Best 6551 quotes in «education quotes» category

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    The carefully fostered theory that schoolwork can be made easy and enjoyable breaks down as soon as anything, however trivial, has to be learned.

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    The challenge of education is not to prepare a person for success, but to prepare him for failure.

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    The chief end of science is to make things clear, the educative aim is to foster the inquisitive spirit.

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    The children are now working as if I did not exist.

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    The child realizes to every man his own earliest remembrance, and so supplies a defect in our education, or enables us to live over the unconscious history with a sympathy so tender as to be almost personal experience.

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    the chief thing I learnt at school was how to tell lies.

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    The child should have the advantage of ignorance as well as of knowledge, and is fortunate if he gets his share of neglect and exposure.

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    The Church is not a gallery for the exhibition of eminent Christians, but a school for the education of imperfect ones.

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    The clarification of visual forms and their organization in integrated patterns as well as the attribution of such forms to suitable objects is one of the most effective training grounds of the young mind.

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    The classroom, with all its limitations, remains a location of possibility. In that field of possibility we have the opportunity to labor for freedom, to demand of ourselves and our comrades, an openness of mind and heart that allows us to face reality even as we collectively imagine ways to move beyond boundaries, to transgress. This is education as the practice of freedom.

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    The clearer the teacher makes it, the worse it is for you. You must work things out for yourself and make the ideas your own.

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    The communications revolution has given millions of people both a wider and more detailed understanding of the world. Because of technology, ordinary citizens enjoy access to information that formerly was available only to elites and nation-states. One consequence of this change is that citizens have become acutely conscious of environmental destruction, entrenched poverty, health catastrophes, human rights abuses, failing education systems, and escalating violence. Another consequence is that people possess powerful communication tools to coordinate efforts to attack those problems.

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    The consequences of these institutions (The towns or districts, the congregations, the schools,and the militia.) have been, that the inhabitants, having acquired from their infancy the habit of discussing, of deliberating, and of judging of public affairs, it was in these assemblies of towns or districts that the sentiments of the people were formed in the first place, and their resolutions were taken from the beginning to the end of the disputes and the war with Great Britain.

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    The connectedness of things is what the great university is all about, and I believe the great university in the coming century will be described as a community of scholars.

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    The connection between education and a healthy economy is critical.

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    The content of the curriculum should never exclude the realities of the very students who must intellectually wrestle with it. When students study all worlds except their own, they are miseducated.

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    The country experience was more of a departure. When you consider my education and my upbringing, you can see that was more of country rock outgrowth of my popular music aspirations.

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    The cultivated mind is the guardian genius of democracy. It is the only dictator that free man acknowledges. It is the only security that free man desires.

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    The definition of a limit is essentially his [Cauchy's] creation and is as much of a miracle as those fantastic Swiss clocks of the period in which hundreds of gleaming cogs are made to celebrate not only the time and date but the phases of the moon.

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    The desire of knowledge, like the thirst of riches, increases ever with the acquisition of it.

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    The desire to explore thus marks out the mathematician. This is one of the forces making for the growth of mathematics. The mathematician enjoys what he already knows; he is eager for more knowledge.

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    The development of the faculty of attention forms the real object and almost the sole interest of studies.

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    The development of a child is guaranteed in his curiosity to discover the cause behind each and every incident.

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    The development of general ability for independent thinking and judgment should always be placed foremost, not the acquisition of special knowledge.

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    The devotion of democracy to education is a familiar fact. . . . [A] government resting upon popular suffrage cannot be successful unless those who elect . . . their governors are educated.

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    The devotion of democracy to education is a familiar fact. The superficial explanation is that a government resting upon popular suffrage cannot be successful unless those who elect and who obey their governors are educated. Since a democratic society repudiates the principle of external authority, it must find a substitute in voluntary disposition and interest; these can be created only by education.

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    The difference between intelligence and an education is this: that intelligence will make a good living for you, but education won't do much for you at all.

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    The difficulty is to try and teach the multitude that something can be true and untrue at the same time.

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    The difficulty lies, not in the new ideas, but in escaping the old ones, which ramify, for those brought up as most of us have been, into every corner of our minds.

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    The dropout crisis is just the tip of an iceberg. What it doesn't count are all the kids who are in school but being disengaged from it, who don't enjoy it, who don't get any real benefit from it.

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    The dream begins with a teacher who believes in you, who tugs and pushes and leads you to the next plateau, sometimes poking you with a sharp stick called 'truth'.

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    The earth is supported by the power of truth; it is the power of truth that makes the sun shine and the winds blow; indeed all things rest upon truth.

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    The dyed-in-the-wool teacher takes everything seriously only with respect to his students--himself included.

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    The economic borderlines of our world will not be drawn between countries, but around Economic Domains. Along the twin paths of globalization and decentralization, the economic pieces of the future are being assembled in a new way. Not what is produced by a country or in a country will be of importance, but the production within global Economic Domains, measured as Gross Domain Products. The global market demands a global sharing of talent. The consequence is Mass Customization of Talent and education as the number one economic priority for all countries

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    The education of life perfects the thinking mind, but depraves the frivolous.

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    The education of youth, an employment of more consequence than making laws and preaching the gospel, because it lays the foundation on which both law and gospel rest for success.

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    The educated man is a greater nuisance than the uneducated one.

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    The educational process should not be one of homogenizing. It should be one of encouraging excellence... when we fail to make financial aid depend upon performance, we eliminate the incentive to excellence.

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    The education and empowerment of women throughout the world cannot fail to result in a more caring, tolerant, just and peaceful life for all.

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    The educated can listen impassively to almost anything.

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    The educated man had throughout the ages found a way to covert passionate activity into silent and motionless pleasure. He can sit still in a room and not perish.

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    The education here intended in not merely that of the children of the rich and noble, but of every rank and class of people, down to the lowest and the poorest. It is not too much to say that schools for the education of all should be placed at convenient distances, and maintained at the public expense.

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    The educator must above all understand how to wait; to reckon all effects in the light of the future, not of the present.

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    The Eeyore Educational System sees childhood as a waste of time, a luxury that society cannot afford . . . Put children in school at the earliest age possible; load them down with homework; take away their time, their creativity, their play, their power; then plug them into machines.

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    The educated differ from the uneducated as much as the living from the dead.

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    The education already given to the people creates the necessity of giving them more.

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    The educational system should be a sieve, through which all the children of a country are passed. It is highly desirable that no child escape inspection.

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    The education needs in Silicon Valley versus rural Iowa versus Tennessee are very different.

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    The effort to understand the universe is one of the very few things that lifts human life a little above the level of farce, and gives it some of the grace of tragedy.

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    The elimination of ignorance, of illiteracy... and of needless inequalities in opportunities (is) to be seen as objectives that are valued for their own sake. They expand our freedom to lead the lives we have reason to value, and these elementary capabilities are of importance on their own