Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Indiana School Journal, 1876, Vol. 21: Organ of the State Teachers' Association and of the Superintendent of Public Instructions
He now becomes architect, mason, carpenter, shipwright, and. Whatever his imagination will make him, by means of the sim ple material. Begin with the simplest form and proceed, develop ing, altering, step by step, one form into another, without de stroying. The child will soon understand that accuracy, neat ness, and exact fitness, are indispensable to success. It would he absurd to dictate one unchangeable series of forms; the great est freedom of choice is granted, so long as the important prin ciple of developing, instead Of isolating, is observed. The younger the children are, the greater will be their tendency to pile up. So one may at Once proceed to the column, repeating the wor up, as the child adds another cube. Then taking them 06, one by one, say, down and up, placing this time the second in diamond shape on the first, the third facing him again, the fourth in diamond form, and so on. A round tower will be seen. The next form may he the zigzag tower, whilst another.
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