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Display: 20

    • 1907, page 24

    • 1907, page 24
    •  

    • 24 SOUTHERN BRANCH SUBJECTS OF INSTRUCTION. MATHEMATICS. MR. HUSSONG. MR. HANSEN. MR. FOSTER. MR. HANNEN. MR. WOODBURY. Algebra a. This course affords a thorough and complete treatment of...
    • 1907, page 28

    • 1907, page 28
    •  

    • 28 SOUTHERN BRANCH PHYSICAL SCIENCE. MR. FOSTER. Elementary Physics. Recitations and laboratory work. The recitations are accompanied by numerous lecture-table experiments, which fully illustrate the subject matter of the lesson. 2...
    • 1907, page 32

    • 1907, page 32
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    • 32 SOUTHERN BRANCH GERMAN MR. DU PONCET German 1. ELEMENTARY COURSE. The object of the first year's work is to familiarize the student with German construction so far as to enable him to read easy German text without difficulty....
    • 1911, page 33

    • 1911, page 33
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    • 33 Three hours per week throughout the year. Miss Decker, Miss Leigh. Literary Interpretation.. This course gives opportunity to forge ahead and prepare onself for an instructor in reading and interpreting the best pieces of literature....
    • 1911, page 39

    • 1911, page 39
    •  

    • 39 training in the art of singing. Special attention will be given to individual voices, with exercises and studies carefully selected to suit the needs of individual voices. The course will be based on the Italian method of making and One...
    • 1911, page 40

    • 1911, page 40
    •  

    • 40 students individually, or in groups when necessary. Each student takes notes on the experiments at the time of performing them and records his results in a record book outside of the laboratory. General Chemistry. This consists of an...
    • 1911, page 41

    • 1911, page 41
    •  

    • 41 plant to the complex forms. Much time is spent on the algae and fungi, particular attention being paid to the pests that the student will likely come in contact with in the intermountain country. The simpler physiological processes are...
    • 1911, page 42

    • 1911, page 42
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    • 42 Physiology. This is a course in physiology, hygiene, and sanitation, which not only prepares the students to teach the subject in the public schools, but teaches him the right conduct in his physical life and prepares him for intelligent...
    • 1911, page 49

    • 1911, page 49
    •  

    • 49 PEDAGOGY. Mr. Barton. The laws of Psychology are referred to in this work simply as a basis for the teaching art. The student must work out a course of instruction for some grade or grades of the public schools. A series of...
    • 1912, page 34

    • 1912, page 34
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    • SUBJECTS OF INSTRUCTION. ENGLISH. Miss Decker. Miss Brown. Mr. English a. This course consists of a review of the principles of English grammar, special attention being given to common errors. Drill in punctuation, letter writing,...
    • 1912, page 35

    • 1912, page 35
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    • 35 Four hours per week throughout the year. Miss Brown. English b. This course consists of a careful study of diction and of the fundamental rhetorical principles-unity, coherence, emphasis, proportion-as applied to the whole...
    • 1912, page 36

    • 1912, page 36
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    • 36 Mrs. Browning, Byron, Wordsworth, Shelley, Keats, Coleridge, Burns, Gray, Goldsmith ; essays of Lamb, De Quincy, Bacon, or Addison. Outside reading will be selected from the following: Gaskell, "Cranford';" Kingsley, "Hypatia ;" Jane Austin,...
    • 1912, page 37

    • 1912, page 37
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    • 37 Four hours per week throughout the year. Miss Decker. Oral Expression. The purpose of this course is to develop intelligent readers. The underlying principles of voice-building-pronunciation, articulation, enunciation, and resonance...
    • 1912, page 38

    • 1912, page 38
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    • 38 MATHEMATICS. Mr. Dalley. Mr. Robb. Mr. Gardner. Mr. Wrigley. Algebra a. This course affords a thoro and complete treatment of addition and substraction, parentheses, multiplication, division, simple equations, factoring,...
    • 1912, page 44

    • 1912, page 44
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    • 44 given to individual voices, with exercises and studies carefully selected to suit the needs of individual voices. The course will be based on the Italian method of making and placing the voice. One year of harmony and two years of piano will...
    • 1912, page 45

    • 1912, page 45
    •  

    • 45 forming them and records his results in a record book outside of the laboratory. General Chemistry. This consists of an elementary course in general chemistry and qualitative analysis. The elements of chemical theories and of important...
    • 1912, page 46

    • 1912, page 46
    •  

    • 46 Considerable field work is done and the plant societies studied to make the student familiar with the plant families that he will meet in the rural districts. Along with the scientific importance of the different forms studied, special...
    • 1912, page 47

    • 1912, page 47
    •  

    • 47 health and sanitation. The first part of the course is taken up with a study of the human mechanism from the standpoint of anatomy and physiology, followed by a careful consideration of the laws of personal hygiene. The cause, nature, history...

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