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Proceedings and Acts of the General Assembly, 1866
Volume 107, Page 473   View pdf image (33K)
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7
and navy of the nation, the Normal School will accomplish for public
instruction in Maryland.
Tuition and the use of text books will be furnished free of charge.
In addition to this it is desirable that some plan be adopted to aid meri-
torious young men and women to pay their board while preparing them-
selves for their work. This might be done by a loan, to be repaid in
instalments from their salaries when engaged as teachers in the Schools.
At the meeting of the State Board, December 27, I was directed to
rent suitable rooms for the school, and to arrange for immediate work.
This has been done. The apartments procured are not well adapted to
the purpose, but such is the scarcity of buildings of every description in
the City of Baltimore, that it may be considered fortunate that we have
been even partially successful. It is hoped that the City Council at its
next session will decide to co-operate with the State Board, and hasten
the thorough organization of the Normal School, which will be of incalcu-
able benefit to the Schools of the City as well as of the Counties.
The first session will commence January 15, 1866, of which notice
has been given by advertisement in the leading journals of Baltimore
and of each County.
REPORT OF PROF. NEWELL.
In compliance with an order of the State Board of Education, I visited,
in the months of November and December, the principal Normal Schools
of Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Massachusetts and Connecti-
cut. My object was to ascertain, by personal observation and inquiry,
the history and organization of these Schools; their methods of instruc-
tion and government; the difficulties they have met with, and the results
they have attained.
It is now about forty years since some bold thinkers in the Eastern
States began to preach a new and startling doctrine respecting Educa-
tion:—that a person requires special training to make him a good teacher,
just as a man needs special training in order to become a good lawyer, a
good physician, or a good mechanic. This truth, so obvious and so
important, met with such a reception as the world generally accords to
great and simple truths, when first presented. Some derided it as a
truism, some branded it as false; many accepted it in theory and re-
jected it in practice. Fourteen years afterwards, in the year 1889,
the State of Massachusetts, urged by one of her private citizens who
offered to defray half the expense, set on foot, as an experiment, three
Schools for the training of teachers. These were the pioneer Normal
Schools of the United States. Five years afterward, the example thus
set by Massachusetts was followed by New York. A State Normal
School was established by Connecticut in 1849, by Michigan in 1850,
by Rhode Island in 1852, by New Jersey in 1855, by Illinois in 1857,
by Pennsylvania and Minnesota in 1859, by Wisconsin in 1862, and by
Maine in 1863. Of the thirteen original States, Maryland is the
seventh that has engaged in this enterprise, and in point of time she is
not far behind some of her sisters.

 
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Proceedings and Acts of the General Assembly, 1866
Volume 107, Page 473   View pdf image (33K)
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