140 INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF EDUCATION.
gogical field. Learned specialists in different lines of study and investigation are slow
bo tell the pedagogical value of their subjects for children in the common schools. They
are generally wise enough to limit their advice to their own academic field of instrue-
tion. It is the business of specialists to develop their particular fields. It is the special
province of the scientific pedagogue to see what use he can make of the fruits of learn-
ing in all fields in developing a child. 1t is his business to step in to the relief not
only of specialists but particularly of the common schools, to select the most important
subjects, and to codrdinate them in harmony with the needs of children. There is then
a broad field which is the legitimate province of the pedagogue and unoccupied by any-
one else.
The school of pedagogy at Jena, under the direction of Dr. Wilhelm Rein, is a place
where theory and practice are brought into the best wholesome union.
Dr. Rein delivers lectures on psychology, history of education, and general and
special methods ; and also is director of the practice school of three grades—second,
courth, and sixth. A skilled training teacher is at the head of each grade, who not only
teaches but is critic of the practice teachers who labor in his grade. Each student who
hears pedagogical lectures with Dr. Rein, also teaches from two to five hours a week in
:he practice school.
Once a week a test lesson is given by one of the practicing teachers, in the presence of
all the teachers presided over by Dr. Rein. Three days later this test lesson is carefully
discussed by the teacher conducting it and by others specially appointed, as well as by
the whole body of interested students. The discussion of an hour and a half is con-
cluded by Dr. Rein giving a summary of the arguments,
Week by week throughout the year this careful mingling of theory and practice
occurs, and the important ideas of educational science and practice gradually clear up.
HIGHER ACADEMIC DEGREES IN PEDAGOGY.
BY PROFESSOR S. G. WILLIAMS, CORNELL UNIVERSITY.
AT the outset, is it not very doubtful whether there is any fit place for special degrees
in pedagogy ? For pedagogy is merely a branch of the philosophic disciplines—an
application of the principles of ethics and psychology to the training of children and
youth, It has always been so considered since Kant, from his renowned chair of phi-
losophy in Kénigsberg, treated pedagogy as one of his proper subjects; since Herbart
inaugurated his illustrious carcer as a philosopher by a course on pedadogy in Gétting-
en, and later, in the chair of Kant, made this a chief object in his courses, thus gain-
ing an ever-growing influence in German education, which is likely to preserve the
memory of his name when his philosophy, save in its relations to pedagogy, may be
forgotten.
But the degree of Ph.D. already exists for the philosophic disciplines in their wide
sense, including language, history, and economics. What reason can be given for cre-
ating a special degree in pedagogy which would not be equally good for giving special
doctorates in history, in economics, and in language ? or for like degrees in mathemat-
ics, chemistry, etc.? The same end would be attained, without a confusing multiplica-
tion of degrees, by conferring the well-known M.A. for distinguished attainments in
pedagogy and the history of education, and the already used Ph.D. for such attainments
coupled with distinguished services in this branch of philosophy.
It is to be feared that the proposal of special pedagogic degrees may be suspected to
be inspired by a desire on the part of ambitious teachers to gain cheap doctorates.