To save content items to your account,
please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies.
If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account.
Find out more about saving content to .
To save content items to your Kindle, first ensure no-reply@cambridge.org
is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings
on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part
of your Kindle email address below.
Find out more about saving to your Kindle.
Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations.
‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi.
‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.
The widely used reference work, Famous First Facts, states without qualification that “the first Bachelor of Music degree was granted June 7, 1876 by Boston University, Boston, Mass., to Charles Henry Morse,” and refers for authority for this statement to the Fourth Annual Report of Boston University.
Regardless of the ups and downs of modern civilization, we are reasonably certain of the continued existence of public education for the rest of this century. During the past one hundred years the public schools have developed into one of the basic institutions in western culture. This is true for the totalitarian nations as well as for those which still claim allegiance to the democratic way of life. The effect of the public school program can no longer be thought of as being individualistic in nature, for the public school is the major agency for the transmission of the cultural heritage and for maintaining social order, as well as for offering the individual opportunity in the struggle for existence. In short, education has become institutionalized.
In The Revolution in Education Mortimer J. Adler and Milton Mayer devote some pages to the development of the modern concept of universal education. In this connection they make brief reference to the thought of J. J. Rousseau, in a passage which is so misleading that some comment is required.
A major activity engaged in by educators between 1910 and 1918 which provides evidence of their increasing tendency to think and act in a business-like way was their action in handling the problems of retardation, elimination, and promotion. In this instance genuine educational problems did exist and they needed attention. But in the age of efficiency with an economy-minded public breathing down their necks some administrators dealt with these problems in a mechanical, financial way in order to defend themselves and demonstrate their efficiency. That the problems were perceived and treated in this manner was due largely to the way they had been presented and publicized by Leonard Ayres.
During the past 150 years England has been ruled largely by leaders who were educated in the English Public Schools. A knowledge of the dominant values and atmosphere of these élite schools is therefore an important clue to understanding the nature of English leadership, and hence the “tone” of English life. Vital to an understanding of the Public Schools is a knowledge of the methods by which their values have been inculcated and discipline maintained. The most distinctive single feature of these methods is the prefect-fagging system. A study of this system should therefore shed light upon some significant aspects of English history and society.
Among the several new religious orders founded during the sixteenth century, the Society of Jesus, from the viewpoint of education, was the most important. Ignatius of Loyola (1491–1556) arrived at the College of Montaigu of the University of Paris in 1528. He was thirty-six years old. His heroic resolve to further his education was the result of his spiritual conversion at Manresa in Spain in 1522. He desired an education, not to teach nor found schools, but to prepare for the priesthood. He continued at St. Barbara's in Paris his philosophy and arts course, with theology later at the Dominican Convent of St. James.
Jonathan Swift's plan of education in Book I of Gulliver's Travels is both a picture in little of Swift's temperament through the whole four books—analytic, commonsensical—and a brief chapter in the history of Renaissance education—an ideal coolly reexamined and reformed.
MARY DE ST POL COUNTESS OF PEMBROKE, BARONESS OF WEXFORD IN IRELAND, AND OF MONTIGNAC, BELLAC AND RANÇON IN FRANCE, was the daughter of Guy, Count of St Pol in the Pas-de-Calais, head of the younger branch of the great French house of Châtillon of Châtillon-sur-Marne. During the Middle Ages this family numbered among its great men Constables of France, Cardinals, a Pope who was canonised and another Saint, St Charles of Blois, a cousin of Mary de St Pol, and no family during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries married more often into the royal line than the family of Châtillon. Their arms were gules, three pales vair with a chief or, and this coat was said to have been granted to a warrior of the family who was one of a party of Crusaders surprised by the Turks when they had neither banners nor blazons. They therefore cut up the scarlet cloaks lined with fur which they were wearing, and displayed these strips instead of banners and coats of arms. Having achieved victory they all vowed that they would never display any heraldry in future other than gules and vair. This legend is however discredited by Andre Duchesne, the seventeenth-century historian of the Maison de Chastillon. The father of Guy de St Pol had added to these arms, “for difference”, a label of five points azure. Guy de St Pol married Mary of Brittany, who was the daughter of John de Dreux, Duke of Brittany, and Beatrice daughter of King Henry III of England.
MORE THAN ONE OF AUBREY ATTWATER's FRIENDS regretted that he did not write a book; they consoled themselves, however, with the knowledge that he was with ever-growing enthusiasm preparing the material for what would have been a scholarly, humane and definitive history of the College that he most lovingly served. For several years before his death Aubrey had spent the greater part of his leisure in the study of College documents, and the more he studied them, the more deeply was he fascinated by them. From time to time he would display the first fruits of his labours in the form of a paper read to The Martlets on the Foundress or on Richard Crossinge, or on Gabriel Harvey, or on the history of the older College rooms. Such papers were, in fact, early drafts of chapters to be included in the History and provided clear evidence of the generous and scholarly scale on which the work was being planned. Or, again, he would contribute an essay on Pitt or on the College Plate or on the Servants or on the Buildings to the Annual Gazette of the College Society. Everyone who heard, or read, one of these papers rejoiced that the formidable task of writing a history of Pembroke was being faced in so gay a spirit.