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Definition of Pedagogic
1. Adjective. Of or relating to pedagogy. "Pedagogical significance"
Derivative terms: Pedagogy, Pedagogy, Pedagogy, Pedagogy, Pedagogy, Pedagogy
Partainyms: Pedagogy, Pedagogy
Definition of Pedagogic
1. n. See Pedagogics.
2. a. Of or pertaining to a pedagogue; suited to, or characteristic of, a pedagogue.
Definition of Pedagogic
1. Adjective. Of, or relating to pedagogy; teaching. ¹
2. Adjective. Haughty and formal. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Pedagogic
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Pedagogic
Literary usage of Pedagogic
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Teaching of Mathematics in the Elementary and the Secondary School by Jacob William Albert Young (1906)
"No one questions that in the pedagogic training of teachers the theoretic study
of pedagogy and the Theory and practice of the art of teaching should go ..."
2. E-learning in Tertiary Education: Where Do We Stand? by OECD Staff, SourceOECD (Online service), SourceOECD (2005)
"The pedagogic impact of e-learning is one of the key topics interesting researchers,
... What are the perceptions of the pedagogic impacts of e-learning? ..."
3. The Montessori method: Scientific Pedagogy as Applied to Child Education in by Maria Montessori (1912)
"... and its purely pedagogic importance gained through its methods for the education
of very young children, of which I now made a trial. As I have said, ..."
4. Problems of the Secondary Teacher by Wilhelm Jerusalem (1918)
"INTEREST AS A pedagogic PRINCIPLE. ITS PRACTICAL SIGNIFICANCE AND APPLICATION In
speaking of interest I refer exclusively to the pleasure incident to the ..."
5. Problems of the Secondary Teacher by Wilhelm Jerusalem (1918)
"INTEREST AS A pedagogic PRINCIPLE. ITS PRACTICAL SIGNIFICANCE AND APPLICATION In
speaking of interest I refer exclusively to the pleasure incident to the ..."
6. Education by Henry Immanuel Smith, H[enry] I[mmanuel] Schmidt (1876)
"portant pedagogic work, which appeared in 1693, in the form of letters to his
... His peculiar views made Locke a welcome teacher to the new pedagogic ..."