1918-1919 Academic Catalog

REQUIREMENTS FOR B. S. IN E. DEGREE English ------ -------------- -------- ------------ ·--·--·--·--------·--··· ·-··. --·-···-··-··--····__ 6 History ---···---·····--------·- _.---·--- .. ___ .... ·-·-. ,-..·---··--·-···- ·····-····-·· -······· ___ .. 6 Economics, Sociology, or Political Science---------·------····-···--·· 6 0 ratory ... ---··-----·-·-··-· _. _. ·-·--- -----···-·. --··-----·-· -······-·-·· ------···-·- -····--···· 6 Argumentation and Debating -·-·---·----·-··-··-·········---------····-·····-· 6 Major Study: EducationH isfory of Education ---·---·-----······--·-·······-·-·······-····-·-·-··-····· 3 School Organization and School Law······---··-·-·····-·--·-····· 3 General Methods of Teaching........·-······--·-·----··················· 3 High School Methods ··-·-·-----------·········--··-·······-···-·······-····· 3 Minor Study, and ElectivesObservation of Teaching__········-··-··-·--···-·-·····--·--------·········· 2 Practice Teaching ----··---······-·---···-·······-······-··········-··-·····-···-· 2 Science of Education ___···············-···--·····--·--····--··---··-········-··· 3 Electives (including enough professional studies to make a total of 30 semester-hours of Professional work) ----------------·--·-····--···--·----------······-···-·-··--·- --····---········- 19 Review of High School Studies with Methods------·-·--------···-· 16 Total ___________ .--------------------·- _________ ------------------------------------------· 136 REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN EDUCATION If the student adds to the above requirements fourteen semester-hours of professional work in psychology, sociology, or education, thus, wi th the sixteen semester-hours of high– school methods, adding a year's work of thirty semester-hours to the one hundred and twenty semester-hours required for the degree of Bachelor of Arts, he may receive also the degree of Bachelor of Science in Education. The limit of work in the Normal Department is the same as in the Collegiate Department, except that one or two high school studies m:iy be taken in revi~w, in addition to the fifteen or eighteen collegiate or normal credits allowed. ONE-YEAR COURSE FOR COLLEGE GRADUATES The one-year normal course is open only to those holding Bachelor's degrees from Cedarville Collge, or institutions of similar standing. It leads to the degree of Bachelor of Science in Education from Cedarville College, and in case all require– ments of the state school laws arc met, to the four-year state high school provisional certificate. These requirements call for thirty hours of strictly professional work, and whatever of this the student has not obtained in his undergraduate 25

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