyes, distract the atten- tion, and serve to overwhelm the names of towns and the natural features of the landscape. 9 .1 ational Series oj Standard School- GEOGRAPHY-Continued. 3. THE VARIETY OF MA? EXERCISE. Starting each time from a different basis, the pupil iu many instances approaches the same fact no less than itx times, thus indelibly impressing it upon his memory. At the same time this sys- tem is not allowed to become wearisome the extent of exercise on each subject being graduated by its relative importance or difficulty of acquisition. 4. THE CHARACTER AND ARRANGEMENT OF THE DESCBIPTrVE TEXT. The cream of the science has teen carefully culled, unimportant matter rejected, elaboration avoided, and a brief and concise manner of presentation cul- tivated. The orderly consideration of topics has contributed greatly to simplicity. Due attention is paid to the facts in history and astronomy which are inseparably connected with, and important to the proper understanding of geography and such only are admitted on any terms. In a word, the National System teaches geography as a science, pure, simple, and exhaustive. 5. ALWAYS UP TO THE TIMES, The authors of these books, editorially speaking, never sleep. No change occurs in the boundaries of countries, or of counties, no new discovery is made, or railroad built, that is not at once noted and recorded, and the next edition of each volume carries to every Bchool-room the new order of things. 6. SUPEEIOE GRADATION. This is the only series which furnishes an avail- able volume for every possible class in graded schools. It is not contemplated that a pupil must necessarily go through every volume in succession to attain proficiency. On the contrary, two will suffice, but three are advised ; and if the course will admit, the whole series should be pursued. At all events, the books are at hand for selection, and every teacher, of every grade, can find among them one exactly suited to his class. The best combination for those who wish to abridge the course consists of Nos. 1, 2, and 3, or. where children are somewhat ad- vanced in other studies when they commence geography, Nos. 1*, 2, and 3. Where but two books are admissible, Nos. l*and 2*, or Nos. 2 and 3, are recommended. 7. FORM OF THE VOLUMES AND MECHANICAL EXECUTION. The maps and text are no longer unnaturally divorced in accordance with the time-honored practice of making text-books on this subject as inconvenient and expensive as possible. On the contrary, all map questions are to be found on the page opposite the map itself, and each book is complete in one volume. The mechanical execu- tion is unrivalled. Paper and printing are everything that could be desired, and the binding is A. S. Barns and Company's. 8. MAP-DRAWING. In 1869 the system of Map-Drawing devised by Professor JEROME AIXBN was secured exclusively for thin series. It derives its claim to originality and usefulness from the introduction of a fixed unit of measurement applicable to every Map. The principles being so few, simple and comprehensive, :he subject of Map-Drawing is relieved of all practical difficulty. (In Noe. 2, 2% -;nd 3, and published separately.) 8. ANALOGOUS OUTLINES. At the same time with Map-Drawing was also in- troduced (in No. 2), a new and ingenious variety of Object Lessons, consisting of a omparfson of the outlines of countries with familiar objects piotorially represented. 10 The J\'atiofial Series of Standard School-Books. Monteith & McNally's National Geographies, CRITICAL OPINIONS. From R. A ADAMS, Member of Board of Education, New Tork. 1 have found, by exauiination of the Book of Supply of our Board, that consid- erably the largest number of any sciies now used in our public schools is th< National, by Monteith and McNally. From BBO. PATBICK, Chief Provincial of the Vast Educational Society of the CUBISTIAN BROTHERS in the United States. Having been convinced for some time past that the series of Geographies in use in our schools were not giving satisfaction, and came far short of meeting our most reasonable expectations, I have felt it my imperative duty to examine into this matter, and see if a remedy could not be found. Copies of the different Geographies published in this country have been placed at our command for examination. On account of other pressing duties we have not been able to give as much time to the investigation of all these different series as we could have desired ; yet we have found enough to convince us that there a: e many others better than those we are now using; but we cheerfully give our most decided preference, above all others, to the National Series, by Monteith & McNally. Their easy gradation, their thoroughly practical and independent character, their comprehensive completeness as a full and accurate system, the wise dis- crimination shown in the selection of the subject matter, the beautiful aud copious Illustrations, the neat cut type, the general execution of the works, and oilier ex- cellencies, win commend them to the friends of education everywhere. From the "Hoara MONTHLT," NashviH-!, Tenn. MoNTErrn's AND McNAii/r's GEOGRAPHIES. Geography is BO closely con- nected with Astronomy, History, Ethnology, and Geology, that it is difficult to define its limit j in the construction of a text-book. If the author confines himself strictly to a description of the earth's surface, his book will be drj*, meager, and unintelligible to a child. If, on the other hand, he attempts to give information on the cognate sciences, he enters a boundless field, and may -wander too far. It eeems to us that the authors of the series before us have hit on the happy medium between too much and too little. The First Lessons, by applying the system of object-teaching, renders the subject so attractive that a child, just able to read, may become deeply interested in it. The second book of the course enlarges the view, but still keeps to the maps and simple descriptions. Then, in the third book. e have Geography combined with History and Astronomy. A general view of t.ie solar system is presented, so that the pupil may understand the earth's position on the map of the heavens. The first part of the fourth book treats of Physical Geography, and contains a vast amount of knowledge com- pressed into a small space. It is made bright and attractive by beautiful pictures and suggestive illustrations, on the principle of object-teaching. The maps in the second part of this volume are remarkably clear, and the map exercises are copious and judicious. In the fifth and last volume of the scries, the whole sub- ject is reviewed and systematized. This is strictly a Geography. Its maps are beautifully engraved and clearly printed. The map exercises arc full and com- prehensive. In all these books the maps, questions and descriptions are given in the same volume, in most geographies there arc too many details and minute descriptions more than any child out of purgatory ought to bo required to learn. The power of memory is overstrained ; there is confusion no clearly defined idea is formed in the child's mind. But in these books, in brief, pointed descriptions, and constant "se of bright, accurate map*, the whole subject id photographed on the mind. The National Series oj Standard School -Ziooks. The National System of Geography, BY MONTEITH & McNALLY. ITS RECORD. These popular text-books hare been adopted, by official authority, for the schools of the following States, cities, and associations in most cases for exclusive and uniform use. STATES. CALIFORNIA. MISSOUBI. VERMONT. MINNESOTA. AT.AHAMA, IOWA. NORTH CAROLINA. TENNESSEE. LOUISIANA. KANSAS. TEXAS. MISSISSIPPI. CITIES. New York City. Louisville. Nashville. Portland. Brooklyn. Newark. Utica. Savannah. New Orleans. Milwaukee. Wilmington. Indianapolis. Buffalo. Charleston. Trenton. Springfield. Richmond. Rochester. Norfolk. Wheeling. Jersey City. Mobile. Norwich. Toledo. Hartford. Syracuse. Lockport. Bridgeport. Worcester. Memphis. Dubuque. St. Paul. ASSOCIATIONS. The Society of the CHRISTIAN BROTHERS, representing 40,000 pupils. The FRANCISCAN BROTHERS, 8,000 pupils. AMERICAN MISSIONARY SOCIETY, 50,000 pupils. Monteith's Physical & Intermediate Geography, This is the most recently published of the Geographical Series, and as might have been anticipated, was very warmly received. TESTIMONIALS IN BRIEF. The more I examine the better I am pleased. J. T. GOODNOW, State Stipt. Kans, Has no superior as a text-book. E. J. THOMPSON, Supt. Fillmore Co., Minn. Brief, clear, suggestive, and admirably adapted. E. CONANT, Prin, Vt. Normal. It is a gem of a book. E. A. STRONG, Supt. Public Schools, Grand Rapids, Mich. The best adapted we have seen. O. FAVILLE. State Supt., Iowa. A book that has long been needed. A. J. KINGMAN. Supt. McUenry Co., 111. Prepared with labor, care, and well adapted. C. B. HA'Lsr^EA.v^S'upl.Newbur^^V. Y. The beet Geography ever published. J. HUTCHISON, Prin. Boys' Sch. Jefferson, La. I like it very much. A. J. CRAIG, State Superintendent, Wisconsin. Cannot fail to awaken a new interest. Vermont School Journal. [ Coll., Va. A new field cultivated with great success. T. C. JOHNSON, Pres. Randolph Macon. Contains more common sense than any other. J. AXOKAB, Prin. Madison Ac. Iowa. 12 National Series of Standard School-Hooks. MATHEMATICS. ARITHMETIC. BLATKK 1. Davies' Primary Arithmetic $ 25 2. Davies' Intellectual Arithmetic 40 3. Davies' Elements of Written Arithmetic ... 50 4. Davies' Practical Arithmetic 90 Key to Practical Arithmetic 90 5. Davies! University Arithmetic 1 40 Key to University Arithmetic *1 40 ALG-EBRA. 1. Davies' New Elementary Algebra 1 25 Key to Elementary Algebra *1 25 2. Davies' University Algebra 1 60 1 75 Key to University Algebra *1 60 3. Davies' Bourdon's Algebra 225 245 Key to Bourdon's Algebra *3 25 G-EOMETRY. 1. Davies' Elementary Geometry and Trigonometry 1 40 1 5ft 2. Davies' Legendre's Geometry 2 25 2 45 3. Davies' Analytical Geometry and Calculus . . 2 50 2 70 4. Davies' Descriptive Geometry 2 75 3 00 MENSURATION. 1. Davies' Practical Mathematics and Mensuration 1 46 1 55 2. Davies' Surveying and Navigation 2 50 2 70 3. Davies' Shades, Shadows, and Perspective . . 3 75 4 00 MATHEMATICAL SCIENCE. Davies' Grammar of Arithmetic .* 50 Davies' Outlines of Mathematical Science *1 00 Davies 1 Logic and Utility of Mathematics . . . . . *! 