1927-1928 Academic Catalog

COLLEGIATE DEPARTMENT 13. Apologetics (three semester-hours) ; 14. History of Educati<?n (three semester-hours); 15. School Administration ancl Management (two semester- hours); 16. Principles of Teaching (three semester-hours) ; 17. Special Methods (Four semester-hours); 18. Educational Psychology (two semester-hours); 19. Observation and Practice Teaching, (three semeste1' hours); 20. A Major Study (a study selected by the student and includ– ing eighteen semester-hours of collegiate work i~ some subject. of study ordinarily taught in secondary schools, for mstance, English, Latin, Biology, or History). In order to major ,in any subject, the student must have the prerequisite high school units required by the Department of Education of the State of Ohio. The following are the number of units prerequisite to each study: English, 3; history, including political science, 1; economics, 1; agriculture, 1; biological science, including physiology, botany, zoology, 1; chemistry, 1; earth science, including geology and physiography, 1; physics, 1; home economics, 1; manual training, including vocational industrial work, 1; commercial subjects, 2; mathematics, 2; French, 2; German, 2; Greek, 2; Spanish, 2; Latin, 2. In case a student lacks the high school units prerequisite to the study in which he desires to major, he may make them up by counting five semester-hours of collegiate work for each high school unit lacking; 22. A Minor Study (including ten semester-hours of collegiate work in some subject of study ordinarily taught in secondary schools). The same requirements as to prerequisite high school units apply to the minor study as to the major study, as stated above. Required work, as well as elective may be counted towards the major and minor studies. 23. Elective studies (in addition to those specified above to an amount sufficient to make a total of one hundred and twenty sem– ester-hours of collegiate work, and including enough professional studies in these one hundred and twenty hours to make a total of twenty-four semester-hours of professional work). In this t~tal of twenty-four hours may be included all work mentioned above in education, psychology, social science and ethics, as well as elective courses in the same subjects. It is not necessary that these requirements should he met in the order given. At each step the student should consult his in– structors .as to which course should be taken. Courses for Freshmen in the Arts-Education Curriculum Freshmen in this course should choose their studies, with the advice and assistance of their instructors, from the following list: Bible. Rhetoric, General Zoology, General Botany, General Chemistry. Physics, French, Germoo, Spanish, Latin, Greek, Algeh1'a, Trigonome– try, Extemporaneous Speaking, General Psychology. Limit of Work No student pursuing the arts-education curriculum will be per– mitted to take work for credit tow2.1rds the degree of Bachelor of Arts amounting to more than eighteen hours per week per semester, and no student, the majority of whose grades for the preceding semester, reckoned in terms of semester hours, was not A will be allowed to take work for such credit amounting to more than fifteen hours per week per semester. PAGE EIGHTEEN

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=