How to Study and Teaching How to Study Quotes
How to Study and Teaching How to Study
by
Frank Morton McMurry32 ratings, 3.66 average rating, 2 reviews
How to Study and Teaching How to Study Quotes
Showing 1-15 of 15
“Never give more time to reading a book than to reflecting upon its contents.”
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
“Many parents as well as teachers refuse to place this responsibility upon children for fear of the mistakes that they will make. On account of this fear they make it as nearly as possible unnecessary for children to judge freely, by giving them arbitrary rules to follow, or by directing them exactly what they shall do each moment. This cultivates poor judgment by depriving children of the very practice that will make their judgments reliable; it prevents the school requirements from corresponding to those in life outside.”
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
“Each lapse is like the letting fall of a ball of string which one is carefully winding up; a single slip undoes more than a great many turns will wind again.”
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
“Never suffer an exception to occur till the new habit is securely rooted in your life.”
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
“Living, in the case of animals, thus means getting on, and any ability, whether physical or intellectual, is of importance to the extent that it makes such getting on successful.”
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
“Every person is bound to make many mistakes; but he will make far fewer when his ability to judge has been properly trained.”
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
“There is one right thing for the student to do, that is, to develop the habit of weighing worths, of sensing the relative values of the facts that he meets.”
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
“The student, likewise, should not be merely a collector of knowledge. The object of study is not merely insight. As Frederick Harrison has said, "Man's business here is to know for the sake of living, not to live for the sake of knowing." "Religion that does not express itself in conduct socially useful is not true religion"; and, we may add, education that does not do the same is not true education.”
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
“The importance of being rich in unsolved problems is not likely to be overestimated. Most well-informed adults who have little "push" are not lazy by nature; they have merely failed to fall in love with worthy aims. That is often partly because education has been allowed to mean to them little more than the collecting of facts. If it had included the collection of interesting and valuable purposes as well, their devotion to proper aims in life might have grown as have their facts; then their energy might have kept pace with their knowledge.”
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
“And, finally, it is seen in the great number of men and women who, without ambition, drift aimlessly through life. Well-chosen specific purposes will help materially to remedy these evils, for there is no dividing line between good study-purposes and good life-purposes. The first must continually merge into the second; and the interest aroused by the former, with its consequent energy, gives assurance of interested and energetic pursuance of the latter.”
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
“Energy to do many kinds of things is so important that one's worth depends as much upon it as upon knowledge. Indeed, if there must be some lack in one of these two, it were probably better that it be in knowledge.”
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
“Indeed, the reason why self-trained men so often surpass men who are trained by others in the effectiveness and success of their reading, is that they know for what”
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
“Strange to say, a larger percentage of children than of teachers mentioned finding the main thought, and finding the more important facts, as two factors in mastering a lesson.”
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
“If teachers are so poorly informed, and if they are doing so little to instruct their pupils on this subject, how can the latter be expected to know how to study?”
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
“brief statements of their idea of study. Fully nine out of every ten have given memorizing as its nearest synonym.”
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
― How to Study and Teaching How to Study
