... study," or branch of learning. A principle, for the intellect, has had to be distinguished and defined; facts have had to be interpreted in relation to this principle, not as they are in themselves. They have had to be regathered about a new center... The Supervision of Instruction: A General Volume - Page 202by Arvil Sylvester Barr, William Henry Burton - 1926 - 626 pagesFull view - About this book
| Ella Flagg Young - 1901 - 442 pages
...facts of direct experience have to undergo before they can appear as a "study," or branch of learjiing. A principle, for the intellect, has had to be distinguished...one's own experience. It means capacity to analyze and to synthesize. It means highly matured intellectual habits and the command of a definite technique... | |
| John Dewey - 1902 - 44 pages
...abstracts and analyzes one set of facts, and from one particular point of view. Arithmetic is anotner division, grammar another department, and so on indefinitely....one's own experience. It means capacity to analyze and to synthesize. It means highly matured intellectual habits and the command of a definite technique... | |
| John Dewey - 1902 - 46 pages
...cannot realize — the amount of separating and reformulating which the facts of direct experi-. ence have to undergo before they can appear as a "study,"...this means a development of a special intellectual ^ Jw interest. It means ability to view facts impar- ^jk/r"^ tially and objectively; that is, without... | |
| Ohio State University - 1926 - 584 pages
...facts have had to be interpreted in relation to the principle, not as they are in themselves. They have to be regathered about a new center which is wholly abstract and ideal. . . . The studies classified are the product in s word, of the science of the ages, not of the experiences... | |
| John Dewey - 1998 - 442 pages
...to this principle, not as they are in themselves. They have had to be regathered about a new centre which is wholly abstract and ideal. All this means...one's own experience. It means capacity to analyze and to synthesize. It means highly matured intellectual habits and the command of a definite technique... | |
| Rod Parker-Rees, Jenny Willan - 2006 - 384 pages
...to this principle, not as they are in themselves. They have had to be regathered about a new centre which is wholly abstract and ideal. All this means...to their place and meaning in one's own experience. 98 It means capacity to analyze and to synthesize. It means highly matured intellectual habits and... | |
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