female teachers in the primary and intermediate schools, and as assistants in the higher departments, and one or more male teachers of the best stamp. The Public High School, instead of being the privilege of the youth of five or six towns, would then become the educational property of every town, and with its permanent establishment would disappear the misnamed and unendowed academy, and transient, though often excellent, select school-the growth of some enterprising teacher or of a few parents who wish to secure better opportunities of education than the unclassified district school can furnish. V. INSTITUTIONS AND AGENCIES IN AID OF COMMON SCHOOLS. State Normal School. The State Normal School was established in 1849, and has for its object the training of teachers in the best methods of teaching and conducting common schools. Its concerns are managed by a board of eight trustees, who direct in the application of funds, have the appointment of teachers, and prescribe the studies, exercises, and rules of the school. The number of pupils must not exceed two hundred and twenty. They are admitted upon certificate and recommendation from the board of visitors of each town, and are entitled to tuition free. The course of instruction occupies three years. With the normal school is connected a model, or experimental school of more than five hundred pupils. Cost to the state annually $5,000. Teachers' Institutes. A Teachers' Institute is held annually in each county of the state. The sum of one hundred and twenty dollars is paid from the state treasury to defray the expenses of instruction and incidental charges. The State Teachers' Association and Common School Journal. A copy of "The Connecticut Common School Journal," published by the State Teachers' Association, is by law sent to the Board of School Visitors of every town. School Libraries and Apparatus. The treasurer of the state, upon the order of the superintendent of common schools, is directed to pay ten dollars to every district which shall raise a like sum for the same purpose, to establish a school library, and a further sum of five dollars annually, upon a like order to the districts that shall raise a like sum for such year. The books for such libraries must be approved by the board of visitors. hundred and seventy districts have established school libraries. Five Five hundred and fifty-four districts are supplied with Holbrook's School Apparatus, (towards the cost of which the state has paid about one half,) and most of the High Schools with philosophical and chemical apparatus. Eight hundred districts have outline maps. XXII. MILITARY SCHOOLS AND EDUCATION. AN account of the Military and Naval Schools of different countries, with special reference to the extension and improvement, among ourselves, of similar institutions and agencies, both national and state, for the special training of officers and men for the exigencies of war, was promised by the Editor in his original announcement of “The American Journal and Library of Education." Believing that the best preparation for professional and official service of any kind, either of peace or war, is to be made in the thorough culture of all manly qualities, and that all special schools should rest on the basis, and rise naturally out of a general system of education for the whole community, we devoted our first efforts to the fullest exposition of the best principles and methods of elementary instruction, and to improvements in the organization, teaching, and discipline of schools, of different grades, but all designed to give a proportionate culture of all the faculties. We have from time to time introduced the subject of Scientific Schools-or of institutions in which the principles of mathematics, mechanics, physics, and chemistry are thoroughly mastered, and their applications to the more common as well as higher arts of construction, machinery, manufactures, and agriculture, are experimentally taught. In this kind of instruction must we look for the special training of our engineers, both civil and military; and schools of this kind established in every state, should turn out every year a certain number of candidates of suitable age to compete freely in open examinations for admission to a great National School, like the Polytechnic at Paris, or the purely scientific course of the Military Academy at West Point, and then after two years of severe study, and having been found qualified by repeated examinations, semi-annual and final, by a board composed, not of honorary visitors, but of experts in each science, should pass to schools of application or training for the special service for which they have a natural aptitude and particular preparation. The terrible realities of our present situation as a people-the fact that within a period of twelve months a million of able bodied men have been summoned to arms from the peaceful occupations of the office, the shop, and the field, and are now in hostile array, or in actual conflict, within the limits of the United States, and the no less alarming aspect of the future, arising not only from the delicate position of our own relations with foreign governments, but from the armed interference of the great Military Powers of Europe in the internal affairs of a neighboring republic, have brought up the subject of MILITARY Schools, and MILITARY EDUCATION, for consideration and action with an urgency which admits of no delay. Something must and will be done at once. And in reply to numerous letters for information and suggestions, and to enable those who are urging the National, State or Municipal authorities to provide additional facilities for military instruction, or who may propose to establish schools, or engraft on existing schools exercises for this purpose,-to profit by the experience of our own and other countries, in the work of training officers and men for the ART OF WAR, we shall bring together into a single volume, "Papers on Military Education," which it was our intention to publish in successive numbers of the NEW SERIES of the "American Journal of Education." This volume, as will be seen by the Contents, presents a most comprehensive survey of the Institutions and Courses of Instruction, which the chief nations of Europe have matured from their own experience, and the study of each other's improvements, to perfect their officers for every department of military and naval service which the exigences of modern warfare require, and at the same time, furnishes valuable hints for the final organization of our entire military establishments, both national and state. We shall publish in the Part devoted to the United States, an account of the Military Academy at West Point, the Naval Academy at Newport, and other Institutions and Agencies,-State, Associated, and Individual, for Military instruction, now in existence in this country, together with several