Concordia College - Corona Borealis Yearbook (Edmonton, Alberta Canada)

 - Class of 1951

Page 24 of 96

 

Concordia College - Corona Borealis Yearbook (Edmonton, Alberta Canada) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 24 of 96
Page 24 of 96



Concordia College - Corona Borealis Yearbook (Edmonton, Alberta Canada) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 23
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Concordia College - Corona Borealis Yearbook (Edmonton, Alberta Canada) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 25
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Page 24 text:

LATIN The more immediate aim of the Latin course is to develop in the student the ability to read Latin of average difficulty by the end of the high school years. Stress is laid upon the understanding of forms and syntax, but the chief aim is thought com¬ prehension. Ultimately the course is designed to reach the following objectives: 1. To assist the student in gaining a better understanding of English, and thereby to develop the ability to use this language more effectively. 2. To develop skill in dealing with philological, literary, and textual problems, thus aiding the student to develop proper study habits and at the same time prepare him for courses at the seminary or the university. 3. To broaden the student’s cultural background by introducing him to the thought and life of the Roman people. On the junior college level the Latin course is closely integrated with the course in the Humanities. HIGH SCHOOL Latin 1: An elementary course introducing the student to simple Latin readings and the fundamentals of Latin grammar. Textbook: Gray, Jenkins, et al., Latin for Today.—Five credits. (Guebert.) Latin 2: Prose composition designed to aid the student in the acquisition and retention of vocabulary, infle ction, syntax, and idiom. Selections from Caesar, Phaedrus, Martial, Gellius, Nepos, and Ovid. Textbooks: Bonney and Niddrie, Latin Prose Com¬ position; Bonney and Niddrie, Latin Prose and Poetry.—Five credits. (Guebert.) Latin 3: An extension of Latin 2, with reading selections from Livy, Horace, Cicero, and Vergil. Textbooks: Bonney and Niddrie, Latin Prose Composition; Bonney and Niddrie, Latin Prose and Poetry.—Five credits. (Guebert.) COLLEGE College Latin: This is a survey course, intending to give the student a bird’s eye view of classical Roman literature, based on reading of original Latin and large selections in translation. Textbooks: Lockwood, A survey of Classical Roman Literature and Guinagh and Dorjahn, Latin Literature in Translation.—Three periods per week. One semester. (Guebert.) SOCIAL STUDIES The courses in the Social Studies are planned so that the student may realize the following outcomes: 1. To interest himself in the story of civilization and to discover God in history. 2. To relate his studies with present-day problems with a view to finding our how he may cope with these problems. 3. To understand and to appraise the various types of economic and political systems which have prevailed at various times in history. 4. To realize more fully that he must be prepared to discharge adequately his social responsibility, both as a child of God and as a citizen in a democracy. HIGH SCHOOL Social Studies 1: This course consists of the following units: Geography for current events; A Brief Outline of the Story of Man from the Dawn of History Up to the Present; Man’s History from Prehistoric Times to the Feudal Age; Canadian Democracy in Action; Provincial and Community Problems; Economic Geography of Canada; Canada Among the Nations.—Five credits. (Riep.) Social Studies 2: This course comprises twelve units, nine of which constitute a year’s work. Six are chosen from Section A and three from Section B. “Adorn the doctrine of God, our Saviour, in all things.”—Titus 2,10. 26

Page 23 text:

