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Parents and children

Chapter 3: PREFACE
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About This Book

A collection of essays aimed at parents presents a coherent educational philosophy combining attention to the physical formation of habits with the fostering of formative ideas and character. The author examines the family's role, parental authority and inspiration, moral and spiritual education, discipline, attention, and the cultivation of feeling and truth, and discusses pedagogical theories and practical techniques. The second part offers case studies, experiments, and illustrative stories to show classroom and home applications, guidance for Bible lessons, parental councils, and ways to encourage initiative, duty, and steady habits in children.

PREFACE

The following essays have appeared in the Parents’ Review, and were addressed, from time to time, to a body of parents who are making a practical study of the principles of education—the “Parents’ National Educational Union.” The present volume is a sequel to Home Education (Kegan Paul & Co.), a work which was the means of originating this Union of Parents. It is not too much to say that the Parents’ Union exists to advance, with more or less method and with more or less steadfastness, a definite school of educational thought of which the two main principles are—the recognition of the physical basis of habit, i.e. of the material side of education; and of the inspiring and formative power of the Idea, i.e. of the immaterial, or spiritual, side of education. These two guiding principles, covering as they do the whole field of human nature, should enable us to deal rationally with all the complex problems of education; and the object of the following essays is, not to give an exhaustive application of these principles—the British Museum itself would hardly contain all the volumes needful for such an undertaking—but to give an example or a suggestion, here and there, as to how such and such an habit may be formed, such and such a formative idea be implanted and fostered. The intention of the volume will account to the reader for what may seem a want of connected and exhaustive treatment of the subject, and for the iteration of the same principles in various connections. The author ventures to hope that the following hints and suggestions will not prove the less practically useful to busy parents, because they rest on profound educational principles.