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Mind and Hand: Manual Training the Chief Factor in Education cover

Mind and Hand: Manual Training the Chief Factor in Education

Chapter 5: ILLUSTRATIONS.
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About This Book

The author argues that education should unite intellectual development and practical skill by teaching manual arts alongside academic subjects, presenting tools and workmanship as central civilizing forces. He traces philosophical and historical foundations for this claim, challenges exclusive reliance on classical educational models, and supports his analysis with citations to authorities. Practical pedagogy occupies much of the discussion, with descriptions of manual-training methods, calls for workshop-centered curricula, and advocacy for the co-education of sexes in hands-on instruction. The work also compiles statistical material and an appendix documenting the diffusion of manual-training programs and recommends institutional reforms to cultivate invention, industry, and useful habits in students.

ILLUSTRATIONS.

  PAGE
Portrait of the Author Frontispiece
The Laboratory of Carpentry 23
Course in the Laboratory of Carpentry 27
The Wood-turning Laboratory 31
Course in the Wood-turning and Pattern Laboratory 41
The Founding Laboratory 49
Course in the Founding Laboratory 53
The Forging Laboratory 59
Course in the Forging Laboratory 67
The Machine-tool Laboratory 79
The Chipping, Filing, and Fitting Laboratory 89
Course in the Machine-tool Laboratory 95
The Students with their Books 107
M. Victor Della-Vos, the Founder of Manual Training in Russia 329
Dr. John D. Runkle, the Founder of Manual Training in the United States 335

POWER.

His tongue was framed to music,
And his hand was armed with skill;
His face was the mould of beauty,
And his heart the throne of will.

Emerson.