The First Higher School's Instruments for Science and Engineering Education

  • OKAMOTO Takuji
    Department of History and Philosophy of Science, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, The University of Tokyo

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説明

This article outlines the collection of educational materials for science and engineering education formerly possessed by the First Higher School, one of the prewar national higher secondary schools in Japan. The collection contains instruments that were supposedly costly for the Japanese Goverment in the 1890s, such as Rudolph Koenig's sound analyzer, an electric balance and a static voltmeter invented by William Thomson and made by James White, or a copy of Leon Foucault's rotating mirror. They represent high hopes that the government placed on higher school pupils, while the pupils' maps drawn as assignments of the practice of surveying, which was compulsory for all engineering majors between 1886 and 1919, describe how they tried to live up to their country's expectations. Furthermore, the surveying instruments in the collection that once belonged to the Imperial Army imply that the offer from the army was crucial in materializing surveying education in its beginnings.

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詳細情報 詳細情報について

  • CRID
    1571980076973650560
  • NII論文ID
    110008661189
  • NII書誌ID
    AA11081495
  • ISSN
    02854821
  • 本文言語コード
    en
  • データソース種別
    • CiNii Articles

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