Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB

ONLY

NLY a few complete sets of the EDUCATIONAL REVIEW from the first issue are left. The first twenty-two volumes (January, 1891, to December, 1901) unbound, will be sent upon receipt of $80.00. Unbound volumes I, II, XII, XIII, XIV, XV, XVI, XVII, XVIII, XIX, and XXII, $1.50 each; VIII, X, and XX, $5.00 each; IV, $2.50; XI, $2.00; and XXI, $3.co. Prices of back volumes subject to change without notice. Table of contents of volumes I-XIV free upon application.

"We find the EDUCATIONAL REVIEW absolutely indispensable at every turn."Michael E. Sadler, Director of Special Inquiries and Reports, Board of Education, London, England. September 13, 1901.

"I wish I could tell you how much of stimulus and inspiration I get from reading the EDUCATIONAL REVIEW. The educational world can never repay you for the work you have put into that richly stored magazine. I have just gone through the entire twenty-one volumes in order to get some things that I especially desired, and I am simply amazed at what I find in those volumes."-Wilbur P. Gordy, High School, Hartford, Conn. September, 1901.

"To men like myself it is a sort of working library. Its volumes stand always at my elbow."-Professor Paul H. Hanus, Harvard University.

"The EDUCATIONAL REVIEW gains in strength monthly. I value the work as highly as any educational work I have among some thousand books."-Fred W. Atkinson, Superintendent of Public Instruction, Manila, Philippine Islands.

"It is difficult to see how the EDUCATIONAL REVIEW could be made more essential for us teachers and executives."-President Charles F. Thwing, Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio.

"I have been a subscriber to the REVIEW Since it started, and hope to continue-well, not until it ends, but until I go out of education and teaching."Will S. Monroe, State Normal School, Westfield, Mass.

"The broadest and most able of the American periodicals devoted to education."-New York Times.

"An educational magazine of which the teaching profession may well be proud. There is nothing better in educational journalism in any country, and it has an editor who has convictions, and the courage of them."-School and Home Education, Bloomington, Ill.

"The REVIEW has from the first issue taken its place at the head of American periodicals devoted to education. It is, indeed, the first educational paper in America to win for our country the respect of educationalists abroad."-Journal of Pedagogy, Ypsilanti, Mich.

35c.) A

14$.3d. A Year (10 Nos., none being issued for July or August.) 15. 8d. Copy

EDUCATIONAL REVIEW PUBLISHING CO., NEW YORK

REVIEW

PUBLISHED MONTHLY

Except July and August

VOLUME XXIII

JANUARY-MAY

1902

LIBRARY

LELAND STANFORD JUNIOR
UNIVERSITY

RAHWAY, N. J., AND NEW YORK
EDUCATIONAL REVIEW PUBLISHING COMPANY
PARIS: F. ALCAN BERLIN: MAYER & MÜLLER

LONDON THE AMERICAN SCHOOL AND COLLEGE TEXT-BOOK AGENCY
CHICAGO A. W. MUMFORD, 203 MICHIGAN AVENUE

[merged small][ocr errors]

EDITOR

NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER

SOMUL OROMAT? QUA BU
VTIZAVIMU

COPYRIGHT, 1902, BY EDUCATIONAL REVIEW PUBLISHING CO

THE MERSHON COMPANY PRESS,
RAHWAY, N. J.

63327

INDEX

The names of contributors are printed in SMALL CAPITALS; subjects treated, in ordinary type; titles of books reviewed, in italics.

Academic freedom, 1, 195
Academy education, Cost of an, 348
Agencies, Supplementary educational,
117

Alphabet? Do children know the,

420

Alps, Eyesight, among the higher, 92 American and the English public elementary school, The, 250 American education, Private schools in, 503

American life, The private school in, 264, 511

Aspects of education, Some social, 433

Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools, North Central, 533

BAIRD, WILLIAM.-The classics in modern education, 407 Belief and credulity, 22

Benefactors, Universities and their, 106

Bill, The new English education, 537 BISHOP, WILLIAM WARNER.-Do

children know the alphabet? 420 BRACQ, J. C.-Moral and religious instruction in France, 325 Brauckmann's (Karl) Die psychische Entwicklung und pädagogische Behandlung der schwerhöriger Kinder, 213

BRIGHAM, ALBERT P.-What shall the small college do? 338

Carnegie Institution, The, 215
Carnegie's latest gif 05
Changes in the secondary schools of
Germany, 103

Children know the alphabet? Do, 420 Classics in modern education, The, 407

COLGATE, JAMES.-The rights of donors, 203

College do? What shall the small, 338 Colleges and Secondary Schools,

North Central Association of, 533

[blocks in formation]

Education and evolution, 60, and
social progress, 355; North and
South, 486; Cost of an academy,
348; Industrial and technical train-
ing in popular, 281; Private schools
in American, 503: Some social as-
pects of, 433; The classics in mod-
ern, 407

Education as a social force, Industrial,
462

Education bill, The new English, 537
Education to industrial and commer-
cial development, The relation of,

490
EDWARDS, GEORGE C.-The private
school in American life, 264
EDWARDS, RICHARD.-My schools
and schoolmasters, 385
Elective studies, 483
Elementary school, The American
and the English public, 250
Elevating the degree of Ph. D., 429
ELIOT, CHARLES W.-Education
North and South, 486

English Education bill, The new, 537
English public elementary school,
The American and the, 250
Evolution, Education and, 60
Eyesight among the higher Alps, 92

[blocks in formation]

HERRICK, CHEESEMAN A.--Ware's
(Fabian) Educational foundations
of trade and industry, 425
HERRICK, CLAY.-Cost of an acad-
emy education, 348

Higher Alps, Eyesight among the, 92
High-school conditions, Dr. Hall on,
323

High school, The various educational
demands upon the, 136

Historical research, Relation of the
National Library to, 217

History teaching in New York State,

400

HOWERTH, IRA W.-Education and
evolution, 60; Education and social
progress, 355

HYSLOP, JAMES H.-Ladd's (George
Trumbull) Philosophy of conduct,
521

Industrial and commercial develop-
ment, The relation of education
to, 490

Industrial and technical training in
popular education, 281

Industrial education as a social force,
462

Institution, The Carnegie, 215

Instruction in France, Moral and
religious, 325

Insurance for teachers, Compulsory,
152

JACKSON, A. V. W.-Ten Brink's
(Bernhard) Language and meter
of Chaucer, 528

Japan, Normal schools of, 371
JASTROW, JOSEPH.-Belief and cre-
dulity, 22

Know the alphabet? Do children,

420

Ladd's (George Trumbull) Philosophy
of conduct, 521

Latest gift, Carnegie's, 105
Lectures versus recitations, 345
Lecture system in university teach-
ing, The, 109; Professor De Garmo
on the, 520

Legislation in Connecticut, Temper-
ance teaching and recent, 233
LEONARD, MERTON C.-Normal
schools of Japan, 371

Library to historical research, Rela-
tion of the National, 217

« AnteriorContinuar »