ProphetesAI is thinking...
sloyd
Answers
MindMap
Loading...
Sources
sloyd
sloyd, n. (slɔɪd) Also slöijd, slöjd, slojd, sloid. [ad. Sw. slöjd, corresponding to ON. slœ́gð, whence sleight n.1] A system of manual instruction or training in elementary woodwork, etc., originally developed and taught in Sweden. The verb sloyd (slöjd, etc.), and the ns. sloyder, sloydist, have a...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
Sloyd
Sloyd in Sweden
Sloyd () has been a Swedish school subject since the 1870s and compulsory since 1955. Gustaf Larsson wrote a number of books about sloyd and sloyd education, and B.B.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Meri Toppelius
Career
Finland
Toppelius gained five years' experience as a teacher of sloyd under Hjelt. During this time, Mrs. Hemingway, an educational leader of Boston, became interested in the sloyd system and its results in the north of Europe.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Gustaf Munthe (1896–1962)
societies; board member of the Swedish Exhibition and Congress Centre 1928-1951, of the Stockholm Exhibition in 1930, of Svenska slöjdföreningen (Swedish Sloyd , of the Gothenburg City Theatre 1935-1945, of the AB Gbgssystemet 1938-1945, of the Svenska hemslöjdsföreningens riksförbund ("Swedish National Home Sloyd
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Edvard Isak Hambro (educator)
He was a modern educator in several respects; he introduced 45 minute lessons, more physical education and sloyd, and education for girls. Schoolteachers from Bergen
Norwegian people of Danish-Jewish descent
University of Oslo alumni
19th-century Norwegian educators
Politicians from Bergen
Sloyd
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Elizabeth Binmore
Binmore is credited with being an implementer in Montreal of educational sloyd, which was a leading edge manual educational innovation in the latter half Biography at the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
Rootsweb Ancestry - Elizabeth Binmore
Canadian educational theorists
1860 births
1917 deaths
Sloyd
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Uno Cygnaeus
A sloyd training school was set up in Nääs, Sweden in the 1870s by Otto Salomon. Currently, sloyd is still part of the compulsory school curriculum in Finland, Sweden and Norway.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Julia Beck
She was first educated at the sloyd school (later Konstfack) in Stockholm from 1869–1872.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Otto Salomon
Otto Aron Salomon (1849–1907) was a Swedish educator and both a noted writer and proponent of educational sloyd. It was while at the seminary that Salomon was able to popularize the educational sloyd movement.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Aksel Mikkelsen
Beginning in 1907, he was inspector of the sloyd system in Denmark. He wrote books as well. Notes
References
1849 births
1929 deaths
19th-century Danish educators
Sloyd
People from Korsør
People from Hjørring
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
North Bennet Street School
Shaw brought Carl Fullen and Lars Eriksson, along with other sloyd teachers, to NBSIS. The school instituted training for teachers in the sloyd methodology, and Larsson estimated that over three hundred teachers had graduated from the sloyd
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Palmgrenska samskolan
It was also the first to offer sloyd, a handicraft-based education, in addition to theoretical subjects. The school was originally located in , where only sloyd was taught, but moved in 1877 to Regeringsgatan 28, where it was divided into two departments,
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Hulda Lundin
She was the founder of the so-called “Swedish public school system of manual training”, and served as Inspector of Girls' Sloyd in the public schools of Eventually, Lundin began teaching other teachers in her education methods, which was characterized by the teaching of the sloyd in Sweden in the latter
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Esbjerg Sløjdhøjskole
The handicraft and sloyd schools later separated, forming Askov Sløjdlærerskole and Askov Husflidsskole. In time, the school's unique system was referred to simply as Askov-sloyd.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org