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Youth; Its Education, Regimen, and Hygiene, by Granville Stanley Hall
Published: New York, D. Appleton and Company, 1907
Condensed from the author's Adolescence, published in 1904. About pre-teen and teen boys and girls, 100 years ago. Includes a Glossary with many antiquated terms you could use now-days, to get people wondering if you had insulted or complimented them.
CONTENTS:
PREFACE
CHAPTER I -- PRE-ADOLESCENCE
Introduction: Characterization of the age from eight to twelve--The era of
recapitulating the stages of primitive human development--Life close to
nature--The age also for drill, habituation, memory work, and
regermination--Adolescence superposed upon this stage of life, but very
distinct from it.
CHAPTER II -- THE MUSCLES AND MOTOR POWERS IN GENERAL
Muscles as organs of the will, of character, and even of thought--The
muscular virtues--Fundamental and accessory muscles and functions--The
development of the mind and of the upright position--Small muscles as
organs of thought--School lays too much stress upon these--Chorea--Vast
numbers of automatic movements in children--Great variety of spontaneous
activities--Poise, control, and spurtiness--Pen and tongue wagging--
Sedentary school life vs. free out-of-door activities--Modern decay of
muscles, especially in girls--Plasticity of motor habits at puberty
CHAPTER III -- INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION
Trade classes and schools, their importance in the international market--
Our dangers and the superiority of German workmen--The effects of a
tariff--Description of schools between the kindergarten and the industrial
school--Equal salaries for teachers in France--Dangers from machinery--The
advantages of life on the old New England farm--Its resemblance to the
education we now give negroes and Indians--Its advantage for all-sided
muscular development
CHAPTER IV -- MANUAL TRAINING AND SLOYD
History of the movement--Its philosophy--The value of hand training in the
development of the brain and its significance in the making of man--A
grammar of our many industries hard--The best we do can reach but few--
Very great defects in manual training methods which do not base on science
and make nothing salable--The Leipzig system--Sloyd is hypermethodic--
These crude peasant industries can never satisfy educational needs--The
gospel of work; William Morris and the arts and crafts movement--Its
spirit desirable--The magic effects of a brief period of intense work--The
natural development of the drawing instinct in the child.
CHAPTER V -- GYMNASTICS
The story of Jahn and the Turners--The enthusiasm which this movement
generated in Germany--The ideal of bringing out latent powers--The concept
of more perfect voluntary control--Swedish gymnastics--Doing everything
possible for the body as a machine--Liberal physical culture--Ling's
orthogenic scheme of economic postures and movements and correcting
defects--The ideal of symmetry and prescribing exercises to bring the body
to a standard--Lamentable lack of correlation between these four systems--
Illustrations of the great good that a systematic training can effect--
Athletic records--Greek physical training.
CHAPTER VI -- PLAY, SPORTS, AND GAMES
The view of Groos partial, and a better explanation of play proposed as
rehearsing ancestral activities--The glory of Greek physical training, its
ideals and results--The first spontaneous movements of infancy as keys to
the past--Necessity of developing basal powers before those that are later
and peculiar to the individual--Plays that interest due to their
antiquity--Play with dolls--Play distinguished by age--Play preferences of
children and their reasons--The profound significance of rhythm--The value
of dancing and also its significance, history, and the desirability of
reintroducing it--Fighting--Boxing--Wrestling--Bushido--Foot-ball--
Military ideals--Showing off--Cold baths--Hill climbing--The playground
movement--The psychology of play--Its relation to work.
CHAPTER VII -- FAULTS, LIES, AND CRIMES>br> Classification of children's faults--Peculiar children--Real fault as distinguished from interference with the teacher's ease--Truancy, its nature and effects--The genesis of crime--The lie, its classes and relations to imagination--Predatory activities--Gangs--Causes of crime-- The effects of stories of crime--Temibility--Juvenile crime and its treatment.
CHAPTER VIII -- BIOGRAPHIES OF YOUTH
Knightly ideals and honor--Thirty adolescents from Shakespeare--Goethe--
C.D. Warner--Aldrich--The fugitive nature of adolescent experience--
Extravagance of autobiographies--Stories that attach to great names--Some
typical crazes--Illustrations from George Eliot, Edison, Chatterton,
Hawthorne, Whittier, Spencer, Huxley, Lyell, Byron, Heine, Napoleon,
Darwin, Martineau, Agassiz, Madame Roland, Louisa Alcott, F.H. Burnett,
Helen Keller, Marie Bashkirtseff, Mary MacLane, Ada Negri, De Quincey,
Stuart Mill, Jefferies, and scores of others.
CHAPTER IX -- THE GROWTH OF SOCIAL IDEALS
Change from childish to adult friends--Influence of favorite teachers--
What children wish or plan to do or be--Property and the money sense--
Social judgments--The only child--First social organizations--Student
life--Associations for youth controlled by adults.
CHAPTER X -- INTELLECTUAL EDUCATION AND SCHOOL WORK
The general change and plasticity at puberty--English teaching--Causes of
its failure, (1) too much time to other languages, (2) subordination of
literary content to form, (3) too early stress on eye and hand instead of
ear and mouth, (4) excessive use of concrete words--Children's interest in
words--Their favorites--Slang--Story telling--Age of reading crazes--What
to read--The historic sense--Growth of memory span.
CHAPTER XI -- THE EDUCATION OF GIRLS
Equal opportunities of higher education now open--Brings new dangers to
women--Ineradicable sex differences begin at puberty, when the sexes
should and do diverge--Different interests--Sex tension--Girls more mature
than boys at the same age--Radical psychic and physiological differences
between the sexes--The bachelor women--Needed reconstruction--Food--Sleep--
Regimen--Manners--Religion--Regularity-- The topics for a girls'
curriculum--The eternally womanly.
CHAPTER XII -- MORAL AND RELIGIOUS TRAINING
Dangers of muscular degeneration and overstimulus of brain--Difficulties
in teaching morals--Methods in Europe--Obedience to commands--Good habits
should be mechanized--Value of scolding--How to flog aright--Its dangers--
Moral precepts and proverbs--Habituation--Training will through intellect--
Examinations--Concentration--Originality--Froebel and the naive--First
ideas of God--Conscience--Importance of Old and New Testaments--Sex
dangers--Love and religion--Conversion.
GLOSSARY
I have often been asked to select and epitomize the practical and especially the pedagogical conclusions of my large volumes on Adolescence, published in 1904, in such form that they may be available at a minimum cost to parents, teachers, reading circles, normal schools, and college classes, by whom even the larger volumes have been often used. This, with the cooeperation of the publishers and with the valuable aid of Superintendent C.N. Kendall of Indianapolis, I have tried to do, following in the main the original text, with only such minor changes and additions as were necessary to bring the topics up to date, and adding a new chapter on moral and religions education. For the scientific justification of my educational conclusions I must, of course, refer to the larger volumes. The last chapter is not in "Adolescence," but is revised from a paper printed elsewhere. I am indebted to Dr. Theodore L. Smith of Clark University for verification of all references, proof-reading, and many minor changes.
G. STANLEY HALL
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