GREEK The aims of the course in Greek are: 1. To prepare the student to read Greek of moderate difficulty with ease and understanding. 2. To lay the foundation for seminary courses in Greek New Testament inter¬ pretation. 3. To develop in the student an understanding and appreciation of the great con¬ tributions which the Greek genius has made to western civilization, especially in the field of literature. These aims are achieved by a thorough training in the essentials of Greek gram¬ mar and syntax, constant practice in rapid and accurate identification of verb forms, acquisition of an ample vocabulary, cursory reading of a number of books of the Greek New Testament, systematic study of the history of Greek literature with selected read¬ ings from translations of the works of various authors, and by careful translation and study of masterpieces of Greek literature. The full Greek course is required for the ministerial student but is not accredited by the Province. HIGH SCHOOL Greek 1: A course in Greek grammar and in the simpler principles of Greek syntax based on the first 83 lessons in Kaegi’s First Lessons in Greek and on Kaegi’s Short Grammar of Classical Greek. The student also memorizes a basic vocabulary of about 1,400 Greek words and translates from the Greek New Testament the fi rst five chapters of the Gospel of St. John, with practice in analyzing cases and verb forms.— Four periods per week. Two semesters. (Riep). COLLEGE Greek 2: A course in Greek syntax based on Greek Prose Composition by North and Hillard. Memorizing of the principal parts of about 125 common irregular verbs. Translation from the Greek New Testament of chapters 6-21 of the Gospel of St. John, with practice in analyzing sentence structure and verb forms. Special studies in the Greek Grammar by Goodwin and Gulick.—Four periods per week. One semester. (Riep). Greek 3: The history of Greek poetry from Homer to Pindar. Reading and discussion of English translations of the Iliad and the Odyssey and of other representa¬ tive works selected from Greek Literature in Translation, by Oates and Murphy. Trans¬ lation from the Greek of two books of Homer’s Odyssey.—From the Greek New Testa¬ ment the student translates in class the Gospel of St. Matthew and privately the First and the Second Epistle to the Thessalonians and the Epistle to Titus. Practice in analyz¬ ing verb forms and sentence structure.—Four periods per week. One semester. (Riep). Greek 4: A study of the origin, development, and structure of the Greek drama. Reading in English of representative Greek dramas (Textbook: Greek Literature in Translation, by Oates and Murphy). Translation from the Greek Euripide’s Alcestis (or Medea). From the Greek New Testament the student translates in class the Gospel of St. Luke and privately the Epistle to the Galatians and the Epistle to the Philippians. Prac¬ tice in analyzing verb forms and sentence structure.—Four periods per week. One semester. Not offered in 1951-52. (Riep). Greek 5: A study of Greek prose, i.e. of Greek writers of history, oratory, and philosophy. Reading in English of selections from each field (Textbook: Greek Literature in Translation, by Oates and Murphy). Translation from the Greek of Plato’s Apology, or of selections from Herodotus, or of selections from Xenophon’s Anabasis (in the case of the Anabasis, with special studies in grammar and syntax based on the Greek Gram¬ mar by Goodwin and Gulick).—From the Greek New Testament the student translates in class the Gospel of St. Mark and privately the Epistle to the Ephesians and the Epistle to the Colcssians. Practice in analyzing verb forms and sentence structure.— Four periods per week. One semester. (Riep). “Thy world is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my path.”—Ps. 119, 105. 25



Page 25 text:

Section A: Historical Outline; Geography for Current Events; Geographical Background for the Study of Europe; Historical Study of Europe (1500-1914); Pro¬ duction and Distribution; Responsible Government; The Expansion of Europe; Problems of Democracy in the United States. Section B. A Community Problem; A Physical Fitness Programme; Immigration; Consumer Education; Co-operative Organizations.—Five credits. (Guebert.) Social Studies 3: The course deals almost wholly with contemporary problems, national, imperial, and international. It comprises, besides discussion of current events, the following four units; International Relationships; Historical Developments since 1920; The Second World War and Proposals for Permanent Peace; Canada in the Post-War World.—Five credits. (Guebert.) COLLEGE College Sociology: An introductory course, treating the individual, the family, the community, and the national and social group. It deals specifically with the mal¬ adjustments of modern society and with the remedial measures employed.—Three periods per week (one semester.) (Guebert.) College Economics: An introductory course with special reference to economic problems of the present day.—Three periods per week (two semesters). (Guebert.) Humanities: The course in Humanities is planned to give the student an opportunity to survey the intellectual, artistic, and other creative achievements of man in the various fields of human endeavor. It is integrated with other courses on the curriculum, with the emphacis upon the cultural aspects of the civilizations from the ancient Orient, through the Greek and Roman, down to our own times. In order that the student might round out his reading, many selections from the great works of the ages are assigned.—Three periods per week (one semester each year alternating with College Latin). (Guebert.) SCIENCE The study of science has two main purposes: first, to give the student an appre¬ ciation and understanding of this important and pervasive aspect of our civilization; second, to develop in him the ability to solve such of his problems as are susceptible to scientific treatment. In carrying out these purposes the course in science aims: 1. To lead the student to appreciate and understand how science has grown into what it is today. 2. To acquaint the student with the vast store of information concerning the structure and composition of matter as well as the nature of the physical and biological world of which he is a part. 3. To develop the idea that our universe is an orderly one in its behavior, and that changes and phenomena that take place in it are the result of scientific laws and principles operating in it under the governing hand of the Almighty God. 4. To encourage the student to think and reason intelligently, in terms of scien¬ tific principles, about the nature and organization of his environment. HIGH SCHOOL Physics 1: This course deals with the simpler parts of physics, covering the follow¬ ing units: Matter and mechanics; molecular physics; heat; sound; light. The laboratory experiments associated with the units are performed. Textbook: Dull, Modern Physics.— Five credits. (Witte.) “Surely I know that it shall be well with them that fear God.”—Eccl. 8,12. 27

Suggestions in the Concordia College - Corona Borealis Yearbook (Edmonton, Alberta Canada) collection:

Concordia College - Corona Borealis Yearbook (Edmonton, Alberta Canada) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

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Concordia College - Corona Borealis Yearbook (Edmonton, Alberta Canada) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

1949

Concordia College - Corona Borealis Yearbook (Edmonton, Alberta Canada) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950

Concordia College - Corona Borealis Yearbook (Edmonton, Alberta Canada) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

1952

Concordia College - Corona Borealis Yearbook (Edmonton, Alberta Canada) online collection, 1953 Edition, Page 1

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Concordia College - Corona Borealis Yearbook (Edmonton, Alberta Canada) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 1

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