The Parents' Review
A Monthly Magazine of Home-Training and Culture
Edited by Charlotte Mason.
"Education is an atmosphere, a discipline, a life."
______________________________________
Books Which Have Been Recommended in the Parents' Review,
and Others
Which I Have Found Really Useful.
By "Irish Pilgrim"
Volume 3, 1892/93, pgs. 841-
There are such quantities of books published nowadays that it is hard
to know which are the ones of lasting and practical use, and which will
remain our friends and our children's friends through life.
I have found any books recommended to me in the Parents' Review really
worth having, and I shall mention some which I first heard of through
its pages, and also some others which the readers of the serial may
like to hear of.
As helps to mothers, or to others interested in education, the
following books will be found practically useful:
"Principles of Physiology, applied to the Preservation of Health, and
to the Improvement of Physical and Mental Education," [by Andrew Combe] is very
suggestive in many ways, and refers to subjects not always mentioned in
books on physiology.
"Physical Education, and its Place in a System of Rational Education,"
by Miss [Concordia] Löfving, is a useful little book, published by Swan
Sonnenschein, and is the material of a lecture given before the
Birmingham Teachers' Association, and also before the Education Society.
"Lectures on Teaching," by J. [Joshua] G. Fitch, M.A., LL.D., is a very valuable
book in helping mothers to superintend the education of their children,
as well as for the use of teachers. Its object is to invite intending
teachers to look in succession at each of the principal problems they
have to solve; to consider what subjects have to be taught, and what
are the reasons for teaching them; and so, by bringing together a few
of the plainer results of experience, to place readers in a position in
which it will be easier for them to divine and work out methods for
themselves.
"The Manuals of Science" and "Art of Teaching" are very useful little
books, published at the National Society's Depository.
"Le Manuel des Maitres" is written in a bright, sympathetic way, by
Madame Pape-Carpentier, who gave her whole life up to the study of
education. It is published by Hachette, as is her "Histoires et Lecons
de Choses," a nice book for children.
"La Gymnastique de l'Esprit," methode maternelle, is a well-thought out
series of little books for children learning French. There are three
parts. The first part deals with "L'Observation des Choses et des
Etres." The second part, "Jugements et Raisonnements sur les Choses et
les Etres." Third part, "La Memoire et l'Imagination." They are written
by A. Pelissier, and published by Hachette. I will give a few words
from the "Conseils Pratiques," at the beginning of the first part of
the "Gymnastique de l'Esprit" to show the object the author has in
view: "Le but de ces exercices est d'habituer les petits enfants a voir
a decomposer, a recomposer, a dessiner tout. Des l'age le plus tendre,
les enfants sont animes d'une curiosite telle que leurs questions
embarrassent tres souvent leurs parents, et leurs instituteurs;
pourquoi ne pas utiliser cette curiosite en la dirigeant? Notre objet
n'est pas d'enseigner aux enfants in la langue, ou la grammaire, ou
l'arithmetique, ou la morale; ce sont la des etudes speciales; nous y
preparons l'esprit en lui donnant certaines qualites generales. Partout
et toujours l'homme aura besoin d'observer d'analyser; il faut y
exercer l'enfant a propos de tout. La precaution la plus importante est
d'epargner a l'esprit toute fatigue; les efforts penible decouragent et
paralysent les enfants; le maitre qui aura le talent d'eveiller leur
curiosite les trouvera tres attentifs, et sera plus vite fatigue qu'ils
ne le seront eux-memes. . . . . Le dessin par croquis tres-faciles,
representant la silhouette des objets ou des etres, est un des
meilleurs exercises; il importe a'y recourir le plus possible. Jamais
ou n'exercera trop l'oeil a saisir et la main a reproduire les formes."
Another useful little book for children learning French is "Premieres
Lecons de Choses Usuelles pour les Enfants de Sept a Neuf Ans," par E.
Dupuis, published by Ch. Delagrave, Paris.
"The Science Ladders," by N. [Nancy] d'Anvers, published by Geo. Philip &
Sons, are well and simply written, and give much interesting teaching
in an unconventional attractive way.
[N. D'Anvers, later Mrs. Arthur Bell -- Science Ladders series: Lowly Water Animals; The Life Story of Our Earth; Forms of Land and Water; The Story of Early Exploration; Vegetable Life; Flowerless Plants; Lowly Mantle- and Armor-Wearers]
An American book entitled "Studies in Nature and Language Lessons" [T. B. Smith] is
based on the theory that experience and expression should go hand in
hand, and will be found a very useful book in teaching children, and
maps out an attractive series of lessons.
"The World at Home; or, Pictures and Scenes from Far-off-Lands," by
Mary and Elizabeth Kirby, is a delightful book for children, and is
published by Nelson & Sons.
I had some difficulty in hearing of a good English book to help in
giving object-lessons to young children. "Object-Lessons from Nature,"
a first book of Science, by L. C. Miall, was recommended to me in the
Parents' Review, and I have found it exactly what I wanted. The plan of
the book is this: Simple explanations about animals and plants, with
very familiar examples, come first. These early lessons are meant to
give a small stock of information, to teach the habit of careful
examination of all the details of any natural object, and to prompt
questions. Then some chemical and physical facts are introduced, and
experiment brought in. Upon this foundation, some simple lessons on
clouds, rain, and rivers, and on the food of plants, are based. There
is one thing of great importance. It is this--that everything learnt
must be a means to something done. Something must be tried as a little
private experiment, or something gathered and preserved, or something
drawn, or something questioned and made to tell its tale. In teaching,
Mr. Miall says, drawing should play a great part; and there is no
better way of checking mental indolence and the miserable habit of
trying to learn with both eye and mind out of focus.
"Among the Stars; or, Wonderful Things in the Sky," by Agnes Giberne,
would be a delightful Christmas present for a child. The story told so
brightly must give children a lasting interest in astronomy.
"Little Christian on his Pilgrimage," is the story of the "Pilgrim's
Progress," simply told by H. [Helen] L. Taylor (Wells Gardner, & Co.), and
is a very useful book for children. It is a pity there is not a preface
written by the author, with suggestions as to the best way of
presenting the characters in the book to the children's imagination.
[Helen Taylor wrote "Little Pilgrim's Progress", which may be the same book, or a revision of the original.]
I must also mention the Rev. B. [Benjamin] Waugh's books as delightful for
children's Sunday hours. "Sunday Evenings with my Children," and "The
Children's Sunday Hour," contain bright stories illustrating, in a
concrete way, such subjects as "Forgiveness," "Faith," "Love,"
Another book, "Elements of Morality," by Mrs. [Charles] Bray, also recommended in
the Parents' Review, I liked much, notwithstanding its rather
unattractive title. It is full of suggestions for a mother's talks with
her children, and I wish there were more really nice books of this kind.
I do not mention "Home Education," by Miss Mason, as it is known to all
readers of the Parents' Review; but I must gratefully say that it has
been the most helpful of books to me, and any mother would be happy who
followed practically the method so carefully and sympathetically
thought out by the writer.
IRISH PILGRIM.
Proofread by LNL, August, 2023
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