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The Library World Volume 8 Issue 7

New Library World

ISSN: 0307-4803

Article publication date: 1 May 1906

17

Abstract

THE importance of the book as an educational agency has so long been recognized, that it will be unnecessary for me to dwell upon that side of the question. Yet it is impossible to ignore it altogether, for it is in the educational power of the book that we find the main reason for the existence of the school library. The elementary schools carry education up to a certain point, and the technical schools and universities take it up and carry it still further, but it is the library—or at any rate the book—which co‐ordinates the whole ; many people, indeed, have no education beyond the elementary school, except what they obtain from books. From this, the part played by the school library becomes obvious. Not only is it a powerful educator in itself, but it prepares the individual for the use of the Public Library and of books in general in the period following school life. Also, I need hardly point out that, although the use of the text‐book is dis pensed with as far as possible, the whole modern system of teaching is founded on the use of books.

Citation

(1906), "The Library World Volume 8 Issue 7", New Library World, Vol. 8 No. 7, pp. 172-200. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb008886

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1906, MCB UP Limited

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