50 Davies' Matric System #1 50 lavies & Peck's Dictionary of Mat:utfta;i^ . - - . .*5 00 13 National Series of Standard School-Books. DAVIES' NATIONAL COURSE of MATHEMATICS, ITS RECORD. In claiming for this series the first place among American test-books, of what- ever class, the Publishers appeal to the magnificent record which its volume} have earned during the thirty-five years of Dr. Charles Davies' mathematical labors. The unremitting exertions of a life-time have \ laced the modern eci ies oil the fame proud eminence among competitors that each of its predecessors hai successively enjoyed in a* course of constantly improved editione, now rounded to' their perfect fruition for it seems almost that this science is susceptible of na further demonstration. During the period alluded to, many authors and editors in this department havo (started into public notice, and by borrowing ideas and processes original with Dr. Davies, have enjoyed a brief i opularity, but are now almost unknown. Many of the series of to-day, built upon a similar basis, and described as " modern books," are destined to a similar fate ; while the most far-seeing eye will find it difficult to fix the time, on the basis of any data afforded by their past history, when these books will cease to increase anil prosper, and fix a still firmer hold en the affection of every educated American. One cause of this unparalleled popularity is found in the fact that the enterprise of the author did not cease with the original completion of his books,. Always a practical teacher, he has incorporated in his text-books from time to time the ad- vantages of every improvement in methods of teaching, and every advance in science. During ell the years in which he has been laboring, he constantly sub- mitted his own theories and those of others to the practical test of the class-room approving, rejecting, or modifying them as the experience thus obtained might suggest. In this way he has been able to produce an almost perfect series of class-books, in which every department of mathematics has received minute and exhaustive attention. Nor has he yet retired from the field. Still in the prime of life, and enjoying a ripe experience which no other living mathematician or teacher can emulate, his pen is ever ready to carry on the good work, as the progress of science may de- mand. Witness his recent exposition of the " Metric System," which received the official endorsement of Congress, by its Committee on Uniform Weights and Measures. DAVIES' SYSTEM is THE ACKNOWLEDGED NATIONAL STANDARD roB THB UNITED STATES, for the following reasons : 1st. It is the basis of instruction in the great national schools at West Point and Annapolis. 2d. It has received the quaA endorsement of the National Congresu. 3d. It is exclusively used in the public schools of the National Capital. 4th. The officials of the Government use it as authority in all cases involving mathematical questions. 6th. Our great soldiers and sailors commanding tho nations! armies ar.d r avies were educated in this system. So have been a majority of eminent scientists in this country. All these refer to "Davies " as authority. 6th. A larger number of American citizens have received their education from this than from any other series. 7th. The series has a larger circulation throughout the whole country than any other, being extensively used in every State in the Union. u The National Series o/ Standard School-Hooks. MATHEMATICS-Continued. ARITHMETICAL EXAMPLES. Reuck's Examples in Denominate Numbers $ 50 Reuck's Examples in Arithmetic 1 oo These volumes differ from the ordinary arithmetic in their peculiarly practical character. They are composed mainly of examples, and afford the most severe and thorough discipline for the mind. While a book which should contain a complete treatise of theory and practice would be too cumbersome for every -day use, the insufficiency of practical examples has been a source of complaint. HIGHER MATHEMATICS. Church's Elements of Calculus 2 60 Church's Analytical Geometry 2 50 Church's Descriptive Geometry, with Shades, Shadows, and Perspective 4 00 These volumes constitute the " West Point Course" in their sever*! departments. Courtenay's Elements of Calculus - < 3 A work especially popular at the South. Hackley's Trigonometry 3 00 With applications to navigation and surveying, nautical and practical geometry and geodesy, and logarithmic, trigonometrical, and nautical tables. APPLIED MATHEMATICS. Peck's Ganot's Popular Physics 1 75 Peck's Elements of Mechanics 1 75 Peck's Practical Calculus 1 75 Prof. \V G. Peck, of Columbia College, has designed the first of these works for the ordinary wants of schools in the department of Natural Philosophy. The work enjoys n high reputation. The Mechanics and Calculus are the briefest treatises on those subjects now published. Their methods are purely practical, and unembarrassed by the details which rather confuse than simplify science. SLATED ARITHMETICS. This consists of the application of an artificially slated surface to the inner cover of a book, with flap of the same opening outward, so that students may refer to the book and use the slate at one and the same time, and as though the slate were detached. When folded up, the slate preserves examples and memoranda till needed. The material used is as durable as the stone slate. The additional cost of books thus improved is trifling. 15 Jfational Scries cf 'ifaitciard School-Hooks. Davies' National Course of Mathematics. TESTIMONIALS. From L. VAN BOKKELEN, State Superintendent Public Instruction, Maryland. The series of Arithmetics edited by Prof. Davies. and published by your firm, have been used lor many years in the school ; of several counties, and the city ol Baltimore, and have beea approved by teachers and commissioners. Under the law of Ibuj, establishing a nnii'onn system cf Free Pul.lie Schools, these- Arithmetics v,-crc unanimously adopted by the State Boiml of EC "neat ion, after ,\ careful examination, and are now used in all the Public Schools of ilary- lanl. These facts evidence the high opinion entertained by the School Authorities ot the value of the series theoretically and practically. From HORACE "WEBSTEB, President of the Colleje cf New York. The undersigned has examined, with care and thought, revere! volumes of Da- viea' Mathematics, and is of the opinion that, as n. whole, it i.s tbe most completes and best course for Academic and Collegiate instruction, with, which he is cc- quainted. From DAVID N. CAMP, State Superintendent of Common Schools, Connecticut. I have examined Davies' Series of Arithmetic? with FOEIO care. The lanj^uage is clear and precise ; each principle is thoroughly analyze -.!, JUK! the whole c'o ar- ranged as to facilitate tho work of instruction. Having observe:! the ratisfacticu and success with which the different books have been iiccd by eminent teachers, it gives me pleasure to commend thera to ethers. From J. O. TVILSOK, Cliairman Committee ox Text-Looks, Washington, D. C. I consider Daviea' Arithmetics decide "ly cupei-jor vo nay other fence, end in this opinion I cm sustained, I believe, Vy tho cuvireEoarclcf Education and Corps of Teachers in this city, where they have boon used ior tevoral year j pact. From JonK L. CAHPSELL, Prcfexcr cf llc.ihemc.tivs, JTclcch College, Indiana. A proper combination of abstract reasoning end practicr.1 illtietration is the chief excellence iu Prof. Davies' Mathematical vorto. I prefer his Arithmetics, Algebras. Geometry and Trigonometry to ell others now in 1'cc, end cordially re- commend them to nil who desire the advancement cf Eoaucl laarning. From MAJOR J. n. WITITTLESEY, Government Incpacter rf I"Jit';r~j CcLools. Be assured, I regard the Trorks of Prof. Baric-*, with which I nn ncmir. r n(c:l. cs l)jr far the best text-boohs in print 0:1 the subjects which they treat. I fhell cer- tainly encourage their adoption wherever a word from me may be cf nny trail. From T. McC. EALLAXTHTI:, Prcf. T'z'.hcmz'.iis C::rnbcrlzn'Z Collie, I?cntuc7:y. 1 have long taught Prof. Davies' Coar53 cf Ilathomatics, and I continue to liha their working. From, JOHN McLiLAH Ezi^, B. A., Priii. of Lower Canada Cotteye. I hnre used Davies 1 Arithmetical end Mathematical Series es text-books in the schools under niy charge for the last eix years. These I have found of great efii- cacy in exciting, invigorating, and concentrating the intellectual lacultics of tho young. Each treatise serves C3 en introduction to the next higher, by the f imilarity of Its reasonings and methods; cud the student JJ carrie.l forward, ly easy cud gradual steps, over tho whole field < f mathematical inoniry, rn'l thct, toe", in a shorter time than ii usually rccupicd i:i mastering n Fintrl" department. 1 1 inccrc- ly and heartily recommend them to tho Attention of my fellow-teachers in Canaclt. From D. \7. ijTEELE, Pri:i. Philefxicn Academy, Cold Sprinc/f, Texas. I have need Davics' Arithmetics ti'l I know them nearly by heart. A better _eries of echool-books never were pnblisherl. I have recommended them r.r.til they are now used in all this region of country. A large mass of similar " Opinions " may be obtataed by cdclressinrj the pub- lisher-; for special circular for Davies' Ma thematic". New recommendations ere published hi current numbers of the Educational Bulletin. 16- J\*at tonal Series cf Standard School-Books. HISTORY Monteilh's Youth's History, $75 A History of tho United States for beginners. It is arranged upon the catechetical j/la.i, with illustrative maps and engravings, review questions, c'..;tcs in parentheses (that their study may be optional with the younger el.iss of learners), and interesting biographical Sketches of all persons who have been prominently identified with the history of our country. Wil lard's United States, School edition, . . . 1 Do. do. University edition, . 