The town child / by Reginald A. Bray.
- Bray, Reginald A. (Reginald Arthur), 1869-1950.
- Date:
- 1911
Licence: In copyright
Credit: The town child / by Reginald A. Bray. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by The University of Glasgow Library. The original may be consulted at The University of Glasgow Library.
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![a part of the real drama of life. Kappa has an excellent passage on the subject— r ^% youthful mind, he says, between the ages of En •7.Vhf''^%l- b« ' revealed ' aI^a The process should resemble the gradual %vlthdrawal of a curtain and disclosure of a splendid and movmg spectacle. Every lesson should end Uke aS instalment next'TKeV^X'' ^^t? ^^^talising ' to be continued in our next The teacher should be held to have mistaken hia that end he shall be supplied with all sorts of mechanical aids rehef-maps, coloured charts, diagrams, model! casts nhnfn flSs' But%f' % 'r'r ^''^ - endleL?a^^^^^^^^ 1 A . But ultimately, of course, if the teacher is +0 awaken the imagination of his pupils, it must be th™h The phrase gradual withdrawal of a curtain exactly describes the process of stimulating imagination. Im agination is abhorrent of clear-cut boundaries- it must be permitted to wander at large and unconfined. ' There must be something shown and there must be something suggested limited th^i.^°^'^^ beyond Ldttt Reading and literature should be taught in a similar way ; and here at any rate the course is easy For therel^^ at never weary-the ]oy of listening to tales Even th^ youngest have an insatiate desire to hear tones and the delight experienced is entirely due to the work nf 3ern ^^ead^r ^^^^^ P^--^ - the](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21465150_0147.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