communications and suggestions which we have received in advocacy of Military Drill and Gymnastic exercises in Schools. We do not object to a moderate amount of this Drill and these exercises, properly regulated as to time and amount, and given by competent teachers. There is much of great practical value in the military element, in respect both to physical training, and moral and mental discipline. But we do not believe in the physical degeneracy, or the lack of military aptitude and spirit of the American people—at least to the extent asserted to exist by many writers on the subject. And we do not believe that any amount of juvenile military drill, any organization of cadet-corps, any amount of rifle or musket practice, or target shooting, valuable as these are, will be an adequate substitute for the severe scientific study, or the special training which a well organized system of military institutions provides for the training of officers both for the army and navy. Our old and abiding reliance for industrial progress, social well being, internal peace, and security from foreign aggression rests on: I. The better Elementary education of the whole people-through better homes and better schools-through homes, such as Christianity establishes and recognizes, and schools, common because cheap enough for the poorest, and good enough for the best,-made better by a more intelligent public conviction of their necessity, and a more general knowledge among adults of the most direct modes of effecting their improvement, and by the joint action of more intelligent parents, better qualified teachers, and more faithful school officers. This first great point must be secured by the more vigorous prosecution of all the agencies and measures now employed for the advancement of public schools, and a more general appreciation of the enormous amount of stolid ignorance and half education, or mis-education which now prevails, even in states where the most attention has been paid to popular education. II. The establishment of a System of Public High Schools in every state-far more complete than exists at this time, based on the system of Elementary Schools, into which candidates shall gain admission only after having been found qualified in certain studies by an open examination. The studies of this class of schools should be preparatory both in literature and science for what is now the College Course, and for what is now also the requirements in mathematics in the Second Year's Course at the Military Academy at West Point. III. A system of Special Schools, either in connection with existing Colleges, or on an independent basis, in which the principles of science shall be taught with special reference to their applications to the Arts of Peace and War. Foremost in this class should stand a National School of Science, organized and conducted on the plan of the Polytechnic School of France, and preparatory to Special Military and Naval Schools. IV. The Appointment to vacancies, in all higher Public Schools, either among teachers or pupils, and in all departments of the Public Service by Open Competitive Examination. To a diffusion of a knowledge of what has been done, is doing, or is proposed to be done in reference to these great points, the NEW SERIES of "The American Journal of Education," will be devoted. MILITARY EDUCATION; An account of Institutions for Military Education in France, Prussia, Austria, Russia, Sardinia, Sweden, Switzerland, England, and the United States. In a Series of Papers prepared for the "American Journal of Education." Edited by HENRY BARNARD, LL. D. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. 1862. PART ONE, FRANCE and PRUSSIA. 400 pages. Price $2.50. VIII. The School of Musketry at Vincennes, IX. The Military and Naval Schools of Medicine and Pharmacy, XI. The Military Gymnastic School at Vincennes, Remarks on French Military Education, II. PRUSSIA. OUTLINE OF MILITARY SYSTEM AND MILITARY EDUCATION,. I. Outline of Military System, II. Historical View of Military Education, III. Present System of Military Education and Promotion, V. Military Schools preparatory to the Officers' Examination, 1. The Cadet Schools, or Cadet Houses, Junior Cadet House, Senior Cadet House, 2. The Division Schools, 3. The United Artillery and Engineers' School, VI. The School for Staff Officers at Berlin, VII. Elementary Military Schools for Non-commissioned Officers, System of Military Instruction, I. Polytechnic School at Paris, . 10 11 1. Subject and Methods of Instruction prescribed for Admission, . 13 2. Modifications of Scientific Course in Lycées and other Preparatory Schools in reference to, 3. History, Management, Studies, Examinations, 4. Public Services, Legal and Military, provided for by, 5. Programmes of Lectures and Courses of Instruction, II. The Artillery and Engineer School of Application at Metz, III. The Regimental Schools of Practice for Artillery and Engineers, V. The Cavalry School of Practice at Saumur, VI. The Staff School at Paris, VII. The Military Orphan School at La Fleche, 49 55 88 2. The School Division or Non-commissioned Officers' School, 3. Regimental Schools, 4. The Noble-School at Liegnitz, VIII. Remarks on the System of Military Education in Prussia, The Artillery and Engineer School at Berlin, THE POLYTECHNIC SCHOOL OF FRANCE: Its History, Conditions of Admission, Management, Subjects and Methods of Instruction, and Discipline. 130 pages. Philadelphia: J. B. LIPPINCOTT & Co. Price, $1.00. CONTENTS. INTRODUCTION. SPECIAL SCHOOLS OF SCIENCE IN FRANCE,. POLYTECHNIC SCHOOL AT PARIS,.. PAGE. 5 13 SUBJECTS OF INSTRUCTION AS PRESCRIBED FOR ADMISSION IN 1850,. 13 EXAMINATIONAL SYSTEM, ANd Results,. PREPARATORY COURSE IN THE LYCEES,. HISTORY, MANAGEMENT, CONDITIONS OF ADMISSION, COURSE OF STUDY, I. FOUNDATION AND HISTORY,.. Out growth of the Necessities of the Public Service in 1794,. 49 55 55 56 High Scientific Ability of its first Teachers,.... Peculiar Method of Scientific Teaching...... 58 59 Characteristic features of the Répétitorial System,.... The Casernement, or Barrack Residence of the Pupils,. Commission of 1850,........ II. OUTLINE OF THE PLAN, OBJECTS, AND MANAGEMENT, Public Services provided for in its General Scientific Course,. Exhibitions, (or bourses, demi-bourses,) and Outfits (trousseaux,).. Number of Professors and Teachers, besides its Military Staff,. Military Establishment,.. Civil Establishment, General Control and Supervision,. 1. Board of Administration,. 2. Board of Discipline,...... 3. Board of Instruction, 4. Board of Improvement,.. III. CONDITIONS AND EXAMINATIONS FOR ADMISSION, Who may be Candidates for Admission,.. Subjects of Entrance Examination,........... Preliminary Examination,... 67 68 68 69 Co-efficients of Influence, varying with the Study and Mode of Examination,.. 69 70 Systein of Credits for every Lecture, every Interrogation, and Exercise,.... 75 |