Roger Ascham
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"Roger Ascham" was an England/English scholar and didactic writer, famous for his prose style, his promotion of the vernacular, and his theories of education. He acted as Elizabeth I/Princess Elizabeth's tutor in Greek and Latin between 1548 and 1550, and served in the administrations of Edward VI of England/Edward VI, Mary I of England/Mary I, and Elizabeth I.

The name Ascham could be more properly spelt Askham, being derived from Askham Bryan/Askham near York. He was born at Kirby Wiske, a village in the North Riding of Yorkshire, near Northallerton, the third son of John Ascham, steward to Baron Scrope of Bolton. His mother, Margaret, is said to have come from the Conyers family, but this is speculation. Thomas and John were Roger's two older brothers, while Anthony Ascham was the youngest son of the Ascham family. The authority for this statement, as for most here concerning Ascham's early life, is his close friend Edward Grant (headmaster)/Edward Grant (1540s–1601), headmaster of the venerable and still extant Royal College of St. Peter at Westminster—better known as Westminster School—who collected and edited his letters and delivered a panegyrical oration on his life in 1576.

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I said... how, and why, young children, were sooner allured by love, than driven by beating, to attain good learning.

Learning teacheth more in one year than experience in twenty.

To speak as the common people do, to think as wise men do is style.