London Normal School - Spectrum Yearbook (London, Ontario Canada)

 - Class of 1939

Page 10 of 80

 

London Normal School - Spectrum Yearbook (London, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 10 of 80
Page 10 of 80



London Normal School - Spectrum Yearbook (London, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 9
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Page 10 text:

644A McudeM Principal C. E. Mark, B.A., D.Paed. School Management, Methodology of Geography and Spelling. Over the brow of the hill and beyond the horizon lies many a charming vista for him who has courage and perseverance. T. E. Clarke, B.A., B.Paed. Science of Education, Methodology of Grammar and Composition. May your pupils develop in their creative expression some measure of those qualities that have characterized your own essays, presented before the Literary Society or subfnitted for the Year Book. G. W. Hofferd, M.A., D.Paed. Methodology of Science, Agriculture and Horticulture. Nature Study. To liavc had a share in developing in you right thoughts conccrtiing education has been a pleasure. May these serve you as a reliable guide in your wider adventures as a teacher and a citizen. .Sowing seeds of kindness, cultivating high ideals, and fos- tering the habit of relating cause and effect luill be among your most direct responsi- bilities. Yoit can achieve the higest goal only if you e.xercise common sense, studious habits and good will towards others. May you have good success! J. G. McEachern, B.A., B.Paed. Advanced English, Methodology of Literature, Reading and History. Follow knowledge like a sinking star. Beyond the utmost bound of human thought. Tennyson. E. H. McKone, B.A., B.Paed. School Management, Methodology of Arithmetic, Primary Reading, Algebra and Geometry. The sati. faction resulting from work well done is man ' s highest reward. {6]

Page 9 text:

MALEDICTDR m nWWJ W WJ Winum jmJWJWWJW j,JUJ IJ UWJ I |T is hard to bid farewell to Normal. Enjoyable associations with masters and fellow-students, both in the classroom and without, have fostered friendships which make parting a sadness. Personal memories of success and failure, of hard work and good times — the night our boarding-house mistress com- plained when we spent nearly an entire night trying to master Principles of Method, the time it rained when we went hiking, the happy day when we blundered upon an honour lesson — how powerfully such memories charge with sentiment our thoughts of Normal! Even the old school building itself — the impressive reach of the building and tower, the graceful curve of the walk, the picture-laden walls of the rooms — rouses a feeling of sorrow at the prospect of departure from it. Yes, it is indeed hard to bid farewell to Normal. But the sadness of departure is more than a little tinged with a kind of joy, for the conclusion of this year marks the beginning of a great new period in our lives. Next year will find us teachers and leaders in various communities throughout the country — afire with the high ideals and enthusiasm of youth. May this divine flame, whose presence makes teaching full with zest and inspiration, and whose absence renders it drab and almost profitless, burn within us as long as we have pupils within our care. May we never fail to found our lessons upon sound principles of method, and at the same time to enliven them with delightful variations of originality; to research in the science of teaching, not merely to accept the statements of others; and to practice teaching as an art, not as a job which must be done. Perhaps it is this view of the life ahead of us which rouses the feeling that there are so many worth-while things to think and do, and so little time in which to do them, that we can not too soon leave this school and take up our positions. And so, anticipation of the life ahead tempers the sadness of departure with a kind of joy. To all those who have helped and instructed us throughout the year, we express our deepest gratitude — to the masters and instructors whose patience and kindliness have been a lesson in themselves, to the critic teachers whose suggestions have proved so helpful, and to the boarding-house mistresses whose motherly welcomes have made us feel at home. Indeed, not only have these made our year most profitable, but they have made it so pleasurable also that the days seem actually to have flown by like laughter in the wind. It is almost as if we must say in one breath, as did the Roman poet, ave atque vale — hail and farewell. Brief but full has been our day at Normal. It is with mingled feelings of sorrow and gladness, of regret and eagerness, that we bid farewell to her halls. — K. VOGAN. (5)

Suggestions in the London Normal School - Spectrum Yearbook (London, Ontario Canada) collection:

London Normal School - Spectrum Yearbook (London, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

London Normal School - Spectrum Yearbook (London, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

London Normal School - Spectrum Yearbook (London, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

London Normal School - Spectrum Yearbook (London, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

London Normal School - Spectrum Yearbook (London, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

London Normal School - Spectrum Yearbook (London, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
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