Hans Weil: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen
Zur Navigation springen
Zur Suche springen
Ilieva (Diskussion | Beiträge) |
|||
(Eine dazwischenliegende Version von einem anderen Benutzer wird nicht angezeigt) | |||
Zeile 1: | Zeile 1: | ||
− | "From Mannheim's school emerged Hans Weil,author of [[The Evolution of the German Educational Principle]],my guide to the structure of German society within which the first stages of Jewish assimilation had occured. Weil was also a Jew and even of a prominent family....Weil himself was far removed from Judaism and was married to a Christian woman. He was associated with the Departament of Education, but his seminar had a distinctly sociological flavor. Though war injuries had impaired his powers of speech, the narrow circle that clustered around Weil found him a fine and gifted teacher."(With My Own Eyes, S.79) | + | *1933 Privatdozent für Pädagogik an der Phil.Fak. |
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | "From Mannheim's school emerged Hans Weil,author of [[The Evolution of the German Educational Principle]],my guide to the structure of German society within which the first stages of Jewish assimilation had occured. Weil was also a Jew and even of a prominent family....Weil himself was far removed from Judaism and was married to a Christian woman. He was associated with the Departament of Education, but his seminar had a distinctly sociological flavor. Though war injuries had impaired his powers of speech, the narrow circle that clustered around Weil found him a fine and gifted teacher."(With My Own Eyes, S.79,Katz) |
Aktuelle Version vom 20. Juli 2007, 10:26 Uhr
- 1933 Privatdozent für Pädagogik an der Phil.Fak.
"From Mannheim's school emerged Hans Weil,author of The Evolution of the German Educational Principle,my guide to the structure of German society within which the first stages of Jewish assimilation had occured. Weil was also a Jew and even of a prominent family....Weil himself was far removed from Judaism and was married to a Christian woman. He was associated with the Departament of Education, but his seminar had a distinctly sociological flavor. Though war injuries had impaired his powers of speech, the narrow circle that clustered around Weil found him a fine and gifted teacher."(With My Own Eyes, S.79,Katz)