McGuffey s Second Eclectic Reader.pdf
Stories in the First and Second Readers picture children in their relationship with family, teacher, friends, and animals.
In addition to containing practical lessons on spelling, McGuffey's passages and examples were chosen with the goal of providing moral instruction as well. They would provide obvious role models or cautionary tales designed to steer students to what McGuffey, a Presbyterian minister, saw as the correct moral path.
Through the sheer number of copies sold of McGuffey's Readers, and the length of time they remained in use, he may have had more influence upon American culture than any other educator in history. Philip Shriver, a historian associated with Miami University, credits the McGuffey Readers with popularizing "Mary Had a Little Lamb," "The Boy Who Cried Wolf," and even certain sayings - for example, "Where there's a will, there's a way."
Although McGuffey's Readers fell out of fashion in the early twentieth century, they still have a small following, even today, and can be found in use in some school districts in West Virginia and Virginia.
Keywords: mcguffey;primer;reader;teach
File Size: 10.8 MBytes
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