1st Edition

The English Grammar Schools to 1660 Their Curriculum and Practice

By Foster Watson Copyright 1908
    467 Pages
    by Routledge

    467 Pages
    by Routledge

    First published in 1908, this important work on the history of education traces the development of teaching in English Grammar Schools from the invention of printing up to 1660. It is not a history of the theories of educational reformers as to what should or should not be taught, but a history of the actual practices of the schools, of their curricula and of the differentiated subjects of instruction. The author relies heavily on the textbooks used in schools in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, in particular the ‘Ludus Literarius’ of John Brinsley and the ‘New Discovery of the Old Art of Teaching School’ of Charles Hoole, and makes free use of the School Statutes which state the express intention of the Founder as to what was to be taught.

    The period covered is one of great significance in which the Encyclopaedia of the medieval curriculum was abandoned for the modern practice of the differentiation of school subjects. The new knowledge of the Renaissance and the introduction of critical methods and of close analysis gave students a detailed knowledge which could not be fitted into the rigid confines of the medieval Encyclopaedia, while the invention of printing enormously facilitated the increase and spreading of text books for both teachers and pupils.

    1. The Ecclesiastical Organisation of Schools. 2. Religion in the Schools, 1500-1600. 3. The Teaching of the Bible. 4. The Catechism. 5. The Teaching of Logic and the Method of Disputations. 6. The Teaching of Manners and Morals. 7. Mediaeval Elementary Instruction. 8. The Elementary Schools, 1547-1660. 9. The A B C and the Horn-Book A B C. 10. The Teaching of Reading. 11. The Teaching of Writing. 12. The Teaching of Music in the 16th and 17th Centuries. 13. Medieval Grammar Schools and Schoolmasters. 14. The Early English Printed Grammars Including the Magdalen College School (Oxford) Group. 15. The Authorised Latin Grammar. 16. The Emendations of Lily’s Grammar. 17. The Grammar War. 18. The Practice of Grammar Teaching. 19. Latin Speaking. 20. Colloquies. 21. Translation of Authors. 22. The Higher Authors. 23. Vocabularies and Dictionaries. 24. The Making of Latins. 25. Letter-Writing. 26. Theme Writing at the Beginning of the 17th Century. 27. Rhetoric. 28. The School Oration at the Time of the Commonwealth. 29. Verse-Making. 30. The Teaching of Greek. 31. The Text-Books for the Teaching of Greek. 32. Hebrew.

    Biography

    Foster Watson