2 The plan of this standard work is chronologically exhibited in front of the title-page ; the Maps and Sketches are found useful assistants to the memory, and dates, usually so difficult to remember, are so systematically arranged as in a great degree to obviate the difficulty. Candor, impar- tiality, and accuracy, are the distinguishing features of tho narrative portion. Willard's Universal History, 2 25 The most valuable features of tho " Unite,! States" arc> reproduced in this. The peculiarities of the work are its great conciseness and the prominence given to the chronological order of events. The margin marks each successive era with great distinctness, BO that the pupil rc- t-iins not o.ily the event but its time, nnd thus fixes the order of history f.rnily and usefully i.i his mind. Mrs. TVillani's books are constantly revised, and at all times written u;) to embrace important historical eveuU of i-ecuul date. Berard's History of England, 1 75 I'y an authoress well known for Hio tuccess of her TTistory of the United States. The social lilc of the KnglUh people is felicitously interwoven, as iu fact, with tho civil and military transactions of tlie realm. Ricord's History of Rome, 1 Possesses the charm of an attractive romance. The Fables with which this history abounds arc introduced in such a way as not to deceive the Inexperienced, while adding materially to the value of the work as a reli- able index to the character and institutions, as well as the history of tho lioruau people. Banna's Bible History, 1 25 The only compendium of Bible narrative which affords a connected and chronological view of the important events there recorded, divested of tU superfluous detail. Summary of History, Complete 60 American History, $0 40. French and Eng. Hist. 35 A well proportioned outline of leading events, condensing the substance of the more extensive text-book in common use into a series of statements so brief, that every word may be committed to memory, and yet o comprehensive that it pn-si-ms an accurate though general view of the whole continuous life of cation*. Marsh's Ecclesiastical History, 2 oo Questions to ditto, 75 Affording the History of the Church m all ages, with accounts of thn pagan world during Biblical periods, and the character, rise, and progress of all Religions, as well as the various sects of the worshiper* o/ Christ The work is entirely non-sectarian, though strictly catholie. 17 The National Series of Standard School-Hooks. HISTORY-Continued. BARNES' ONE-TERM HISTORY. A Brief History of the United States, . ? $i 50 This is probably the MOST ORIGINAL SCHOOL-BOOK published for many yeara, in auy department. A lew of us tlaima me the icllowing: 1. Brcvit?. The test is complete for Grammar School or intermediate classes, in 290 12mo pages, large type. It mey readily be completed, il cetired, in one term of study. 2. ConprahansivsneSS. Though so brief, this bock contains the pith of all the wearying contents of the larger manuals, and a great tleal LLOIC than tLe mem- ory usually retains from the latter. 3. Int3r33t has been a prime consideration. Small books have heretofore beuu bare, full of dry i- tatistics, unattractive. This one is charmingly written, replete with anecdote, and brilliant with illustration. 1 Proportion Of Events. It is remarkable for the discrimination with which the different portions of our history are presented according to iheir im- portance. Thus the older works being already large books when the civil war took place, give it less space than that accorded to the Revolution. 5. Arr3.n*3Tn.3nt In Fix epochs, entitled respectively. Discovery and Settle- ment, the Colonies, the Revolution, Growth of States, the Civil War. and Current Events. 6. Catch Words, Each paragraph is preceded by its lending thought in prominent type, standing in the student's mind lor the whole paragraph. 7.. K37 Not 33 Analogous with thia is the idea of grouping battles, etc., about some central event, which relieves the f ameness so ccmn-.on in such de- scriptions, and renders each distinct by some striking peculiarity of its own. 8. Fooi N0j23, These are crowded with interesting matter that is not strictly a part of history proper. They may be learned or i;ot, at pleasure. They are certain in any event to be read. 9. BlO^raphisS of all the leading characters arc given in full in foot-rotes. 10. MllDS. Elegant and distinct Maps from engravings on copper-plate, and beautifully colored, precede each epoch, and contain all the places earned. 11. Question") are at the. back of the book, to compel a more independent use of the text. Both text and questions are to worded that the pupil must give in- telligent answers IN HIS OWN WOHDS. " Yes " and " Ko " will not do. 12. Historical Eacreations, These are additional questions to test the stu- dent's knowledge, in review, as: "What trees are celebrated in our history?" " When did a fog save our army ? " " What Presidents died in cflice '( " ' When was the Mississippi our western boundary 1 '' " Who said, ' I would rather bo right than President ? ' " etc. 13. Til3 Illustrations, about seventy in number, are the work of onrbest artists and engravers, produced at great expense. They are vhid cr.d interest- ing, and mostly upon subjects never before illustrated in a school-book. 14. Dlt33 Only the leading dates are given in the text, and these are so associated as to assist the memory, but at the head of each page is the date of the event first mentioned, and at the close of each epoch a summary of events and dates. 15. T!l3 Philosophy Of History is studiously exhibited the causes and effects of events being distinctly traced and their interconnection shown. IS. Impartiality. All sectional, partisan, or denominational views are avoided. Facts are stated after a careful comparison of nil authorities without the least prejudice or favor. 17. InieS, A verbal index at the close of the book perfects it as a work of reference. It win be observed that the abovo avr r.ll particulars in which School Histories have .been signally defer tivc. or altogether wanting. Many other claims to favor v share* in common with ifc predecessor?. 18 National Series of Standard School &ooks. BOOK-KEEPING Smith & Martin's Book-keeping . - . . *i 25 Blanks to ditto *60 This work Is by a practical teacher and a practical book-keeper. It t of a thoroughly popular class, ai;d will be welcomed by every one wh loves to see theory and practice combined in an easy, concise, and methodical form. The Single Entry portion Is well adapted to supply a want felt In nearly all other treatises, which seem to be prepared mainly for the use of whole- sale merchants, leaving retailers, mechanics, farmers, &c., who transact the greater portion of the business of the country, without a guide. The work is also commended, on this account, for general use in Young Ladies' Seminaries, where a thorough grounding in the simpler form of accounts will be invaluable to tht, future housekeepers of the nation. The treatise on Double Entty Book-keeping combines all the advan- tages of the most recent methods, with the utmost simplicity of application, thus affording the pupil all the advantages of actual experience in the counting-liou. the ease experienced in acquiring the science. DRAWING. < The Little Artist's Portfolio *50 25 Drawing ' lards (progressive patterns), 25 Blanks, and a fine Artist'* Pencil, all In one neat envelope. Clark's Elements of Drawing *i oo Containing full instructions, with appropriate designs and copies for a complete cjurfu in this graceful art, from the first rudiments of outline to the finished sS etches of landscape and scenery. Fowle's Linear and Perspective Drawing '60 For tto cultivation of the eye and hand, with copious illustrations and directiiriB, wh ch will enable the unskilled teacher to learn the art himself while instructing his pupils. Chapman's American Drawing Book . . .*6 oo Tie standard American text-book and authority in all branches of art. Monk's Drawing Books Six Numbers, per set *2 25 Each book contains eleven large patterns with opposing blanks. No. 1. 'C'ementary Studies; No. 2. Studies of Foliage; No. 3. Landscapes; No. 4. Animals, I.; No. 5 Animals, II. ; No. 6. Marine Views, &c. Ripley's Map Drawing 1 25 One of t*e mis' efficient aids to the acquirement of a knowledge of geography ia tne practice of map drawing. It is useful for the same reason that the lefA exercise in orthography is the writing of difficult words. Sight comes to the aid of hearing, and a double impression is produced upon the memory. Knowledge becomes less mechanical and more intui- tive. The student who 1ms sketched the outlines of a country, and dotted the important places, is little likely to forget either. The impression pro duced may be compared to that of a traveler who has been over the ground, while more comprehensive and accurate in detail. 19 J\~ational xrrtes / Xffi/irfrrrrf NATURAL SCIENCE. FAMILIAR SCIENCE Norton & Porter's First Book of Science, $1 75 By eminent Professors of Yale Collage. Contains the principles of Natural Philosophy, Astronomy, Chemistry, Physiology, and Geology. Arranged on the Catechetical plan for primary classes and beginners. Chambers' Treasury of Knowledge, 1 3 Progressive Isssons upon first, common things which He most imme- diately around us, and first attract the attention of the young mind ; second, common objects from the Mineral, Animal, and Vegetable king- doms, manufactured articles, and miscellaneous substances ; third, a sys- tematic view of Nature under the various sciences. May be used as a Eeader or Text-Book. l NATURAL PHILOSOPHY. Norton's First Book in Natural Philosophy, By Prof. NOBTOX, of Yale College. Di-signed for beginners ; profusely illustrated, and arranged on the Catechetical plan. Peck's Ganot's Course of Nat. Philosophy, 1 73 The standard text-book of France, Americanized and popularized by Prof. PECK, of Columbia College. The most magnificent, system of illus- tration ever adopted in an American school-book is here found. For intermediate classes. Peck's Elements of Mechanics, ...... 2 25 A suitable introduction to Birtlett's higher treatises on Mechanics] Philosophy, and adequate in itself for a complete academical course. Bartlett's Synthetic Mechanics, ..... 5 oo Bartlett's Analytical Mechanics, ..... 6 oo Bartlett's Acoustics and Optics, ..... 3 53 A system of Collegiate Philosophy, by Prof. BABTLETT, of 'West Point Military Academy. Steela's 14 Weeks Course in Philos. A successful effort to reduce the study to the limits of a single term, thereby making feasible its general introduction in institutions of every character The author's felicity of style and success in making the science pre-eminently interestiivi are oeculiarly noticeable features. Chemical Apparatus, to accompany "Porter" 20 00 do do to accompany " Steele" 25 00 BOTANY. Thinker's First Lessons in Botany, .... 