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Problems and Progress in the Development of Girls' Education in IndiaCleaveland, Rozaline Jean 01 January 1952 (has links)
In a country where only 2.53 per cent of the female population is literate, the importance of education for girls cannot be overestimated. India, being freed from British Rule in 1947, is now an independent self-governing nation. In its draft constitution it has accepted the democratic way of life. Democracy postulates an equality of opportunity for every individual to develop his abilities to the fullest extent and to be able to play his proper role in society. Therefore, in Indian today women have equal opportunity with men guaranteed by the constitution; and, in order to exercise this libety with an intellectual and social alertness, they must no longer be deprived of educational advantage.
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"Reclaiming the Child": Mountain Mission School as a Successful Appalachian Home Mission.Hood, Rachel Rebecca 15 December 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Mountain Mission School of Grundy, Virginia, founded by Samuel Robinson Hurley in 1921, is an anomaly of the mission school era of 1880 to 1940. Unlike other mission schools, Mountain Mission School was independent from its inception and was founded by a self-taught, self-made millionaire from southwest Virginia. The school's purpose to "reclaim" the child from material and spiritual poverty lay in Hurley's desire to develop a child's mind, body, and soul through a Christian, industrial education. Through personal commitment to the school and tireless fund-raising efforts for the school, he inspired others to continue the mission he began. Primary sources from Radford University, Milligan College, and Mountain Mission School, plus contemporary articles published in the Christian Standard, defend these claims.
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The Grace Dieu experience of the Anglican churchMokwele, Alfred Percy Phuti January 1988 (has links)
Thesis (M. Ed.) -- University of the North, 1988 / Refer to the document
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A historical-educational investigation into missionary education in South Africa with special reference to mission schools in BushbuckridgeNdlovu, Ntshamatiko Boy Elliot 11 1900 (has links)
This research investigates and discusses missionary education in South Africa in general, and
in the Bushbuckridge (BBR) area in particular, during the period 1910-1973. It also
investigates and highlights how missionaries from various church denominations from Europe
and the United States of America, spread the Word of God in South Africa. This research
reveals that they founded and provided educational assistance to illiterate Black people. in
order to enable thein to read the Bible, as effective means of realising their goals of
Christianisation, evangelisation and civilisation.
This study also finds that mi.ssionaries in the BBR offered Black people education in matters
of industry. manual skills and farming, at their mission stations and mission schools, as a
strong means of not only providing them with job skills and knowledge, but also preparing
them for possible future self-employment and promoting their economic development and that
of the community at large.
This investigation indicates that missionary education removed out Black culture and
traditional religious beliefs, and inculcated Western culture and Christian religious belief.
Missionary education atso inculcated civilised habits of cleanliness, obedience, loyalty,
patience, punctuality, tidiness, subordination, submissiveness, trustfulness and a sound
attitude to work, industriousness, perseverance, respect and a sense of humour amongst Black
people, as characteristic of Christianisation, and Christian evangelisation and civilisation.
After a thorough investigation and discussion of missionary education, in South Africa· in
general, and in the BBR area in particular, several recommendations and proposals are
formulated, in order to advance the purpose of this research. / Educational Studies / M. Ed. (History of Education)
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The Berlin Mission Church in Cape Town 1899-1923Karzek, Thomas 11 1900 (has links)
The study describes the formation and the establishment
of the first urban congregation of the Berlin Mission in
the Cape at the turn of the century. The establishment of
the Cape Town Congregation was not a result of urban
mission work but rather a result of the townward movement
of rural coloured people who already belonged to the
Berlin Mission Church. At first the mission headquarters
in Berlin resisted an involvement in Cape Town, but the
members there and the missionaries of the Cape Synod
urged the Berl in Mission to accept the responsibility.
Fol lowing the advice of the Moravian Mission the
Berliners finally sent a missionary, and declared the
congregation as a proper mission station on May 7, 1907.
The study closes with the consecration of the church
building in Searle Street in 1923 as a visible sign for
the establishment of the Berlin Mission Church in Cape
Town. / Christian Spirituality, Church History & Missiology / M. Th. (Missiology)
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A historical-educational investigation into missionary education in South Africa with special reference to mission schools in BushbuckridgeNdlovu, Ntshamatiko Boy Elliot 11 1900 (has links)
This research investigates and discusses missionary education in South Africa in general, and
in the Bushbuckridge (BBR) area in particular, during the period 1910-1973. It also
investigates and highlights how missionaries from various church denominations from Europe
and the United States of America, spread the Word of God in South Africa. This research
reveals that they founded and provided educational assistance to illiterate Black people. in
order to enable thein to read the Bible, as effective means of realising their goals of
Christianisation, evangelisation and civilisation.
This study also finds that mi.ssionaries in the BBR offered Black people education in matters
of industry. manual skills and farming, at their mission stations and mission schools, as a
strong means of not only providing them with job skills and knowledge, but also preparing
them for possible future self-employment and promoting their economic development and that
of the community at large.
This investigation indicates that missionary education removed out Black culture and
traditional religious beliefs, and inculcated Western culture and Christian religious belief.
Missionary education atso inculcated civilised habits of cleanliness, obedience, loyalty,
patience, punctuality, tidiness, subordination, submissiveness, trustfulness and a sound
attitude to work, industriousness, perseverance, respect and a sense of humour amongst Black
people, as characteristic of Christianisation, and Christian evangelisation and civilisation.
After a thorough investigation and discussion of missionary education, in South Africa· in
general, and in the BBR area in particular, several recommendations and proposals are
formulated, in order to advance the purpose of this research. / Educational Studies / M. Ed. (History of Education)
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The Berlin Mission Church in Cape Town 1899-1923Karzek, Thomas 11 1900 (has links)
The study describes the formation and the establishment
of the first urban congregation of the Berlin Mission in
the Cape at the turn of the century. The establishment of
the Cape Town Congregation was not a result of urban
mission work but rather a result of the townward movement
of rural coloured people who already belonged to the
Berlin Mission Church. At first the mission headquarters
in Berlin resisted an involvement in Cape Town, but the
members there and the missionaries of the Cape Synod
urged the Berl in Mission to accept the responsibility.
Fol lowing the advice of the Moravian Mission the
Berliners finally sent a missionary, and declared the
congregation as a proper mission station on May 7, 1907.
The study closes with the consecration of the church
building in Searle Street in 1923 as a visible sign for
the establishment of the Berlin Mission Church in Cape
Town. / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / M. Th. (Missiology)
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