Documents of the Board of Education of the City of New York

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1864
 

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Seite 11 - ... in any institution in the state, if his parents can only furnish him the means to subsist at home, is in the highest degree cheering, while the certainty that the limited earnings of his parents will preclude him, in the existing state of things, from having any such advantages, tends to repress...
Seite 77 - Education shall apportion the money so raised to each of the schools hereafter provided for by this act, except the Free Academy and. the evening schools, according to the number of children over four and under twenty-one years of age, who were actual residents of the city and county of New York, at the time of their attendance on such schools, without charge, the preceding year...
Seite 9 - Academy," and presenting its design, nature and objects in this language : " Your Committee will not at present enter into the details of the proposed institution, but will briefly remark, that their design is to offer the idea of a college, which, while it shall be in no way inferior to any of our colleges in the character, amount or value, of the information given to the pupils, the course of studies to be pursued will have more especial reference to the active duties of operative life, rather...
Seite 28 - ... but any absences recorded against the name of the pupil before the teacher receives this notice shall be allowed to remain, and, in making up the attendance averages, such absences shall be regarded the same as any other absence.
Seite 20 - Library, under any pretence whatever, by any person, without the authority of the Librarian, and every book so taken is recorded in a register provided for that purpose, No Library book is allowed to be retained by any instructor or student for a longer period than two weeks, without renewal. Penalties are attached for defacing, mutilating, or losing books. All books, whether Library books, books of reference, or text-books, delivered to any instructor or student...
Seite 10 - Another object of the proposed free institution is, to create an additional interest in, and more completely popularize the Common Schools. It is believed that they will be regarded with additional favor, and attended with increased satisfaction, when the pupils and their parents feel that the children who have received their primary education in these schools, can be admitted to all the benefits and advantages furnished by the best endowed college in the State, without any expense whatever.
Seite 111 - An Act to Amend, Consolidate, and Reduce to One Act the Various Acts Relative to the Common Schools of the City of New York...
Seite 14 - ... in proportion to the number of pupils instructed in each academy or seminary, for six months during the preceding year, who shall have pursued classical studies, or the higher branches of English education, or both...

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