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The Educational Writings of Richard Mulcaster

Chapter 2: PREFACE.
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About This Book

The author outlines a comprehensive programme for schooling that blends elementary literacy, languages, music, drawing, arithmetic, moral instruction, and regulated physical exercise. He advocates vernacular-first reading, merit-based selection and limits on school numbers, elementary provision for all and higher studies for some, including girls, alongside practical training for gentlemen and professionals. Detailed proposals address teacher training, school organization, specialized colleges, curricula, hours, buildings, choice of books, and forms of discipline. Practical concerns about overpressure, cooperation between parents and teachers, and methods to foster healthy bodies and minds recur throughout.


PREFACE.

Some apology is needed for the presentation of an Elizabethan writer to English readers in any form but that of the original text. The justification of the present volume must lie in the fact that in the three centuries and more that have elapsed since the educational writings of Richard Mulcaster were given to the world, they have entirely failed to gain acceptance as literature. This neglect of one of our most interesting and important educationists is no doubt chiefly to be regarded as part of the general indifference which until recently the British public has consistently shown to all discussion of educational problems, but when we consider the reputation of Mulcaster’s contemporary, Roger Ascham, who had far less to say, but knew how to say it with lucidity and grace, we are constrained to admit that Mulcaster has lost his opportunity of catching the world’s ear, and that if his writings are to be known and appreciated as they deserve by this generation, it must be rather for their substance than for their literary style. It is true that the serious student may now be trusted to investigate for himself the thoughts of earlier authors in spite of difficulties of form and expression, but the general reader will expect more help than, in the case of Mulcaster at least, is at present available. The earlier of his two chief works, the Positions, published in 1581, was out of print for 300 years, until the issue in 1888 of an almost facsimile edition by the late Mr. Quick, to whom the credit of discovering this author is mainly due, while the second work, the Elementarie, has never been reprinted at all. It is safe to assume that not many readers will care to possess themselves of the somewhat expensive reprint of the former work, or to institute a search for one of the rare copies of the original and only edition of the latter. And if these books were to be made more accessible, it seemed worth while at the same time to present them in such a form that they should be readily intelligible to the ordinary reader. In the case of an acknowledged literary classic it may be inadmissible to tamper even with the type and spelling, far more with the phraseology and arrangement of sentences, but such scruples would be out of place with the author now in question. An attempt has been made to remove all gratuitous hindrances to a full understanding of the author’s meaning, while omitting nothing that is at once characteristic and significant. It is hoped that in the process of adaptation as little as possible has been lost of the quaint flavour of the original, and of the gifts of expression that Mulcaster undoubtedly possessed, however much these were obscured by the euphuistic tendency and the somewhat laboured construction that marked the prose of his time.

J. O.


CONTENTS.

PAGE
The method of treatment,1
The purpose of writing,2
Reasons for writing in English,4
First principles,4
The use of authority,7
The ideal and the possible,11
When school education should begin,12
Risk of overpressure,13
Mens Sana in corpore sano,14
Physical exercise needs regulation,15
Physical and mental training should go together,15
Exercise specially necessary for students,16
The best kinds of exercise,17
Football as a form of exercise,17
Is education to be offered to both sexes?18
All cannot receive a learned education,19
Choice of scholars both from rich and poor,20
The number of scholars limited by circumstances,21
The number of scholars kept down by law,22
Talent not peculiar either to rich or poor,22
Choice of those fit for learning,23
How the choice of scholars, should be determined,24
Grounds for promotion,25
Co-operation of parents,27
Admission into colleges,28
Preferment to degrees,29
Natural capacity in children,30
Encouragement better than severity,32
Moral training falls chiefly on parents,32
Elementary instruction—reading,33
The vernacular first,34
Material of reading,35
Writing,36
Elementary period a time of probation,37
Drawing,37
Music,39
Four elementary subjects,42
Study of languages,44
Follow nature,45
Education of girls,50
Aim of education for girls,53
When their education should begin,54
All should have elementary education,55
Higher studies for some,57
What higher studies are suitable,58
Who should be their teachers,60
The education of young gentlemen,60
Private and public education,61
What should a gentleman learn?65
What makes a gentleman?68
Learning useful to noblemen,70
Course of study for a gentleman,72
Foreign travel,73
Gentlemen should take up the professions,77
The training of a prince,78
Boarding-schools,79
School buildings,82
Best hours for study,84
Elementary teacher most important,85
The grammar school teacher,87
The training of teachers,90
University reform,91
A college for languages,92
A college for mathematics,93
A college for philosophy,95
Professional colleges,96
General study for professional men,96
A training college for teachers,97
Use of the seven colleges,98
Uniting of colleges,99
University readers,100
Evils of overpressure,101
Limit of elementary course,103
Difficulties in teaching,104
Uniformity of method,105
Choice of school books,110
School regulations,113
Punishments,113
Condition of teachers,117
Consultation about children,118
Systematic direction,121
The standard of English spelling,124
 
The Peroration,171
 
Critical Estimate,209