Excerpt from Lectures, and Annual Reports, on Education
IN preparing the present volumes of Mr. Mann's works for republication, I have gone back to his very first expositions of the deficiencies in the administration of our' common-school system, not only because it is a matter of historical interest to note the commencements of the reform in which he was so actively engaged for twelve years, but because, on looking into the present condition of the schools, even in Massachusetts, in towns not twenty miles from Boston, the same defects may be observed in many cases, and in many respects, which at first attracted his attention.
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