Castle Heights Military Academy - Yearbook (Lebanon, TN)

 - Class of 1943

Page 40 of 118

 

Castle Heights Military Academy - Yearbook (Lebanon, TN) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 40 of 118
Page 40 of 118



Castle Heights Military Academy - Yearbook (Lebanon, TN) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 39
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Castle Heights Military Academy - Yearbook (Lebanon, TN) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 41
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Page 40 text:

GROUP B I Mini- Maxi- Mini- Maxi- Suhuh mum mumSuMeds mum mum Agriculture . . 1 2 Commercial Drawing .... I 2 Typing . . . 1 r Shopwork .... 1 2 Shonhand . . . 1 2 Vocational Teacher Bookkeeping , . 1 2 Training . . 1 3 Commercial Law Z 25 Home Economics . I 3 Bus. Practice . . M x Pdndng . . . . 1 2 Saksmandup. . DQ I Auto Mechanics . M 1 Com. Arith. . . M M Conn Cleography L6 L6 Admission by Examination. Pupils desiring to enter the Junior College but who have never been grad- uated from a secondary school may do so by success- fully passing an entrance examination in the required number and kinds of units as specified above. Applicants wishing to enter by this method should correspond with the dean as to the dates of such examinations and the required subjects which he will have to take. Results of College Entrance Board Examinations are accepted in lieu of passing these examinations. So also are the examinations of the Board of New York Regents. Pupil Guidance. The college offers its students intelligent and careful guidance in several different fields. This service includes lil Educational Guidance, 12, Vocational Guidance, GQ Personal Guidance, My Mental and Physical Health Guidance, and Ol De- velopment through carefully chosen Extra-Curricular Activities. Every student is studied for the purpose of discovering his own particular individuality and needs. The purpose is to fit the boy to his own peculiar in- dividuality rather than mould him into a mass complex. The guidance program is carried on by means of both group and individual pupil conferences. Each student is assigned to a counsellor, who acts as his adviser. In matters pertaining to vocational and personal guidance it is possible that he will come in contact with as many faculty advisers as he has vocational interest or abilities, or as often as needs be in the development of his per- sonality. The duty of the adviser is to aid the pupil in the selection of his studies in order to best iit him in pursu- ing further study preparatory to his future vocation or profession. The educational adviser confers with him concerning types of colleges or universities where he can best get further training, and helps him in mapping out his course of study along this line. He is taught the art of fitting himself to an organized society as one of its members. His personal weaknesses, if he has any, are analyzed and methods of improvement are frankly discussed with him. His strong points are brought to his attention and again he is encouraged to sieze upon these and develop them to their fullest possibility. In other words, the aim of the entire guidance program is to develop the whole boy to the fullest extent rather than permit him to develop into a one-sided or warped individual. A guidance clinic, as well as a reading clinic, has U61 been established in the school and offers help to any student, at any time, with individual or personal prob- lems. Students are free to visit the clinic at their own volition or they may be referred by members of the faculty. Freshman Week. All freshmen and other stu- dents enrolling for the first time are required to report to the college a few days in advance of the beginning of instruction in September. This period is devoted to registration, aptitude and psychological tests, confer- ences with advisers, class assignments, lectures, and a general orientation program, thus enabling the pupil to become thoroughly acquainted with the school environ- ment before he is thrown into the larger group. General Requirements. At the time of matricu- lation every student is required to select one of the groups of college subjects for which he is prepared. He will be assigned to this group by the dean and will not be permitted to change to another unless he can show good reasons why such a change is necessary or advis- able. Under no circumstances will he be permitted to make such a change without the dean's consent. 1. NUMBER OF CLASS I-Iouns REQUIRED! Each stu- dent will be expected to carry a normal scholastic load of fifteen class hours per semester. The minimum num- ber of class hours which any regular student may carry during any one semester is twelve. The maximum num- ber is seventeen. Any deviation from this regulation must have the consent of the dean and a just cause must be presented by the pupil in the form of a petition before it will be acted upon. In addition to the regular schedule of class-room work the pupil must enroll in the military department for the regular work offered in the R. O. T. C. He is also required to participate in some form of physical education at least one hour each day during the school week. 2. HOME CONTACTS: Each pupil is required to write at least one letter home each week to his parents. Time is set aside once each week for this purpose. Examinations and Grades. In addition to the regular semester examination, which comes at the close of each term, both monthly and bi-monthly tests are given for the purpose of arriving, to some degree, at the progress the pupil is making. Such grades are marked numerically and a report is made to the pupil's parents or guardian immediately following. The lowest passing grade is 70Wv. All grades are made up from an average of the accumulated daily work and the exami- nation grades. Any student whose work is unsatisfactory but not a complete failure and, who, in the judgment of the instructor, is capable of removing the deficiency without repeating the work in class, shall be condi- tioned, and so marked. No conditioned grades will count toward graduation. Those students whose work is entirely unsatisfactory shall be marked failed,,' and

Page 39 text:

