I question if many of us deeply consider its meaning. From the lowest grade of the public school to the highest form of university training, education in this country is at the disposal of every man, every woman who chooses to work for and obtain it. The Administration of Education in a Democracy - Halaman 371oleh Horace Adelbert Hollister - 1914 - 383 halamanTampilan utuh - Tentang buku ini
| United States. President (1901-1909 : Roosevelt) - 1903 - 218 halaman
...the nation. Although we talk a good deal about what the widespread education of this country means, I question if many of us deeply consider its meaning....every woman, who chooses to work for and obtain it. The State has done much, very much ; witness this university. Private benefaction has done much, very... | |
| United States. President (1901-1909 : Roosevelt), Theodore Roosevelt - 1904 - 512 halaman
...the nation. Although we talk a good deal about what the widespread education of this country means, I question if many of us deeply consider its meaning....every woman, who chooses to work for and obtain it. The State has done very much; witness this university. Private benefaction has done much, very much... | |
| Theodore Roosevelt - 1906 - 788 halaman
...the nation. Although we talk a good deal about what the widespread education of this country means, I question if many of us deeply consider its meaning....every woman, who chooses to work for and obtain it. The State has done much, very much; witness this university. Private benefaction has done much, very... | |
| 1903 - 346 halaman
...the nation. Although we talk a good deal about what the widespread education of this country means, I question if many of us deeply consider its meaning....every woman, who chooses to work for and obtain it. The state has done much, very much; witness this University. Private benefaction has done much, very... | |
| Columbia University. Teachers College - 1915 - 170 halaman
...upon which the maintenance and success of free institutions depend." (c: 34) Says Theodore Roosevelt: "From the lowest grade of the public school to the...every woman, who chooses to work for and obtain it." (c: 35-36) But is education at the disposal of every man and every woman? Practice is often remote... | |
| Robert Alexander Fyfe McDonald - 1915 - 160 halaman
...upon which the maintenance and success of free institutions depend." (c: 34) Says Theodore Roosevelt: "From the lowest grade of the public school to the...every woman, who chooses to work for and obtain it." (c: 35-36) But is education at the disposal of every man and every woman? Practice is often remote... | |
| Leon Josiah Richardson - 1924 - 320 halaman
...York, London, Harper and Brothers, 1920. Each of us then who has an education, school or college, has something from the community at large, for which he or she has not paid. No self respecting man or woman is content to rest permanently under such an obligation when the state... | |
| United States. Office of Education - 1941 - 580 halaman
...^ ^k what the widespread education of this ^^^^^^ Although we talk a good deal about country means, I question if many of us deeply consider its meaning. From the ,JEy lowest grade of the public school to the highest form of university training edu• cation in... | |
| 1925 - 670 halaman
...of being cultivated by the long patient training called 'education'." — Charles W. Elliot, 1903. "Each one of us then who has an education, school...community at large, for which he or she has not paid. No selfrespecting man or woman is content to rest permanently under such an obligation where the State... | |
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