The Quarterly Review, Volume 265,Nummer 526John Murray, 1935 |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 19
Pagina 202
... boys and girls tends to arise within whole - hearted co- educational experiments , and that is where different subjects belong especially to boys and others to girls , each sex being supposed to choose quite freely . Here we should be ...
... boys and girls tends to arise within whole - hearted co- educational experiments , and that is where different subjects belong especially to boys and others to girls , each sex being supposed to choose quite freely . Here we should be ...
Pagina 205
... boys , ' for the fast running and hard hitting of the boys often spoiled the more skilful combinations of the girls . Differences in physical strength are not hard to recognise , and any really exceptional can be provided for by making ...
... boys , ' for the fast running and hard hitting of the boys often spoiled the more skilful combinations of the girls . Differences in physical strength are not hard to recognise , and any really exceptional can be provided for by making ...
Pagina 207
... boys come to realise that women have a definite place in the wide world . ' The coeducated regard coeducation as a matter of course . They say that foolish friendships die out of their own accord if not treated seriously . Boys bring to ...
... boys come to realise that women have a definite place in the wide world . ' The coeducated regard coeducation as a matter of course . They say that foolish friendships die out of their own accord if not treated seriously . Boys bring to ...
Inhoudsopgave
THE THEORY OF COEDUCATION By Alice Woods | 199 |
THE BALANCE OF NATURE By Douglas Gordon | 209 |
ABOLITION OR REFORM? | 223 |
6 andere gedeelten niet getoond
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Abyssinia Addis Addis Ababa Anthony Hope Beaconsfield beer bench birds black-backed gull boys and girls British Browning Browning's century character chough Christian Church civilisation coeducation conviction criticism death declared Disraeli Dr Partington Dr Seton-Watson drunkenness Emperor England English evils F. J. Furnivall fact faith fear Festus foreign Gladstone heart Henry human influence interest Isaac Italy's John John of Salisbury king lay justices less living London Lord Lord Salisbury medieval ment mind Miss Cruse modern More's natural never Paracelsus Peace persons poet Police Courts political Pope present Prince Professor Chambers Quarter Sessions Queen Queen Victoria realise recognised reforms religion religious royal Russia Salisbury schools seems social species spirit Tafari things thought tion truth Tshaka Utopia Victorian Walter Map women words writing wrote young Zauditu Zulu