[Maria Mitchell: Life, Letters, and Journals by Maria Mitchell]@TWC D-Link book
Maria Mitchell: Life, Letters, and Journals

CHAPTER IX
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Then would come one of those treats which she bestowed so freely upon her girls, and which seemed to put them in touch with the great outside world.

Letters from astronomers in Europe or America, or from members of their families, giving delightful glimpses of home life; stories of her travels and of visits to famous people; accounts of scientific conventions and of large gatherings of women,--not so common then as now,--gave her listeners a wider outlook and new interests.
"Professor Mitchell was chairman of a standing committee of the American Association for the Advancement of Women,--that on women's work in science,--and some of her students did their first work for women's organizations in gathering statistics and filling out blanks which she distributed among them.
"The benefits derived from my college course were manifold, but time and money would have been well spent had there been no return but that of two years' intercourse with Maria Mitchell." Another pupil, and later her successor at Vassar College, Miss Mary W.
Whitney, has said of her method of teaching: "As a teacher, Miss Mitchell's gift was that of stimulus, not that of drill.

She could not drill; she would not drive.

But no honest student could escape the pressure of her strong will and earnest intent.

The marking system she held in contempt, and wished to have nothing to do with it.


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