40 For children. The technical terms are largely dispensed with in favor of an easy and familiar style adapted to the smallest learner. Wood's Object Lessons in Botany, . . . . 1 so Wood's American Botanist and Florist, . . 2 so Wood's New Class-Book of Botany, . . . 3 so The standard text-books of the United States in this department. In style they are simple, popular, and lively; in arrangement, easy and nat- ural ; in description, graphic and strictly exact. The Tables for Analysis are reduced to a perfect system. More are annually sold than of all others combined. Darby's Southern Botany, 2 Embracing general Structural and Physiological Botany, with vegetable products, and descriptions of Southern plants, and a complete Flora of tho Southern States. The National Scries of Standard School-Sootcs. NATURAL SCIENCE-Continued PIIYSIOLOG-Y. Jarvis' Elements elf Physiology, $75 Jarvis' Physiology and Laws of Health, 1 GS The only books extant wiiich approach this subject with a proper view of the true object of teaching Physiology in schools, viz., that scholars in:iy know hour to take care <>f their own health. In bold outrast wilh the abstract Anatomies, which children lean ns they would Greek or Latin (and forget as soo:i), t > discipline the mind, arc these text-books, using the science as a secondary consideration, and only so far as is necessary for the comprehension of tho Liwi of health. Hamilton's Vegetable & Animal Physiology, 1 25 The two branches of the science combine " seil'-tauglit" student!. The directions for ascertain! vj the gjnder of French nouns also a g?eat stumbling-block aro peculiar to thi) work, anj will b3 found romarkv.bl/ competent to the end propo ;cd. Tha criticism of teacher* and thj teat of the school-room u limtoa tj taia ezcollout ficiioo, wii.i c Worman's French Echo, - ..... 1 25 To teach conversational French by aetnr.l practice, on an entirely new plau, which recognizes the importance of the student learning to think in the language which he speaks. It furnishes an extensive vocabulary of' words and expressions in common use, and suffices to free the learner from the embarrassments which the peculiarities of his own tongue are likely to be to him, and to make him thoroughly familiar with tue use of proper idioms. Worman's German Echo, ........ * 25 O.i tho same plan. Sec Worman's German Scries, paga 9. Pujol's Complete French Class-Book, - . 2 25 OST'.rs, in one volume, method icnlly arranged, a complete French conrss usually embraced in serijs of from fiva to twelvo books, including tha bulky and expensive Lexicon. Here aro Grammar, Conversation, and choice Literature selected from ths best French authors. Each branch is thoroughly handled ; and the student, hav'rvi diligently completed tha course as prescribad, may consider himself, without further application, aufatt in the most polite and elegant laaguaga of modern times. Maurice-Poitevin's Grammaire Francaise, ! oo American schools are nt last supplied with an American edition of this famous text-book. Many of our best institutions have for years been pro- caring it e too highly commended. It affords an opportunity for finish and review at once ; while embodying abundant praciico of its own rules. XVillard's Historia de los Estados Unidos, 2 oo The History of the United States, translated by Professors TOLON and DE TOISNOS, will be found a valuable, instructive, a::J catertaioiag read- ing'book for Spanish classes. 27 The National Series of Standard School- "Books. Pujol's Complete French Class-Book. TESTIMONIALS. From PROF. ELIAS PEISSNEB, Union College. I take great pleasure in recommending Pujol and Van Norman's French Class- Bqok. as there is no French grammar or class-book which can be compared with it in completeness, system, clearness, and general utility. From EDWAED NOBTH, President cf Hamilton College. I have carefully examined Pujol and Tan Norman's French Class-Book, and am eatufic.l of its superiority, for college purposes, over a\iy other heretolore uted. We shall not fail to use it with our next class in French. From A. CTJT.TIS, Prcs't cf Cincinnati Literary and Scientific Institute. I am confident that it nay be made an instrument in conveying to the student, in i'rooi six months t3 a year, the art of speaking and writing the French with almost native fluency and propriety. From nir.Aii Or.cuTT, A. M., Prin. Oknwood and Tilden Ladies'" Seminaries. I have nse-J Pujol's French Grammar in my two Eeminaries, exclusively, for more than a yoar, and Lave no hesitation in eaying that I regard it iLe best text- hook in this department extant And my opinion id confirmed by the testimony of Prof. F. De Launay and TIademcicclle llerintlin. They assure me tLat the book is eminently accurate and practical, as tested ia the school-room. From Pcor 1 . Tnro. F. DE FTJUAT, Hebrew Educational Institute, Memphis, Tenn. M. Pujol's French Cranmar is one of the bejrt and most practical woiks. Tbe French language is cho;cu and elegant ia style modern ard cary. It is far su- perior to the other French class-tooka in this country. The f election of the con- versational part is very good, end will interest pupils ; and beir , Germ in instructor. I have shown him both your German grammars. lie has expressed kin approbation of them generally. From Prof. Z. TEST, Ifowland School for Young Ladies, N. Y, I shall introduce the books. From a cursory examination I have no hesitation in pronouncing the Complete Grammar a decided improvement on the text-books at present ia use in this country. From Prof. LEWIS KISTLER, Northwestern Univtrsity, III. Having looked through the Complete Grammar with Eomo care I must say that you hava produced a good book; you may bcr.warded with this gratification that your grammar promotes the facility of learning the German language, and of becoming ucqu.ii.itei with its rich literature. From Pren. J. P. Hous, Stockwell CtMegiute, In*t., Ind. I supplied a cliss with the Elementary Grammar, and it gives complete satlxfac- timi. T!u! conversational and reading exercises are well calculated to illustrate the principles, and lead the student on an easy yet thorough course. I think the Com plato Grammar equally attractive. 30 National Series of Standard School-Hooks* THE CLASSICS. L AT IK. Silber's Latin Course $1 25 The book contains an Kpitome of Latin Grammar, followed by Readme; Kxercises, rrith explanatory Notes and copious References to the leading Latin Grammar!:, and r.lso to the Epitome which precedes the work. Then follow a Latin-English Vocabu- l.iry and Exercises in Latin Prose Composition, being thus complete in itself, and a very suitable work to put in tuo hands of oue about to study the language. Searing's VirgiUs neid, 2 25 It contains only the first six books of the ./Enei-'l. ". A rery carefully constructed Dictionary. 3. Sufficiently copious Notes. 4. Grammatical references to four lead* i:ig Grammars. 5. Numerous Illustrations of the highest order, 6. A superb Map of the Mediterranean and adjacent countries. 7. Dr. S. II. Taylor's "Questions on the jneid." 8. A Metrical Index, and an Essay on the Poetical Style. 9. A photo- graphic fac simile of a i early Latin M.S. 13. The text according to Jahn, but para- graphed according to Ladcwig. 11. Superior mechanical execution. Hanson's Latin Prose Book, 3 oo Hanson's Latin Poetry, 3 oo Andrews & Stoddard's Latin Grammar, *i so Andrews' Questions on the Grammar, *o 15 Andrews' Latin Exercises, . *i 25 Andrews' Viri Romae, *i 25 Andrews' Sallust's Jugurthine War, &c. Andrews' Eclogues & Georgics of Virgil, *i so Andrews' Caesar's Commentaries, .... *i so Andrews' Ovid's Metamorphoses, . . . *i 25 GREEK. Crosby's Greek Grammar, 2 oo Crosby's Xenophon's Anabasis, 1 25 MYTHOLOGY. Dwight's Grecian and Roman Mythology. School edition, $1 25; University edition, *3 00 A knowledge of the fables of antiquity, thus presented ia a systematic form, is as indispensable to the student of general literature as to him who would peruse intelli- rently the classical authors. The mythological allusions so frequent In literature are readily understood with such a Key as this. 27te National Seties of Standard School Soofcs, ELOCUTION. Watson's Practical Elocution $o 25 A brief, clear, and most satisfactory treatise same as in " Independent Fifth Reader." The subject fully illustrated by diagrams. Zachos' Analytic Elocution 1 50 All departments of el'icution such as tin: analysis of the voice and the sentence, phonology, rhythm, expression, gesture, &c. are here arranged for instruction in classes, illustrated by copious examples. Sherwood's Self Culture 1 oo Self-culture In reading, speaking, and conversation a very vnluable treatise to those who would perfect themselves in these accomplishments. SPEAKERS. Northend's Little Orator, *eo Child's Speaker*eo Two little works of the same grade but different selections, containing simple and attractive pieces for children under twelve years of age. Northend's National Orator *i 25 About o'i hundred and seventy choice pieces happily arranged. *Tho design of the author in making the selection has been to cultivate vtna- tilitij of esprution. Northend's Entertaining Dialogues . . . .*i 25 Extracts eminently adapted to cultivate the dramatic faculties, as well as entertair an audience. Swell's Common School Speaker . . . .*! 25 Selections trom recent literature. Raymond's Palriolic Speaker *2 00 A stijHTti rotnnflauon ot modern eloquence and poetry, with oriprinal dramatic exerciser. Nearly every eminent living orator is represented, without distinction of place or party. COMPOSITION, &c. Brookfield's Firsl Book in Composilion . 50 Making the cultivation of this important art feasible for the smallest c^ild. By a new method, to induce and stimulate thought Boyd's Composilion and Rheloric . 