A course of seventeen lectures on subjects connected with Pedagogics, which promise to be of great interest, are to be given at Johns Hopkins University this spring. Some of the most interesting subjects named are:
The present state of university and collegiate instruction in this country, by D. C. Gilman.
The educational value of grammar, by B. L. Gildersleeve.
Educational value of the study of Chemistry, by Ira Remsen.
What to teach in Biology, by H. Newell Martin.
Modern methods in the study of History, by H. B. Adams.
Methods of Comparative Philology as pursued today, by H. Bloomfield.
The new impetus given to the study of Latin by the application of the historical method and by the study of inscriptions, by Minton Warren.
Hygiene in collegiate training, by E. M. Hartwell.
Rhythm and education, by G. Stanley Hall.
The educational value of specialization and original work, by G. Stanley Hall.
On the uses of libraries in education, by D. C. Gilman.
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