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  • Feb. 1, 1794
  • Page 54
  • PLAN OF EDUCATION.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Feb. 1, 1794: Page 54

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Page 54

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Plan Of Education.

temper , regular and polished in his manners , temperate and p lain in his way of life , of all mankind he ought to have the fewest faults and the fewest foibles ; because the bad example of a many Avho is every day employed in teaching morality , as well as language , will naturally have a most pernicious influence on the soft and flexible minds of children , who are to receive their impressions , in a great measure , from their teacher . 'To an entire command of his passionsand a

just-, ness of sentiment , both Avith respect to reli g ion and politics , he should join a superiority to party spirit , and an aversion to all slavish and enslaving principles . Above all , he ought to have an honest and upright heart , and a sincere desire to be useful to the children under his care . This ought to be the delight of his soul , and the great motive of his actions ; it is this motive , that above every thing , else ,

should have determined him at first to enter upon this way of life . Without a natural taste for communicating knoAvledge , and an earnest desire of being useful to his pupils , he will neither be happy in his charge , nor so successful as its importance requires . Nor is it sufficient that the teacher should have the qualifications and dispositions already mentioned ; it is also necessary , that he should be invested with an unlimited power over his pupils , and that his authority should on every occasion , be supported by their parents . Without this , all the efforts of the teacher in educating the child will prove

ineffectual . For which reason , parents ought to have an entire confidence in the fidelity , as well as ability , of the teacher , before they commit their children to his care , and to neglect nothing that can strengthen his hands , when once they have bestOAved on him so important a trust . . No less attentive should the teacher be , to support the authority of the parent . Parents and teachers should confer together on every occasion ; by their united exertionsthe most naughty or

re-, fractory boy , would , very probably , be reclaimed , Avithout that severity , Avhich indiscretion , and the want of well-supported authority , render as vain as it is disagreeable . But-though the authority of a teacher over his pupil ought to be fully established , yet its surest and most agreeable foundation will bs a sense of characterAvith which he should studto inspire themand

, y , . an apprehension of displeasing him , rather than a servile fear of punishment . At first , indeed , in the case of gross negligence , or dissipation of mind , greater strictness is to be used , in order to fix the attention ; and if the boy be of a refractory disposition , some chas usement may be necessary to render him tractable . This , however , will be necessary onlywhen he has been much neglected in his first years ,

, or corrupted by undue indulgence . But when the temper is once tendered pliant and docile , the severity of discipline is to be relaxed , and the distance between the teacher and scholar to be gradually diuiimsned , till a free and ea . sy intercourse t-. tks place between them * . This

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1794-02-01, Page 54” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 19 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01021794/page/54/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 2
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 3
THE PRINCIPLES OF FREE MASONRY EXPLAINED. Article 11
JOHN COUSTOS, FOR FREEMASONRY, Article 19
A VIEW OF THE PROGRESS OF NAVIGATION. Article 22
ON THE PROPRIETY OF MAKING A WILL. Article 24
ANECDOTES OF THE LATE HUGH KELLY. Article 29
EXTRACT FROM AN ESSAY ON INSTINCT. Article 33
THE ORIGIN OF LITERARY JOURNALS. Article 35
LETTER Article 37
LETTER Article 38
ON MAN. Article 38
ON JEALOUSY. Article 40
ON YOUTHFUL COURAGE AND RESOLUTION. Article 41
INVASION. Article 42
ANECDOTES OF JAMES NORTHCOTE, ESQ. Article 48
SURPRIZING INGENUITY. Article 51
CURIOUS ACCOUNT OF THE PHYSICIANS OF ANCIENT EGYPT. Article 52
INSTANCE OF THE POWER OF MUSIC OVER ANIMALS. Article 53
PLAN OF EDUCATION. Article 53
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 56
REMARKS ON THE MUTABILITY OF FORTUNE. Article 57
LONDON CHARACTERIZED. Article 59
LITERARY INTELLIGENCE. Article 59
PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. Article 60
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 69
A CURIOUS FACT. Article 72
POETRY. Article 73
FREEMASON PROLOGUE. Article 74
PROLOGUE WRITTEN FOR THE YOUNG GENTLEMEN, Article 75
RURAL FELICITY: A POEM. Article 76
TO FRIENDSHIP. Article 77
IMPROMPTU Article 77
ON CONTENT. Article 78
ON AN INFANT Article 79
EPITAPH. Article 79
EPITAPH ON A NOBLE LADY. Article 79
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 80
Untitled Article 83
Untitled Article 83
Untitled Article 83
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Page 54

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Plan Of Education.

temper , regular and polished in his manners , temperate and p lain in his way of life , of all mankind he ought to have the fewest faults and the fewest foibles ; because the bad example of a many Avho is every day employed in teaching morality , as well as language , will naturally have a most pernicious influence on the soft and flexible minds of children , who are to receive their impressions , in a great measure , from their teacher . 'To an entire command of his passionsand a

just-, ness of sentiment , both Avith respect to reli g ion and politics , he should join a superiority to party spirit , and an aversion to all slavish and enslaving principles . Above all , he ought to have an honest and upright heart , and a sincere desire to be useful to the children under his care . This ought to be the delight of his soul , and the great motive of his actions ; it is this motive , that above every thing , else ,

should have determined him at first to enter upon this way of life . Without a natural taste for communicating knoAvledge , and an earnest desire of being useful to his pupils , he will neither be happy in his charge , nor so successful as its importance requires . Nor is it sufficient that the teacher should have the qualifications and dispositions already mentioned ; it is also necessary , that he should be invested with an unlimited power over his pupils , and that his authority should on every occasion , be supported by their parents . Without this , all the efforts of the teacher in educating the child will prove

ineffectual . For which reason , parents ought to have an entire confidence in the fidelity , as well as ability , of the teacher , before they commit their children to his care , and to neglect nothing that can strengthen his hands , when once they have bestOAved on him so important a trust . . No less attentive should the teacher be , to support the authority of the parent . Parents and teachers should confer together on every occasion ; by their united exertionsthe most naughty or

re-, fractory boy , would , very probably , be reclaimed , Avithout that severity , Avhich indiscretion , and the want of well-supported authority , render as vain as it is disagreeable . But-though the authority of a teacher over his pupil ought to be fully established , yet its surest and most agreeable foundation will bs a sense of characterAvith which he should studto inspire themand

, y , . an apprehension of displeasing him , rather than a servile fear of punishment . At first , indeed , in the case of gross negligence , or dissipation of mind , greater strictness is to be used , in order to fix the attention ; and if the boy be of a refractory disposition , some chas usement may be necessary to render him tractable . This , however , will be necessary onlywhen he has been much neglected in his first years ,

, or corrupted by undue indulgence . But when the temper is once tendered pliant and docile , the severity of discipline is to be relaxed , and the distance between the teacher and scholar to be gradually diuiimsned , till a free and ea . sy intercourse t-. tks place between them * . This

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