1 50 1 his work furnishes all the aid that is needful or can b desired in the various aepartments and styles of composition, both in prc se and verse. Day's Arl of Rheloric * 25 Noted for exactness of definition, clear limitation, and philosophical development of subject ; the large share of attention given to Invention, a a branch of Rhetoric, and the unequalled analysis of style 32 National Series of Standard School- LITERATURE. Cleveland's Compendiums .... each, $*2 50 ENGLISH LITERATURE. AMERICAN LITERATURE. ENG. LIT. OF XIX CENTURY. CLASSICAL LITERATURE. In these four volumes are gathered the cream of the literature of all ages for the school-room and the general reader. Their reputation is national. More than 1-23,000 copies have been sold. Boyd's English Classics each, *l 25 MILTON'S PARADISE LOST. THOMSON'S SEASONS. YOUNG'S NIGHI THOUGHTS. POLLOK'S COURSE OP TIME. COWPER'S TASK, TABLE TALK, &c. LORD BACON'S ESSAYS. This series of annotated editions of great English writers, in prose and poetry, is designed for critical reading and parsing in school?. Prof. J. R. Boyd proves himself an editor of high capacity, and the works themselves need no encomium. As auxiliary to the study of Belles Lettres, etc., these works have no equal. Pope's Essay on Man *20 Pope's Homer's Iliad *so The metrical translation of the great poet of antiquity, and the matchless " Essay on the Nature and State of Man," by ALEXANDER POPE, afford superior etercise in literature and parsing. AESTHETICS. Hunlington's Manual of (he Fine Arts -*i it A view of the rise and progress of Art in different countries, a brief accoun' of the most eminent masters of Art, and an analysis of the prin- ciples of Art It is complete in itself, or may precede to advantage tho critical work of Lord Kames. Boyd's Kames' Elements of Criticism -*i 75 The best edition of this standard work ; without the study of which none may be considered proficient in the science of the Perceptions. No other study can be pursued with so marked an effect upon the taste and refinement of the pupil. POLITICAL ECONOMY. Champlin's Lessons on Political Economy 1 25 An improvement on previous treatises, being shorter, yet containing every thing essential, with a view of recent questions in finance, etc., which is not elsewhere found. 33 The National Series of Standard School- Sooks. ' MENTAL PHILOSOPHY. * Mahan's Intellectual Philosophy . . . .$1 75 The subject exhaustively considered. The author has evinced learn- ing, candor, and independent thinking. Mahan's Science of Logic 2 oo A profound analysis of the laws of thought. The system possesses the merit of being intelligible and self consistent. In addition to the author's carefully elaborated views, it embraces results attained by the ablest minds of Great Britain, Germany, and France, in this department. Boyd's Elements of Logic 1 25 A systematic and philosophic condensation of the subject, fortified with additions from Watts, Abercrombie, Whately, &c. Watts on the Mind .......... 50 The Improvement of the Mind, by Isaac Watts, is designed as a guide for the attainment of useful knowledge. As a text-book it is unparalleled ; and the discipline it affords cannot be too highly esteemed by the edu- cator. M O RJ^LjT Alden's Text-Book of Ethics o For young pupils. To aid in systematizing the ethical teachings of the Bible, and point out the coincidences between the instructions of the sacred volume and the sound conclusions of reason. Willard's Morals for the Young . . . . *75 Lessons in conversational ityle to inculcate the elements of moral phi- losophy. The study is made attractive by narratives and engravings. GOVERNMENT. Howe's Young Citizen's Catechism .... 75 Explaining the duties of District, Town, City, County, State, and United States Officers, with rales for parliamentary and commercial busi- ness that which every future " sovereign" ought to know, and so few are taught Young's Lessons in Civil Government . 1 25 A comprehensive view of Government, and abstract of the laws show- ing the rights, duties, and responsibilities of citizens. Mansfield's Political Manual 1 25 This is a complete view of the theory and practice of the General and State Governments of the United States, designed as a text-book. The author is an esteemed and able professor of constitutional law, widely known for his sagacious utterances in matters of statecraft through the public press. Recent events teach with emphasis the vital necessity that the rising generation should comprehend the noble polity of the Amer- ican government, that they may act intelligently when endowed witk voice i it. 34 The National Series of Standard School-Hooks. PENMANSHIP. Beers' System of Progressive Penmanship. Per dozen $1 68 This "round hand" system of Penmanship in twelve numbers, com- mends itself by its simplicity and thoroughness. The first four numbers nre primary books. Nos. 6 to 7, advanced books for boys. Nos. 8 to 10, advanced books for girls. Nos. 11 and 12, ornamental penmanship. These books are printed from steel plates (engraved by McLees), and are unexcelled in mechanical execution. Large quantities are annually sold. Beers' Slated Copy Slips, per set *50 All beginners should practice, for a few weeks, slate exercises, familiar- izing them with the form of the letters, the motions of the hand and arm, &c., &c. These copy slips, 32 in number, supply all the copies found in a complete seiies of writing-books, at a trifling cost. Payson,Dunton&Scribner's Copy-B'ks.P-doztl 80 The National System of Penmanship, in three distinct series (11 Com- mon School Series, comprising the first six numbers ; (2) Business Series, Nos. 8, 11, and 12 ; (3) Ladies' Series, Nos. 7, 9, and 10. Fulton & Eastman's Chirographic Charts,*3 75 To embellish the school room walls, and furnish class exercise in the elements of Penmanship. PaySOn'S Copy-Book Cover, per hundred .*4 00 Protects every page except the one in use, and furnishes "line*" with proper lope for the penman, under. Patented. National Steel Pens, Card with all kinds . . . *15 Pronounced by competent judges the perfection of American-made pens, and superior to any foreign article. SCHOOL SERIES. School Pen, per gross, . .$ 60 Academic Pen, do . . 63 Fine Pointed Pen, per gross 70 POPULAR SERIES. Capitol Pen, per gross, . . 1 00 do do pr. box of 2 doz. 25 Bullion Pen (imit gold) pr. gr. 75 Ladies' Pen do 63 Index Pen, per gross ... 75 BUSINESS SERIES Albata Pen, per gross, . Bank Pen, do . Empire Pen, do . Commercial Pen, per gross Express Pen, do Falcon Pen, do Elastic Pen, do 40 70 70 60 75 70 75 Stimpson's Scientific Steel Pen, per gross .*2 oo One forward and two backward arches, ensuring great strength, well- balanced elasticity, evenness of point, and smoothness of execution. One gross in twelve contains a Scientific Gold Pen. Stimpson's Ink-Retaining Holder, per doz. .*2 oo A simple apparatus, whic.. does not get out of order, withholds at a single dtp as much ink a the pen would otherwise realize from a dozen trips to tho inkstand, which it supplies with moderate and easy flow. Stimpson's Gold Pen, $3 oo ; with Ink Retainer** 50 Stimpson's Penman's Card, * 60 On* dozen S tel Pans (assorted points) and Patent Ink-retaining Pn holder. 35 27te National Teachers' Library. THE TEACHER'S LIBRARY. The Metric System Davies $*i 50 Considered with reference to its general introduction, and embracing the views of John Quincy Adams and Sir John Ilerschel. The Student Phelps *i so The Educator Phelps *i 50 The Discipline of Life-Phelps *i 75 The authoress of these works is one of the most distinguished writers on education ; and they cannot fail to prove a valuable addition to the Scho_ol and Teachers' Libraries, being in a high degree both interesting and instructive. A Scientific Basis of Education Meeker *2 50 Adaptation of study and classification by temperaments. Object Lessons Welch . ..... .*i oo This is a complete exposition of the popular modern system of "object- teaching," for teachers of primary classes. Theory and Practice of Teaching Page -*i so This volume has, without doubt, been read by two hundred thousand teachers, and its popularity remains uudiminished large editions being exhausted yearly. It was the pioneer, as it is now the patriarch of professional works for teachers. The Graded School Wells *l 25 The proper way to organize graded schools is here illustrated. Tho author has availed himself of the bust elements of the several systems prevalent in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, St. Louis, and other cities. The Normal-Holbrook .*i 76 Carries a working school on its visit to teachers, showing the most ap- proved methods of teaching uil the common branches, including the tech- nicalities, explanations, demonstrations, and definitions introductory and peculiar to each branch. The Teachers' Institute Fowle * - .*i 25 This is a volume of suggestions inspired by the author's experience at Institutes, in the instruction of young teachers. A thousand points of in- terest to this class are most satisfactorily dealt with, 86 National Teachers' Ziibrary. The Teacher and the Parent Northend . 1*1 50 A treatise upon common-school education, designed to lead teachers to view their calling iu its true light, and to stimulate them to fidelity. The Teachers' Assistant Northend . . .*i 50 A natural continuation of the author's previous work, more directly calculated for daily use in the administration of school discipline and in- I str action. School Government Jewell ....... *i 50 Full of advanced ideas on the subject which its title indicates. The cri- ticism* upon current theories of punishment and schemes of administra- tion have excited general attention and comment. Grammatical Diagrams Jewell . -*i oo The diagram system of teaching grammar explained, defended, and improved. The curious in literature, the searcher for truth, those inter- ested in new inventions, as well as the disciples of Prof. Clark, who would see their favorite theory fairly treated, all want this book. There are many who would like to be made familiar with this system before risking iU use in a class. The opportunity is here afforded. The Complete Examiner Stone . ' .*i as Consists of a series of questions on every English branch of school and academic instruction, with reference to a given page or article of leading text-books where the answer may be found in full. Prepared to aid teuchers in securing certificates, pupils in preparing for promotion, and teachers in selecting review questions. School Amusements Root ...... *i 5p To assist teachers in making the school interesting, with hints upon the management of the school-room. Rules for military and gymnastic exer- cises are included. Illustrated by diagrams. Institute Lectures on Mental and Moral Culture Bates ......... *i 50 These lectures, originally delivered before institutes, are based upon various topics of interest to the teacher. The volume is calculated to prepare the will, awaken the inquiry, and stimulate the thought of the xeal'jus teacher. Method of Teachers' Institutes Bates- * 75 Sets forth the best method of conducting institutes, with a detailed ac- count of the object, organization, plan of instruction, and trno theory of education on which such instruction should be based. History and Progress of Education - -*l 50 The systems of education prevailing in all nations and ages, the gradual advance to the present time, and the bearing of the past upon the present 'n this regard, are worthy of the careful investigation of all concerned in 37 The National Teachers' library. American Education Mansfield $1 60 A treatise on the principles and elements of education, as practiced in this country, with ideas towards distinctive republican and Christian edu- cation. American Institutions De Tocqueville .