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Definition of Elementary education
1. Noun. Education in elementary subjects (reading and writing and arithmetic) provided to young students at a grade school.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Elementary Education
Literary usage of Elementary education
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Readers' Guide to Periodical Literature by H.W. Wilson Company (1916)
"Kduc H 51:342-54 Ар Ч« elementary education. HB Wilson. Nat Educ Assn 1915:602-9
Elimination of waste in elementary education. CJ Cipriani. ..."
2. Readings in the History of Education: A Collection of Sources and Readings by Ellwood Patterson Cubberley (1920)
"The elementary education Act of 1870 (elementary education Act; 33 and 34 Victoria,
chap. 75) In 1870 the culmination of over sixty years of struggle to ..."
3. Comparative Education: Studies of the Educational Systems of Six Modern Nations by Peter Sandiford, Isaac Leon Kandel, Harold Waldstein Foght, Arthur H. Hope (1918)
"elementary education The chief asset of Canadian elementary education is its
democratic character. For in a very real sense the elementary school is the ..."
4. Education by Project Innovation (Organization) (1916)
"New Idealism in elementary education BY EMMA TOWNSEND WILKINSON, ALBANY, NEW YOEK.
1 What education is. 2 False ideals. OUTLINE. ..."
5. The Catholic Encyclopedia: An International Work of Reference on the by Charles George Herbermann (1913)
"As all previous work in elementary education was due to the voluntary or
denominational bodies, nearly all existing primary schools were voluntary schools. ..."
6. Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Standard Work of Reference in Art, Literature (1907)
"75, entitled of 1870' "An Act to provide for Public elementary education in
England and Wales," it was ordered that ''there shall be provided for every ..."
7. A Text-book in the History of Education by Paul Monroe (1905)
"elementary education in Roman Catholic Countries.— The Christian Brothers performed
for elementary education, at least in France and to a less degree in ..."