Electricity, like every science, presents
two phases to the student, one belonging to a theoretical
knowledge, and the other which pertains to the practical
application of that knowledge. The boy is directly
interested in the practical use which he can make of
this wonderful phenomenon in nature.
It is, in reality, the most successful
avenue by which he may obtain the theory, for he learns
the abstract more readily from concrete examples.
It is an art in which shop practice
is a greater educator than can be possible with books.
Boys are not, generally, inclined to speculate or
theorize on phenomena apart from the work itself; but
once put them into contact with the mechanism itself,
let them become a living part of it, and they will
commence to reason and think for themselves.
It would be a dry, dull and uninteresting
thing to tell a boy that electricity can be generated
by riveting together two pieces of dissimilar metals,
and applying heat to the juncture. But put into
his hands the metals, and set him to perform the actual
work of riveting the metals together, then wiring
up the ends of the metals, heating them, and, with
a galvanometer, watching for results, it will at once
make him see something in the experiment which never
occurred when the abstract theory was propounded.
He will inquire first what metals
should be used to get the best results, and finally,
he will speculate as to the reasons for the phenomena.
When he learns that all metals are positive-negative
or negative-positive to each other, he has grasped
a new idea in the realm of knowledge, which he unconsciously
traces back still further, only to learn that he has
entered a field which relates to the constitution of
matter itself. As he follows the subject through
its various channels he will learn that there is a
common source of all things; a manifestation common
to all matter, and that all substances in nature are
linked together in a most wonderful way.
An impulse must be given to a boy’s
training. The time is past for the rule-and-rote
method. The rule can be learned better by a manual
application than by committing a sentence to memory.
In the preparation of this book, therefore,
I have made practice and work the predominating factors.
It has been my aim to suggest the best form in which
to do the things in a practical way, and from that
work, as the boy carries it out, to deduce certain
laws and develop the principles which underlie them.
Wherever it is deemed possible to do so, it is planned
to have the boy make these discoveries for himself,
so as to encourage him to become a thinker and a reasoner
instead of a mere machine.
A boy does not develop into a philosopher
or a scientist through being told he must learn the
principles of this teaching, or the fundamentals of
that school of reasoning. He will unconsciously
imbibe the spirit and the willingness if we but place
before him the tools by which he may build even the
simple machinery that displays the various electrical
manifestations.