*i 50 A valuable index to the genius of our Government. Universal Education Mayhew *i 75 The subject is approached with the clear, keen perception of one who has observed its necessity, and realized its feasibility and expediency alike. The redeeming and elevating power of improved common schools constitutes the inspiration of the volume. Higher Christian Education Dwight -*i so A treatise on the principles and spirit, the modes, directions, and ra- snlts of all true teaching ; showing that right education should appeal to every element of enthusiasm in the teacher's nature. Oral Training Lessons Barnard .... *1 00 The object of this very useful work is to furnish material for instruc- tors to impart orally to their classes, in branches not usually taught in common schools, embracing all departments of Natural Science and much general knowledge. Lectures on Natural History Chadbourne * 75 Affording many themes for oral instruction in this interesting science especially in schools where it is not pursued as a class exercise. Outlines of Mathematical Science Davies *i oo A manual suggesting the best methods of presenting mathematical In. traction on the part of the teacher, with that comprehensive view of the whole which is necessary to the intelligent treatment of a part, in science. Logic & Utility of Mathematics Davies -*i 60 An elaborate and lucid exposition of the principles which lie at the foundation of pure mathematics, with a highly ingenious application of their results to the development of the eosential idea of the different branches of the science. Mathematical Dictionary Davies & Peck .*5 oo This cyclopmdia of mathematical science defines with completeness, precision", and accuracy, every technical term, thus constituting a popular treatise on each branch, and a general view of the whole subject School Architecture-Barnard ...... .*2 25 Attention is here called to the vital connection between a good school house and a good school, with plans and specifications for securing the former in the most economical and satisfactory manner. 38 THE SCHOOL LIBRARY. The two elements of Instruction and entertainment were never more happily com- bined than in this collection of standard books. Children and adults aivke will here find ample food for the mind, of the sort that is easily digested, while not degene- rating to the level of modern romance. LIBRARY OF LITERATURE. Millon'S Paradise Lost Boyd's Illustrated Ed.$l 60 Young's Night Thoughts do. . . i GO Cowper's Task, Table Talk, &c. -do. . . i 60 Thomson's Seasons do. . . i 60 Pollok's Course of Time .... do. . . i 60 These great moral poems are known wherever the English language is read, and are regarded as models of the best and purest literature. The books are beautifully illustrated, and notes explain all doubtftil mean- ings, and furnish other matter of interest to the general reader. Lord BaCOn'S Essays, (Boyd's Edition.) . . . 1 60 Another grand English classic, affording the highest example ef parity in languags and style. The Iliad Of Homer. Translated by POPE. . 80 Thosii who ire unable to read this greatest of ancient writers in the original, should not fail to avail themselves of this metrical version by an eminent scholar and poet. The Poets of Connecticut Everest . i 76 With the biographical sketches, this volwne forms a complete history f the poetical literature of the State. The Son of a Genius Hofland ...... 75 A juvenile classic which never wears out, and finds many interested readers in every generation of youth. Lady Willoughby . . i oo The diary of a wife and mother, An historical romance of the seven- teenth century. At once beautiful and pathetic, entertaining and in- structive. The Rhyming Dictionary Walker . i as A serviceable manual to composers of rhythmical matter, betas; a com- plete index of allowable rhymes. 39 National School JLibrary. LITERATURE-Continued. Compendium of Eng. Literature Cleveland,^ 50 English Literature of XIX Century . . do . . 2 50 Compendium of American Literature do . . 2 so Compendium of Classical Literature do ... . 2 50 Nearly one hundred and fifty thousand volumes of Prof. CLEVELAND'S inim- itable compendiums have beeu sold. Taken together they present a complete view of literature " from Homer to Holmes from the first Greek to the latest American author." To the man who can afford bnt a few books these will tup- ply the place of an extensive library. From commendations of the very Lighes-t authorities the following extracts will give some idea of the enthusiasm with which the works are regarded by scholars : With the Bible and your volumes one might leave libraries without very pain- ful regret. The work cr.nrot be found from which in the same limits so much interesting and valuable information may be obtained. Good taste, fine BcLolar- ebip, familiar acquaintance with literature, unwearied industry, tact acquired by practice, an interest in the culture of the young, and regard for trrtb. purity, philanthropy and religion are united in Mr. ClevrlanO. A judgment tki.r and impartial, a taste at once delicate and severe. The biographies are juet and discriminating. An admirable bird's eye view. Acqnaii.ts thereacer with the characteristic method, tone, and quality of each writer. Succinct, carefully written, and wonderfully comprehensive in detail, etc., etc. Wilton's Poetical Works Cleveland . 2 so This is the very best edition of the great Poet. It includes a life of the author, no_tes, dissertations on each poem, a faultless text, and is t/ie only edition of Milton with a complete verbal Index. LIBRARY OF REFERENCE. Home Cyclopaedia of Chronology . . . . 3 oo An index to the sources of knowledge a dictionary of dates. Home Cyclopaedia of Geography- ... . 3 oo A complete gazetteer of the world. Home Cyclopaedia of Useful Arts . . . . 3 oo Covering the principles and practice of modern pcientiflc enterprise, with a record of important inventions in aarricnlture, architecture, domestic economy, engineering, machinery, manufactures, mining, photogenic and telegraphic trt, &c., &c. Home Cyclopaedia of Literature & Fine Arts 3 co A complete index to all terms employed in belles lettres, philosophy, theology, law, mythology, painting, music, sculpture, architectnre, and all kindred arts. 40 National School Library. LIBRARY OF TRAVEL. Life in the Sandwich Islands Cheever -$i 50 The " heart of the Pacific, as it was and is," shows most vividly the contrast between the depth of degradation and barbarism, and the light and liberty of civilization, so rapidly realized in these islands under the humanizing influence of the Christian religion. Illustrated. Peruvian Antiquities Von Tschudi- . 1 so Travels in Peru Von Tschudi 1 so The first of these volumes affords whatever Information has been at- tained by travelers and men of science concerning the extinct people who once inhabited 1'eru, and who have left behind them many relics of a wonderful civilization. The "Travels" furnish valuable information concerning the country and its inhabitants as they now are. Illustrated. Ancient Monasteries of the East Curzon 1 so The exploration of these ancient seats of learning has thrown much light upon the researches of the historian, the philologist, and the theo- logian, as well as the general student of antiquity. Illustrated. Discoveries in Babylon & Nineveh Lay ard 1 75 Valuable alike for the information imparted with regard to these most interesting ruins, and the pleasant adventures and observations of the author in regions that to most men seeiu like Fairyland. Illustrated. A Run Through Europe Benedict, 2 oo A work replete with instruction and interest. St. Petersburgh Jermann * Americans are less familiar with the history and social cnstoms of the Russian people than those of any other modern civilized nation. Oppor- tunities such as this book affords are not, therefore, to be neglected. The Polar Regions Osborn 1 25 A thrilling and intensely interesting narrative of one of the famous ex- peditions in search of Sir John Franklin unsuccessful in its main object, but adding many facts to the repertoire of science. Thirteen Months in the Confederate Army 75 The author, a northern man conscripted into the Confederate service, and rising from the ranks by soldierly conduct to positions of responsi- bility, had remarkable opportunities for the acquisition of facts respect- ing the conduct of the Southern armies, and the policy and deeds of their leaders. He participated in many engagements, and his book is oue of the most exciting narratives of adventure ever published. Mr. Steven- e/m takes no cround as a partizan. but views the whole subject as with the eye of a neutral only interested in Biioserviug the ends of history by the contribution of impartial tacts. Illustrated. -41 National School Library LIBRARY OF HISTORY. History of Europe Alison $2 50 A reliable and standard work, which covers with clcnr, connected, and complete narrative, the eventful occurrences transpiring from A. D. 178'J to 1815, being mainly a history of the career of Napoleon Bonaparte. History of England Berard 1 75 Combining a history of the social life of '.lie English people with that of the civil and military transactions of the realm. History of Rome Ricord 1 GO Possesses all the charm of an attractive romance. The fables with which this history abounds are introduced in such away MR net to deceive th- inexperienced reader, while adding vastly to the interest of the work am! affording a pleasing index to the genius of the Roman people. lllus- traUd. The Republic of America Willard . 