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Indian Education

1906

The Act of 1902 overrode ar which would have prevented the managers of a voluntary scho accepting the clause which calls upon them to carry out any e of the local education authority as to the secular instruction to in the school including any direction with respect to the nun educational qualifications of the teachers to be employed instruction and for the dismissal of any teacher on educationa [...] The powers of the Commissioners are to hold the passing of the Act to December 31 st 1908 at earliest and to 'Ai right of examining witnesses on oath of enforcing the atten witnesses the examination of witnesses and the production of be documents. [...] The third part of the Bill empowers the Board of Education to give after public inquiry to the Council of any borough ( outside the metropolis ) or of an urban district with a population of 50 000 at the last census for the time being the autonomous powers in regard to secondary and higher education which were reserved under the Act of 1902 to County Boroughs. [...] But the chief advantage to be hoped for in making a change in the course is the elimination of text-books altogether and the liberation of students and lecturers from the task of hammering away at a text and from the bewilderment of losing themselves in a tangle of notes and introductions. [...] The evil of not teaching Grammar in the Lower Secondary and still more in the fourth and fifth form classes of the High School—as is advocated by the authors of the new system—is that students fail to understand the rules of sentence-building and commit gross blunders in the simplest exercises in English Composition.
education
Pages
58
Published in
United States
SARF Document ID
sarf.120008
Segment Pages Author Actions
Editorial Notes
581-582 unknown view
Education in England
582-589 Michael E. Sadler view
The B.A. Course in English
589-591 W. A. Hirst view
The New Method of Teaching English
592-593 P. Parthasarathy view
First Steps in Teaching English as a Foreign Tongue
593-597 unknown view
Hints for Teachers—III
597-598 J. N. F. view
Typical Errors of Indian Students.
598-599 J. A. Chapman view
The Teaching of Composition
600-601 unknown view
Public Instruction in Bengal
601-605 unknown view
The News of the Month
605-619 unknown view
Reviews of Books
619-623 unknown view
Our Contemporaries
623-624 unknown view
Government Notifications
625-628 unknown view
Editorial Notice
628-628 unknown view

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