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Definition of Pedagogically
1. Adverb. In a didactic manner. "This is a didactically sound method"
Definition of Pedagogically
1. Adverb. in a pedagogical manner, like a pedagogue ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Pedagogically
1. [adv]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Pedagogically
Literary usage of Pedagogically
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Problems of Subnormality by John Edward Wallace Wallin (1917)
"CHAPTER THREE GENERAL PRINCIPLES AND FACTS TO BE RECOGNIZED IN THE ORGANIZATION
OF WORK FOR MENTALLY AND pedagogically RETARDED CHILDREN IN the month of ..."
2. The Psychological Methods of Testing Intelligence by William Stern (1914)
"In fact, we do note that there are no paradoxical cases: no one of the children
with mental retardation is pedagogically advanced, and only a single ..."
3. Education by Project Innovation (Organization) (1908)
"If Napoleon had become a teacher in a military school, could he have taught
pedagogically more than he taught directly? If the great statesmen were to ..."
4. Proceedings of the ... Annual Convention (1908)
"You cannot pedagogically impart the ... impart the appreciation of a landscape;
you cannot pedagogically impart even the nice appreciation of idioms. ..."
5. The Development of Intelligence in Children: (the Binet-Simon Scale) by Alfred Binet (1916)
"To this school are admitted all children " pedagogically retarded." The pedagogically
retarded are those whose instruction puts them two years behind normal ..."
6. Science of Education by Richard Gause Boone (1904)
"pedagogically, this all means that the pupil is to be held responsible for only
such discriminations as he is able to make, and for all such. ..."
7. Brightness and Dullness in Children by Herbert Hollingworth Woodrow (1919)
"Thus, if a child is in the fourth grade, pedagogically he is nine or ten years
of age, since nine and ten are the normal ages for the fourth grade. ..."
8. Brightness and Dullness in Children by Herbert Hollingworth Woodrow (1919)
"Thus, if a child is in the fourth grade, pedagogically he is nine or ten years
of age, since nine and ten are the normal ages for the fourth grade. ..."