2 25 Universal History in Perspective Willard 2 25 From thfse two comparatively brief treatises the intelligent mind mny obtain a comprehenolye knowledge of the history of the world in both hemispheres. Mrs. Willard' s reputation ae an historiar vj wid an th<< land. Illusti tted. Ecclesiastical History Marsh 2 oo A history of the Church in all ages. >rith a comprehensive review of all forms of religion fr.m the creation of the world. No otner source affords, in the same conipasb, the information here conveyed. History of the Ancient Hebrews Mills . . 1 75 The record of " God's people" from the call of Abraham to the destruc- tion of Jerusalem ; gathered from sources sacred aud profane. The Mexican War Mansfield 1 50 A history of Us origii , and a detailed account of Its victories ; with official dispatches, the ti aty of peace, aud valuable tables. Illustrated. Early History of Michigan Sheldon . . l 75 A work of value and deep interest to the people of the West. Com- piled under th supervision of Uou. Lewis Casn. UmbvUixueJ with pur- traits. 42 National School Library. LIBRARY OF BIOG-RAPHY. Life of Dr: Sam. Johnson Boswell - -$2 25 This work has been before the public for seventy years, with increasing approbation. Boswell is known as " the; prince cf biographers.'* Henry Clay's Life and Speeches Wallory 2 vols 4 50 This great American statesman commands the admiration, and Ms character and deeds solicit the study of every patriot Life & Services of General Scott Mansfield 1 76 The hero of the Mexican war, who was for many yearn the most promi- nent figure in American military circles, should not be forgotten in the whirl of more recent events than those by which he signalized himself! Illustrated. Garibaldi's Autobiography . . . " . . . . 1 60 The Italian patriot's record of his own life, translated and edited by his friend and admirer. A thrilling narrative of a romantic career. With portrait. Lives of the Signers Dwight 1 so The memory of the noble men who declared onr country free at the peril of their own "lives, fortunes, and sacred honor," should be em- balmed in every American's heart. Life of Sir Joshua Reynolds Cunningham 1 so A candid, truthful, and appreciative memoir of the great painter, with a compilation of his discourses. The volume is a text-book for artists, as well as thus* who would acquire the rudiments of art. With a portrait. Prison Life . . . . * 76 Interesting biographies of celebrated priscners and martyrs, deiigneJ !/ for the instruction and cultivation of youth. 43 National c/too Library. LIBRARY OF NATURAL SCIENCE. The Treasury of Knowledge ..... .$! 25 A eyclopsedia of ten thousand common things, embracing the widest range of subject-matter. Illustrated. Ganot's Popular Physics ........ 1 75 The elements of natural philosophy for both student and the general leader. Tha original work is celebrated for the magnificent character of its illustrations, all of which aru literally reproduced here. Principles of Chemistry Porter ..... 2 oo A work which commends itself to tne amateur in science by its extreme simplicity, and careful avoidance of unnecessary detail. Illustrated. Class-Book of Botany Wood . ... . . 3 50 Indispensable as a work of reference. Illustrated. The Laws of Health Jarvis ..... . . 1 65 This is not an abstract anatomy, but all its teachings nre directed to the best methods of preserving health, as inculcated by an in^lligent know- ledge of the structure and needs ef the human body. Illustrated. Vegetable & Animal Physiology Hamilton l 23 An exhaustive analysis of the conditions of life in all animate nature. Illustrated. Elements of Zoology Chambers ..... l so A complete view of the animal kingdom as a portion o/ external nature. Illustrated. Astronography Willard ........ l oo The elements of astronomy in a compact and readable form. Illus- trated. Elements of Geology Page ... l 25 The subject presented in its two aspects of interesting and important. Illustrated. Lsctures on Natural History Chadbourne 75 The subject is here considered in its relations to intellect, taste, health, and religion. . ^rational School library. VALUABLE LIBRARY BOOKS. The Political Manual Mansfield ..... $1 25 Every American youth should be familiar with the principles of the guverniueut under which he lives, especially as the policy of this country will one day call upon him to participate in it, at least to the extent of his ballot. American Institutions De Tocqueville . . 1 50 Democracy in America De Tocqueville . 2 25 The views of this distinguished foreigner on the genius of our political institutions are of unquestionable value, as proceeding from a standpoint whence we seldom have an opportunity to hear. Constitutions of the United States 2 25 Contains the Constitution of the General Government, and of the seve- ral State Governments, the Declaration of Independence, and other im- portant documents relating to Americau history. Indispensable as a work of reference. Public Economy of the United States -2 25 A full discussion of the relations nf the United States with other na- tions, especially the feasibility of a free-trade policy. Grecian and Roman Mythology Dwight 3 CO The presentation, in a systematic form, of the Fables of Antiquity, affords most entertaining rending, and is valuable to nil us an i :drx to the mythological allusions so frequent in literature, as well as t students of tlu> classics who would peruse intelligently the classical authors. Illus- trated. Modern Philology Dwight ....... 1 75 The science of language is here placed, in the limits of a moderate volume, within the reach of all General View of the Fine Arts Hunlington 1 75 The preparation of this work was suggested by the interested inquiries of a group of young people, concerning the productions and styles of the great masters of art, whose names only were familiar. This statement is sufnciimt index of its character. Morals for the Young Willard ..... 75 A scries of moral stories, by one of the most experienced of American educators. Illustrated. Improvement of the Mind Isaac Watts pers 45 A classical standard. No young person should grow up without having rused it National Series of Standard School- A. S. Barnes & Company [From tb* Nw You FiTHnxDiR, Aig. 18M.J This well-known and long-established Book and Stationery House ha* recently ra- noTtd from the premises with which it has been identified for orer twenty year*, to the fine buildings, Nos. Ill and 113 William Street, corner of John Street, New York, no block only from the old store. Here they have been enabled to organize their ex- tensive business in all its departments more thoroughly than ever before, and enjoy facilities possessed by no other house in New York, for handling in large quantities and at satisfactory prices every thing in (heir line. A visit to this large establishment will well repay the curious. On entering, we find the first floor occupied mainly by offices appertaining to the different departments of the business. The first encountered is the " Salesman's Office," where attentive young men are always in waiting to supply the wants of customers. Further on we come to the Entry Department, where all invoices from the several sales-rooms are collected and recorded. Next comes the General Office of the firm. Then a modest sign indicates the entrance to the "Teachers' Heading- Room" a spacious and inviting apartment set apart for the use of the many professional friends and visitors of this house. On the table we noticed files of educational journals and other periodical matter while a book-case contains a fine selection of popular publications as samples. The private office of the senior partner, and the Book-keeper's and Mailing Clerk's respective apartments, are next in order, and complete the list of offices on this floor. The re- mainder of the space is occupied by the departments of stock known as "Lite Publi- cations " and " General School Books." Descending to the finely lighted and ventilated basement, we find the " Exchange Trade," " Shipping," and " Packing" departments. Here, also, is kept a heavy stock of the publications of the house, while a scries of vaults under the sidewalk afford accommodation for a variety of heavy goods. Stepping on the platform of the fine Otis' Steam-elevator, which runs from bottom to top of the building, the visitor ascends to the Second Story. This floor is occupied by the Blank Book and Stationery Depart- ment, where are carried on all the details of an entirely separate business, by clerks especially trained in this line. Here every thing in the way of Imported and domestic stationery is kept in vast assortment and to suit the wants of every class of trade. The system of organization mentioned above enables this house to cempete successfully with those who make this branch a specialty, while the convenience to Booksellers of making all their purchases at one place is indisputable. On the third floor are found the following varieties of stock : Toy and Juvenile Books, Bibles and Prayer Books. Standard Works, Photograph Albums, ic. The fourth and fifth stories are occupied as store-rooms for Standard School Stock. During the summer, while all the manufacturing energies of the concern are devoted to the preparation and accumulation of stock for the fall trade, upwards of half a million of volumes are gathered in those capacious rooms at once. The manufacturing department of this house is carried on iu the old premises, Nos. 61, 63, and 55 John Street, and 2, 4. snd 6 Dutch Street A large number of opera- tives, with adequate presses and machinery, are constantly employed in turning out Uw popular publications of the firm 46 National Series of Standard School- Books. The Peabody Correspondence, NKW YORK, April 29, iStfT. To THE BoARn OP TKUSTKM OF THB PBAPODT EIMJOATIONAI, FnNi>: GKNTI.KMF.N Having boen for many years intimately connected with the educa- tional interestii of the South, we are desirous of expressing our appreciation of the noble charity which you represent. The Peabody Fund, to encourage and aid com- mon schools in these war-desol:ited States, can not fail of accomplishing a great a.