EDUCATION It is now sixty-five years since Dr. Samuel Gridley Howe knew that he had made his way through Laura Bridgmans fingers to her intelligence. The names of Laura Bridgman and Helen Keller will always be linked together, and it is necessary to understand what Dr. Howe did for his pupil before one comes to an account of Miss Sullivans work. For Dr. Howe is the great pioneer on whose work that of Miss Sullivan and other teachers of the deaf-blind immediately depends.
Dr. Samuel Gridley Howe was born in Boston, November 10, 1801, and died in Boston, January 9, 1876. He was a great philanthropist, interested especially in the education of all defectives, the feeble-minded, the blind, and the deaf. Far in advance of his time he advocated many public measures for the relief of the poor and the diseased, for which he was laughed at then, but which have since been put into practice. As head of the Perkins Institution for the Blind in Boston, he heard of Laura Bridgman and had her brought to the Institution on October 4, 1837.
Loading...
未加载完,尝试【刷新】or【退出阅读模式】or【关闭广告屏蔽】。
尝试更换【Firefox浏览器】or【Chrome谷歌浏览器】打开多多收藏!
移动流量偶尔打不开,可以切换电信、联通、Wifi。
收藏网址:www.dd123.cc
(>人<;)