1919-1920 Academic Catalog

THE ARTS CURRICULUM 3. The Arts-Theology Curriculum, leading to the degree of Bachelor of Arts and to the Diploma of Graduation from the Theological Seminary; 4. The Arts-Science Curriculum, leading to the degree of Bachelor of Science; 5. The Arts-Agriculture Curriculum, leading to the degree of Bachelor of Science from Cedarville College and to the de– gree of Bachelor of Science in Agriculture from Ohio State University. DEFINITION OF CREDIT OR SEMESTER-HOUR In all of the Collegiate and Graduate Courses, credit is counted by the "semester-hour." A ·'credit" or "semester– hour" is one recitation, lecture, or laboratory period a week for one semester. A student completing the work required in fifteen such periods a week for one semester receives credit for fifteen semester-hours, and if such work is continued for a full year and satisfactorily completed, he receives credit for thirty semester-hours, which is considered full work for one year. A semester is eighteen weeks or one-half of the academic or collegiate year of nine months. ---- THE ARTS CURRICULUM Requirements for the Degree of Bachelor of Arts Upon th~ completion of the following requirements, which comprise the Arts Curriculum, the degree of Bachelor of ,1-rts is conferred: 1. Bible (six semester-hours elected from this depart– ment); 2. College Rhetoric (six semester-hours) ; 3. Foreign Language (from twelve to sixteen semester– hours, including two years' work in one language or one year's work in each of two languages, selected from the following: French, German, Latin, Greek, or Spanish); 4. Natural Science (sixteen semester-hours, including two of the following sciences: Biology, Chemistry, or Physics; each science being pursued throughout an entire collegiate year); 5. English (six semester-hours, in addition to College Rhetoric, elected from this department); l8

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