-.J good work, the beneficent results of which, as they will be exhibited in the future, not only nf the stricken population of the South, but of the nation at large, seem almost i:i calculable. It is probable that the use of meritorious text-books will prove a most effective agency toward the thorough accomplishment of Mr. Peabody's benevolent design. As we publish many which are considered such, we have selected from our list some of the most valuable, and ask the privilege of placing them in your hands for gratuitous distribu- tion in connection with the fund of which you have charge, among the teachers and in the schools of the destitute South. Observing that the training of teachers (through the agency of Normal Schools and otherwise) is to be a prominent feature of your undertaking, we offer you for this pur- pose 5,000 volumes of the " Teachers' Library," a series of professional works de- signed for the efficient self-education of those who are in their turn to teach others- as follows: 600 Page's Theory and Practice of Teach- 250 Bates' Method of Teachers' Institutes- ing. 290 Ue Tocqueville's American Institut'ns. 500 Welch's Manual of Object- Lessons. 250 D wight's Higher Christian Kducation, 500 Duvies' Outlines of Mathematical 250 History of Education. Science. 250 Mansfield on American Education. 250 Holbrook's Normal Methods of 250 Mayhew on Universal Kducation. Teaching. 250 Northern's Teachers' Assistant. 250 Wells on Graded Schools. 250 Noitlieud's Teacher and Parent. 250 Jewell on School Government 250 Koot on School Amusement*. 250 Fowle's Teachers' Institute. 250 Stone's Teachers' Examiner. In addition to these we also ask that yon will accept 25,OuO volumes of school-books for intermediate classes, embracing 5,000 The National Second Reader. 5,000 Beers' Penmanship. 5,000 navies' Written Arithmetic. 500 First Hook of Science. 5,000 Mouteith'ft Second Book in Geogra- 500 Jarvis' Physiology and Health. phy. 500 Puck's Ganot's Natural Philosophy. 3,000 Moateith's United States History. 500 Smith & Martin's Book-keeping. Should your Board consent to undertake the distribution of these volumes, we shall hold ourselves in readiness to pack and ship the same in such quantities and to such points as you may designate. We further propose '.hat, should you find it advisable to use a greater quantity of our publications in the prosecution of your plans, we will donate, for the benefit of this cause, twenty-five per cent, of the usual wholesale price of the books needed. Hoping that our request will meet with your approval, and that re may have the pleasure of contributing in this way to wants with which we deeply sympathize, we are, gentlemen, very respectfully yours, A. 8. BAR.NKS & CO. Bosroa, May 7, 1867 MESSES. A. S. BABTOB & Co., Pnm.isiiEns, NEW YOKK: GENTI.EMK.V Your communication of the 29th ult, addressed to the Trustees of tha Peabody Kilucitio.i Fund, hn been Inn In 1 to ma by our general agent, the Rev. Dr. Sears. I shall take the greatest pleasure in laying it before the board at their earliest ceetkig. I am unwilling, however, to postpone its acknowledgment so long, and hasten to assure you of the. hi.^li value which 1 place upon your gift. Five thousand volumes of your "Teachers' Library," and twenty-five thousand volumes of " School- nooks for intermediate classes," make up a most munificent contribution to the cause of Southern education in which we are engaged. Dr. Sears is well acquainted with the books you have so generously off-red i s, aud unites with me in the highest apprecia- tion of the gift. You will he gUd to know, too, that your letter reached us i.i season to be ^mmunfcatcd to Mr. Peabody, before he embarked for England on the 1st iu- jtant, and that he expressed the greatest gratification and gratitude on hearing what you had offered. Believe me, gea'Jemoa with the highest respect and regard, y( nr obliged and obo- Went sarwsat. KOBT. O. WIXTHKOP, Chairman. 47 27ie National Series of Standard School -Books* TEACHERS' AIDS. Brooks' School Manual of Devotion ... 75 This volume contains daily devotional jxercises, co-sisting of a hymn, eductions of scripture for alternate reading by teacher and pupil*, and a prayer. Its valuo lor opening aud closing school is apparent. Cleaveland's School Harmonist ..... *70 Contains appropriate tunes for each hymn in the " Manual of Devo- tioa" described above. The Boy Soldier ' .......... 75 Complete i-ifantry tactics for schools, with illustrations, for the use of thnse who would introduce this pleasing relaxcitien from the confining duties of the desk. Welch's Object Lessons ....... *i oo Invaluable for teachers of primary school;. Contains tne best explana- tion of the Pestalozzian nystem. By its aid the proficiency of pupils and the general interest of tlio school may be increased one hundred per cent. Tracy's School Record ..... . *75 To record attendance, deportment, and scholarship; containing also many useful tables and FUggestious to teachers, that are worh of them* selves the price of the book. Tracy's Pocket Record ......... *65 A portable edition of the School Kccord, Without the tables, &c, Brooks' Teacher's Register . ... . .*i oo Carter's Record and Roll-Book . ' .- . . .*2 50 For large gradr.d schools. National School Diary, per dozen ..... *i oo A little book of blank forms for weekly report of the standing of each Mholar, from teacher to parent A great conveuieuc*. 43 UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY Los Angeles This book is DUE on the last date stamped below. SUBJECT TO FINE IF EDUCATION AUG 14 162 JIM '7 C ED/PSYClk VED PW Lib. MOT RETURNED TO LIBRARY Form L9-25m-3,'61(B8165s4)444 iis' Klafleniafics. And Only Thorough and Complete Mathematical Series. /. COMMON SCHOOL COURSE. Da vies' Primary Arithmetic. The fundamental principles displayed in Object Lessons. Davies' Intellectual Arithmetic. Referring all operations to the unit 1 as the only tangible basis for logical development. Davies' Elements of Written Arithmetic. A practical introduction to the whole subject. Theory subordinated to Practice. Davies' Practical Arithmetic.* The most successiul combination of Theory and Practice, clear, exact, brief, and comprehensive. //. ACADEMIC COURSE. Davios' University Arithmetic.* Treating the subject exhaustive!y as a science, in a logical series of connected propositions. Davies' Elementary Algebra.* A connecting link, conducting the pup'l easily from arithmetical processes to abstract analysis. Davies' University Alge^bra.* For institutions desiring a more complete but not the fullest course in pure Algebra. Davies' Practical Mathematics. The science practically applied to the useful arts, as Drawing, Architecture, Surveying, Mechanics, etc. Davies' Elementary Geometry. The important principles In simple form, but with all the exactness of vigorous reasoning. Davies' Elements of Surveying-. Re-written in 1S70. The- simplest and most practical presentation for youtha of 12 to 16. ///. COLLEGIATE COURSE. Davies' Courdon's Algebra.* Embracing Sturm's Theorem, and a most exhaustive and scholar ly course. Davies' University Algebra.* A shorter course tliaa reunion, for Institu- tions have less time to give the subject. Davies' Legendre's Geometry. Acknowledged t*ie cn?y s&tlsCzciory treatise of its grade. 300,000 copies have been sold. Davies' Analytical Geometry and Calculus. The shorter treatises, combined in one volume, are more available for American courses of study. ID :j vies' Analytical Geometry. IThe original compendiums, for those de- Navies' Diff. & Int. Calculus. ' siring to give full time to each branch. Davies' Descriptive Geometry. With application to Spherical Trigonome- try, Spherical Projections, and Warped Surfaces. Davies' Shades, Shadows, and Perspective. A succinct exposition of the mathematical principles involved. Davies' Science of Mathematics- ^"or teachers, embracing I. GRAMMAR OP ARITHMETIC, III. LOGIC AND UTILITY ov MATHEMATICS, II. OUTLINES o? MATHEMATICS, IV. MATHEMATICAL DICTIONARY. KEYS MAY BE OBTAINED PROM THE PUBLISHERS CY TEACHERS ONLY. UCLA-ED/PSYCH Library LB 1025 N81 WEEKS 005 623 9270 NATURAL PHILOSOPHY, ASTRONOMY. CHEMISTRY, G-EOLOGY. These volumes constitute the most available, practical, and attractive text-books on the Sciences ever published. Each volume may be completed in a single term of study. THE FAMOUS PRACTICAL QUESTIONS devised by this author are alone sufficient to place his books in every Academy and Grammar School of the land. These are questions as to the nature and cause of com- mon phenomena, and are not directly answered in the text, the design being to test and promote an intelligent use of the student's knowledge of the foregoing principles. TO MAKE SCIENCE POPULAR is a prime object of these books. To this end each subject is invested with a charm- ing interest by the peculiarly happy use of language and illustration in which this author excels. THEIR HE A VY PREDECESSORS demand as much of the student's time for the acquisition of the principles of a single branch as these for the whole course. PUBLIC APPRECIA TION. The author's great success in meeting an urgent, popular need, is indicated by the fact (probably unparalleled in the history of scientific text-books), that although t>' first volume was issued in 1867, the yearly sale is already at the rate of OP O R T "Y T H O TJ S A- 1ST ID V O L. XJ M IE S- PHYSIOLOGY AND HEALTH, By EDWARD JARVIS, M.D. ELEMEXTS OF PHYSIOLOGY, PHYSIOLOGY AND LAWS OF HEALTH. object of teaching Physiology in schools, viz., that scholars may know how to take The child instructed from these works will be always The only books extant which approach this subject with a proper view of the true bject of teaching Physi care of their own health. ZDOCTOIR- the Lilies. 1 ' BOTANY. WOOD'S AMERICAN BOTANIST AND FLORIST. This new and eagerly expected work is the result of the author's experience and life-long labors in CLASSIFYING THE SCIENCE OF BOTANY. He has at length attained the realization of his hopes by a wonderfully ingenious pro- cess of condensation and arrangement, and presents to the world in this single moder- ate-sized volume a COMPLiETEJ MANUAL. In 370 duodecimo pages he has actually recorded and defined NEARLY 4,000 SPECIES. The^treatises on Descriptive and Structural Botany are models of concise statement, which leave nothing to be said. Of entirely new features, the most notable are the Synoptical Tables for the blackboard, and the distinction of species and varieties by variation in the type. Prof. Wood, by this work, establishes a just claim to his title of the great AMERICAN EXPONENT OF BOTANY.