Excerpt from Normal Schools and Their Origin: A Paper Read at a Regular Meeting of the Worcester Society of Antiquity, June 5th, 1877
But, to Rev. Samuel R. Hall belongs the credit of being the father of normal schools in America, the first to establish on this continent a school for the Special training and prepara tion oi teachers. Schools oi this kind were ad vocated as early as 1816 by Professor Denison Olmstead while a tutor in Yale College, in an address delivered on the state of education in Connecticut, in which he endeavored to show that the great defect in our school education was the ighorance and incompetency of the teachers, and the only remedy was a seminary for their special instruction and training for the work of their profession. Other gentlemen deeply interested in the cause 01 popular educa tion, had from time to time before the establish ment of our state normal schools in 1838 made similar suggestions, and Professor Ticknor in the North American Review [or 1827 advocated the same.
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