Dickens As an EducatorGood Press, 25.4.2021 - 339 sivua "Dickens As an Educator" by James L. Hughes. Published by Good Press. Good Press publishes a wide range of titles that encompasses every genre. From well-known classics & literary fiction and non-fiction to forgotten−or yet undiscovered gems−of world literature, we issue the books that need to be read. Each Good Press edition has been meticulously edited and formatted to boost readability for all e-readers and devices. Our goal is to produce eBooks that are user-friendly and accessible to everyone in a high-quality digital format. |
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Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 27
Sivu
... described in The Haunted House ; Miss Twinkleton's seminary , in Edwin Drood ; the schools of the Stepney Union ; The Schoolboy's Story ; and Our School . In addition to these twenty - eight schools , he describes a real school in ...
... described in The Haunted House ; Miss Twinkleton's seminary , in Edwin Drood ; the schools of the Stepney Union ; The Schoolboy's Story ; and Our School . In addition to these twenty - eight schools , he describes a real school in ...
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... described. Two things should be kept in mind, however. Dickens usually described the worst, not the best types, and he was justified in revealing a wrong principle or practice in the strongest possible light, in order to make it more ...
... described. Two things should be kept in mind, however. Dickens usually described the worst, not the best types, and he was justified in revealing a wrong principle or practice in the strongest possible light, in order to make it more ...
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... described them truly. He saw wrongs more clearly than other men, and he made them stand out in their natural hideousness. It is frequently asserted that Dickens portrayed wrong training more than right, that he was destructive rather ...
... described them truly. He saw wrongs more clearly than other men, and he made them stand out in their natural hideousness. It is frequently asserted that Dickens portrayed wrong training more than right, that he was destructive rather ...
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... described the wrong if he had not clearly understood the right . He had perfect sympathy with childhood , he was a great student of the child and of the existing methods of training and educating him , and his insights and judgment were ...
... described the wrong if he had not clearly understood the right . He had perfect sympathy with childhood , he was a great student of the child and of the existing methods of training and educating him , and his insights and judgment were ...
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... described Squeers a little more than half a century earlier . In the report to the British Government , at the close of his remarkable half - century of honourable and very able educational work , Sir Joshua Fitch said : “ In watching ...
... described Squeers a little more than half a century earlier . In the report to the British Government , at the close of his remarkable half - century of honourable and very able educational work , Sir Joshua Fitch said : “ In watching ...
Sisältö
CHAPTER I | |
incidental The fact that his educational principles are revealed chiefly | |
Dickens As an Educator | |
to his novels the preface to his Household Words the educational | |
CHAPTER VII | |
CHAPTER X | |
CHAPTER XI | |
CHAPTER XII | |
Buy now and read | |
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Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
adulthood asked Barnaby Rudge believe better Bill Sikes Bitherstone Bleak House blessed Briggs Bumble character child depravity childhood coercion Cornelia corporal punishment cramming Creakle cried David Copperfield dear Dickens Doctor Blimber Dombey Dombey and Son duty Esther evil eyes face fact fancy father feeling Froebel gentleman girl Gradgrind hand hard Harthouse head heart ideal imagination Infant Jellyby Jemmy Jupe knew lady learned Lirriper Little Dorrit lives look Louisa M'Choakumchild Martin Chuzzlewit means mind Miss Blimber mother Murdstone natural neglect never Nicholas Nicholas Nickleby Old Curiosity Shop Oliver Oliver Twist Pardiggle parents Paul Pipchin play poor pupils remember revealed selfhood Sissy soul Squeers Steerforth story sympathy taught teachers teaching tell things thought told Toodle took Tozer true wonder words wrong young gentlemen