THE NORMAL SCHOOLS. BY PROF. JOHN W. HESTON, A, M. FOR some time the educational pa pers of Pennsylvania have been calling attention to the Normal Schools of the State, the character of their work, their inability to give an educa tion broad and extended enough to meet the requirements of teachers at the present time, etc., etc. The interest awakened by the dis cussion of this subject warrants its in troduction in a College paper, and this more especially, since it seems conceded by all that the Colleges of the State must take up the work of training teachers for the common schools. The ventilation of this whole sub ject was begun by Dr. E. H. Magill, President of Swarthmore College. He believes that teachers require the same careful and elaborate preparation for their work that is required for entering upon the other professions. He also considers the courses of study in our Normal Schools inadequate and partic ularly deficient, because the attempt is there made to train, in methods of in struction, those who are not familiar with the subjects to be taught; after quite an elaborate statement of the de ficiencies existing in the Normal School system and practice he suggests what is termed the “new plan.” This he presents in six propositions : i. Stop all appropriations to Normal THE FREE LANCE. schools, and cancel the mortgages held against these schools, as they were built by individuals and corporations, on the faith of the state that they would continue to be State institutions. 2, Open all Colleges in the state to men and women on equal terms. 3. Establish professorships of pedagogics in certain colleges (say ten or more) at the expense of the state. 4. Give state aid to these colleges in pro portion to the number of students in pedagogies in each. 5. Require all preparing to teach to take the course in pedagogies for say the last two years of the college course. 6. Require a regular diploma, and the cer tificate in pedagogics combined, for all to be employed as teachers after a fixed date, say 189 s pr 1900 ; and subject such to no further examina tion. This “new plan” of Dr. Magill’s has been commented on by a number of men more or less prominent in the educational work of the state. First among these is Dr. Wickersham, the father of the present Normal School system. He, of course, condemns the “new plan” and endeavors to show that the present system is not only an admi rable one but perfectly adapted to the needs of our teachers in every particu lar. Among the most elaborate objec tions he offers to Dr. Magill’s plan is this— That lectures on theoretical pedagogics may be delivered in a college with good results as a department of instruction in psychology or meta physics, but such a course supplies a very small part of the preparation a teacher needs. It is fat more important that he be allowed to sec the best teaching, to teach himself under directions,