GENERAL ROBERT LEE BULLARD HALL required for admission a unit is defined as the amount of work usually accomplished in a subject during one recitation period of not less than forty minutes per day for one school year, with a minimum of thirty-six weeks or its equivalent. Pupils not quite meeting the admis- sion requirements may be given a provisional admission, but the deficiency must be made up during the first year of residence. Making Application. As soon as the pupil has decided to enter Castle Heights Junior College it is extremely important that he have the principal or super- intendent of the high school from which he graduated send his credits immediately to the Dean of the Junior College, Castle Heights Military Academy. No student can be regularly admitted until all his credits have been received. Merely a high school diploma or a certificate alone is not acceptable for admission. Subjects Accepted for Admission. The high school subjects accepted for admission to the college are, in general, those which are acceptable in any regular college or university. However, certain subjects out of the group of fifteen are required for general admission. These might be classified as following: Three units in English, two units in mathematics, one in algebra and one in plane geometry, one unit in a social science, one unit in a laboratory science other ISN than general science. Two units in a foreign language are strongly advised. In case the latter is not presented for entrance, additional hours in a language will be required for graduation in certain departments leading toward a liberal arts degree. ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS-JUNIOR COLLEGE The high school subjects which one may offer for general admission to the college may be classified accord- ing to the following plan: GROUP A Mini- Maxi- Mini- Maxi- Subjects mum Vlllllllslllljffli' mum mum English . . 3 4 Solid Geometry . . LQ I4 Speech ..... M 1 'Trigonometry . . LQ LQ Mathematics . . Advanced Arith, . LQ HS Algebra . . . 1 2 Foreign Language Plane Geometry 1 1 Greek , . . . 2 3 Latin . , . . 2 4 Natural Sciences German . . . 2 3 Physics ..., 1 1 French . . . 2 3 Chemistry . . . 1 1 Spanish . . . 2 3 Botany .... M 1 Social Subjects Zoology . . , . M 1 History . . 1 4 Physiography . M I Civics . . . I4 1 General Science . 1 I Sociology . . I6 1 Music Am. Problems M 1 Music Apprecia- Economics . . V2 1 tion .... M 1 Geography , M 1 Harmony . . . M 1 Musical Per- formance . . M 1



Page 41 text:

lass. Students shall be required to repeat the work in c who fail to take an examination, except in case of a recognized excuse, or who attend an examination but fail to turn in an examination paper, shall be marked 'ifailedn for that period. In case of an unavoidable absence the student will be marked X and will be per- mitted to take the examination at some later date pro- vided that he file in the ofhce of the dean an acceptable excuse either prior or immediately following the date of the examination. Before the student may rake the for an absent grade he must present to his ermit signed by the dean. AND ABSENCES: All grades marked examination instructor a p 1. CONDITIONS Nconditionn in any subject, or absent from an exami- nation, which are not removed within a reasonable time as indicated by the dean, will be changed to failure. 2. INCOMPLETE: All grades, except s of 'lincompletei' not made up within the next given rade period will be changed to failure. g 3. FAILURES: A semester grade marked failure, or an rade permitted to emester grades, incomplete or conditioned semester g lapse with a failure, cannot be removed and no credit will be given in the subject until the course is repeated again in class. 4. CHANGE OF COURSE. OR WITHDRAWAL: A student who drops a course, except by petition, later than three weeks from the date the class first meets shall be marked failed in that subject. In case of illness or other bl nditions the student may petition to unavoida e co . drop the course, and, if accepted, will not receive a failure in the subject. 5. CLAssIFIcATIoN: No student will be classified as a sophomore who has not satisfactorily earned at least twenty-eight semester hours. 6. FORFEITURES AND DISMISSALSZ The college re- serves the right to dismiss any student from the school at the close of any semester if he has failed In his scho- lastic efforts the preceding semest.er. If he fails to pass in the majority of the subjects for which he Is registered during any semester he shall be required to apply for permission to register for the subsequent semester. Before he is permitted to register for the second year's work the student must have an average of 1.5 for the freshman year's work or else must have made satisfac- h' ork cover- tory grades in at ing the preceding semester. least three-fourths of is w d- Requirements for Graduation. In order to gra uate from the junior College with the University pre- paratory diploma carrying the Junior College degree the student must meet the following requirements: 1. He must have been regularly enrolled in the junior d ust have completed one year of residence College an m ' ' ' l for all departments. work. This regulation is compu sory D E D I C A T l O N M . Macfadden, Governor Cooper of 'M ,,, -IU' r Tennessee, General Bullard, and Ray ' I Commander mond Kelly, Nahona American Legion, at Dedication Ban quef. We

Suggestions in the Castle Heights Military Academy - Yearbook (Lebanon, TN) collection:

Castle Heights Military Academy - Yearbook (Lebanon, TN) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922

Castle Heights Military Academy - Yearbook (Lebanon, TN) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Castle Heights Military Academy - Yearbook (Lebanon, TN) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Castle Heights Military Academy - Yearbook (Lebanon, TN) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

1952

Castle Heights Military Academy - Yearbook (Lebanon, TN) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 51

1943, pg 51

Castle Heights Military Academy - Yearbook (Lebanon, TN) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 115

1943, pg 115


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