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Orphan Schools in Madras

9 bytes added, 00:57, 28 February 2010
Madras Military Male Orphan Asylum
[[Image:Madras map 1862.jpg|thumb|300px|Madras, 1862, showing the Military Male Asylum (centre)]]
*This Asylum was opened in 1789. Page 223 of this Google Books [http://books.google.com/books?id=AbYBAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA223 link], published 1855.
*This [http://spuddybike.org.uk/familyhistory/madras/MadrasMFAsylum.html link] Information about the founding of both the Female and Male Military Orphan Asylums contains information from the book is contained in [http://www.archive.org/stream/churchinmadrasbe01penn#page/508/mode/2up''The church in Madras : being the history of the ecclesiastical and missionary action of the East India Company in the presidency of Madras'' ], page 508 by Rev Frank Penny (1904)Archive.org
*The Rev Dr Andrew Bell was the first Director and Superintendent of the Asylum at Egmore from 1789-1796. At the time of his appointment the system of teaching was inadequate and this lead to his founding the 'Madras System of Education' - a monitorial method whereby older pupils instructed those younger, in addition to receiving instruction from their seniors. The first monitor was a boy named John Frisken, who later became the printer of the Madras Courier. After Bell's return to the UK in 1796, this system of education was adopted in various schools both in England and also in his native Scotland.The Madras College, Fife, still recognises the influence of it's founder. For further details see [http://www.madras.fife.sch.uk/archive/articles/therevdrandrewbell.html The Rev Dr Andrew Bell]madras.fife.sch.uk.
:Bell wrote two books about the system of education he developed, giving details of the Asylum
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