Search results
meisterdrucke.it
- He helped to establish other charity schools in Reims and subsequently formed his teachers into a religious order (1680). He also set up boarding schools for middle-class boys, reformatories, and training colleges for secular teachers, the last of which were a new concept.
www.britannica.com/biography/Saint-Jean-Baptiste-de-La-SalleSt. Jean-Baptiste de La Salle | Biography, Religious Order ...
People also ask
Who was John Baptist de la Salle?
How did La Salle contribute to the education of poor children in France?
Why did John Baptist de la Salle want to be an educator?
Did La Salle have a priest?
How many schools did Charles de la Salle open?
Did de la Salle provide a'religious' education?
He was sent to the College des Bons Enfants, where he pursued higher studies and on 10 July 1669 he took the degree of Master of Arts. When De La Salle had completed his classical, literary, and philosophical courses, he was sent to Paris to enter the Seminary of Saint-Sulpice on 18 October 1670.
founder of the Brothers of the Christian Schools. Born at Reims of a noble family, de la Salle was early destined for the Church. He was tonsured at eleven years of age and became a canon of Reims at sixteen. Three years later he went to study at Saint-Sulpice and was ordained priest in 1678.
May 16, 2019 · A pioneer of education who dreamed of a school open to all is how Pope Francis described Saint John Baptist de La Salle, in the audience granted this morning to the Brothers of the Christian Schools, the community he founded, on the third centenary of his death.
It is true that de la Salle, in establishing his institute, had in mind principally the primary and elementary school, which was the real raison d'etre for the existence of the Brothers of the Christian Schools.
May 12, 2019 · De La Salle’s first attempt to open a training college was made in conjunction with Armand-Charles, the Duke of Mazarin, in 1683, when he eventually resigned his post from canon of the...
Mar 11, 2019 · John Baptist de La Salle was a pioneer in founding training colleges for teachers, reform schools for delinquents, technical schools, and secondary schools for modern languages, arts, and sciences. Read more about this extraordinary teacher’s contribution.