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JOSEPH JACOTOT (1770-1840)

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Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 122 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOSEPH JACOTOT (1770-1840)  , French educationist, author of the method of " emancipation intellectuelle," was born at
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Dijon on the 4th of March 1770 . He was educated at the university of Dijon, where in his nineteenth
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year he was chosen professor of Latin, after which he studied law, became advocate, and at the same time devoted a large amount of his attention to mathematics . In 1788 he organized a federation of the youth of Dijon for the defence of the principles of the Revolution; and in 1792, with the rank of captain, he set out to take
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part in the
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campaign of Belgium, where he conducted himself with bravery and distinction . After for some time filling the office of secretary of the " commission d'organisation du mouvement
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des armees," he in 1794 became deputy of the director of the Polytechnic school, and on the institution of the central
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schools at Dijon he was appointed to the chair of the " method of sciences," where he made his first experiments in that mode of tuition which he afterwards
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developed more fully . On the central schools being replaced by other educational institutions, Jacotot occupied successively the chairs of mathematics and of
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Roman law until the overthrow of the
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empire . In 1815 he was elected a representative to the chamber of deputies; but after the second restoration he found it necessary to quit his native
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land, and, having taken up his residence at Brussels, he was in 1818 nominated by the Government teacher of the French language at the university of Louvain, where he perfected into a
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system the educational principles which he had already practised with success in France . His method was not only adopted in several institutions in Belgium, but also met with some approval in France, England, Germany and Russia . It was based on three principles: (1) all men have equal intelligence; (2) every man has received from
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God the faculty of being able to instruct himself; (3) everything is in everything . As regards (1) he maintained that it is only in the will to use their intelligence that men differ; and his own
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process, depending on (3), was to give any one learning a language for the first time a short passage of a few lines, and to encourage the pupil to study, first the words, then the letters, then the grammar, then the meaning, until a single
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paragraph became the occasion for learning an entire literature . After the revolution of 1830 Jacotot returned to France, and he died at Paris on the 3oth of
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July 1840 . His system was described by him in Enseignement universel, langue maternelle, Louvain and Dijon, 1823—which passed through several editions—and in various other
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works; and he also advocated his views in the Journal de l'emancipation intellectuelle . For a
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complete list of his works and fuller details regarding his career, see Biographie de J .

Jacotot, by Achille Guillard (Paris, 186o) .

End of Article: JOSEPH JACOTOT (1770-1840)
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