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Page 15 text:
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lt may be asked whether the university system is the only means of gratifying the English girl's intellectual ambition. There are a number of independent colleges, one of which, the Royal Holloway College, is richly endowed and was modelled upon Vassar and Wellesley Colleges. The founder intended Holloway to be self-centred and self-sufiicing, a sort of womans university. conferring its own degreesg but such colleges to the English mind savor too much of the boarding-school or seminary, and Holloway has been slow in winning favor. The degrees of a distinctively feminine university would be regarded with little favor, and Holloway has been obliged to cater to English conservatism by preparing for the London University degrees or the Oxford examinations. Wlhen the women's colleges at Oxford and Cambridge were established, some thirty years ago, the founders perceived that great responsibilities rested upon them as pioneers. The eyes of all England were upon them, waiting to see how they would solve the question4as yet decidedly an open question-whether women were really capable of receiving and profiting by the higher education. lt was rightly judged that nothing in the way of a test would be convincing to men but the strenuous exertions to which they subjected themselves in order to bear off the palms of scholarship. lVhile there may still be some doubt as to whether the present university courses are the most useful that could be devised for women, it is generally admitted that for the present, to quote the words of a writer on the subject of women's education in England, 'fwoman is not able to go out of the beaten track, being internally not free enoughg and that men would not recognize any other culture as profound and sufficient except one like their own. l1Vith respect to the use made of their education by English women, a very large proportion of those who pass their examinations become teachers. Both the Cxford and Cambridge lists show many names of head mistresses or assistants in girls' schools in England and her dependencies. Many lecture independently or in connection with university extension work. A few become private secretaries or coaches, and occasionally one is employed in the civil service. Une woman holds an important post in the labor department of the Board of Tradeg another is Senior Lady Inspector of Factories. Of those who do not make professional use of their education, the majority, like college graduates ofthe same class in America, find ample scope for their attainments in social and philanthropic work. lt would be unfair and ungracious to suggest that the English system limits the number of women who may avail themselves of the higher education. Unquestionably, if it is discovered that Newnham and Cvirton and Somerville are not meeting the needs of English girls, the adjustment will one day be made. On the other hand there can be little doubt but that American colleges are successfully working along the lines best adapted to the ever-increasing demand of that form ofeducation that shall produce the best type of thorough-bred American woman. 1 Qfrfwfa Ez' 13
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Page 14 text:
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a list of general sub-divisions of his Tripos, the names of university professors who will lecture upon those subjects, and references to authorities whose works he may profitably consult. He is not left utterly without counsel, however, for lecturers or tutors appointed for the purpose have general supervision of the candidate. Usually each student employes a coach,,' or tutor, with whom he works regularly, especially during the long vacation, and often a mnnber of students combine to take a tutor off to Switzerland or to some seashore resort for a reading party during the shorter recesses at Christmas or Easter. At Oxford private tuition is the chief feature of the system, and it is held to be exceedingly important to secure a good coach.' Many ofthe best students change tutors frequently in order to get a variety of the best instruction. This system of individual teaching draws teacher and student into close relations and offers certain advantages impossible in large classes where the lecturer deals with his students en masse and fails to reach the individual directly. The fees charged for private tuition vary with the reputation of the instructor. Aside from this coaching, the student is thrown upon his own resources, free to select the material of his pre- paration, and to read hard or to be slothful according to his own discretion. A casual visitor observing the Cam in the May term, lined with canoes in which under-graduates, pipe in mouth and novel in hand, lie basking under japanese umbrellas by the hour, is inclined to fancy that life at Cambridge must be quite idyllic and not too great an intellectual strain. There is plenty of fun and relaxation, also, at Girton and Newnham g but those who know the colleges from the inside are aware that many men and most women work with a wonderful energy and concentration when once they set about it. In this they could teach their American cousins a salutary lesson. Except where two or three combine to employ one tutor, class recitations, in the American sense, are unknown. No definite page lessons are set, and a student must use her own judgment in deciding what and how much to read in a given year, and whether to hear lectures during the first or second years, reserving the last terms for reading and reviewingg and whether it is advisable to come up for the long, or not. She knows what is before her and must judge for herself what sort of preparation is best for her, and whether homoeopathic or allopathic doses best suit her constitution. The self-poise and independence of thought and action which result are the best recommendation of the English method. In view of this explanation of the aims, subjects and methods of college training in England, it is natural to inquire whether such a system attracts women in great numbers. The halls of residence at Newnham, Girton and Oxford, and the new hall at Cambridge all together accommodate less than five hundred students, and they are not yet over-crowded. The attendance at our separate colleges for women varies from three hundred to twelve hundred, each 3 and the total enrollment, including universities at which co-education or co-ordinate education prevails, reaches into the thousands. lt is clear that if a rigid honors examination were required of American women, the numbers who seek a college education would be greatly reduced, since the college would appeal only to the ambitious and the very strong. American women who wish to specialize enter the universities at home or abroad for graduate work after they have completed the A. B. course, and many come up for the examinations leading to the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. This arrangement has, of course, the disadvantage of adding several years of time and several hundreds of dollars to the American womans expenditure for education. 12
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Page 16 text:
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.f The College Calendar. 57,1 YA num x fll,gl157 5,-r ,gf 'A Q -. 'XAKEMQX I '. - '. --AWA 1901 1' '., A A ll f 1 A MARCH 27, D P M Easter recess Q! ! V 3 to APRIL 10, ro A xr C V MAY 24-31, Annual examinations. X , M 'R if ' -f MAY 28-31, Entrance examinations. xgy . I 2' MAY 31, Alto Dale Day. - JUNE 2, II A M Baccalaureate sermon. I M JUNE 4, 4 P. M Conferring of degrees, end of session IKZ QQ SEPTEMBER 17, Beginning of session 1901-1902. Nl SEPTEMBER I7-20, Entrance examinations. SEPTEMBER 23, Class exercises begin. I, OCTOBER 6, Matriculation sermon. , NOVEMBER 19, Annual meeting ofthe Board of Trustees W NOVEMBER 22, College Day. fi DECEMBER 20, P. M. , , , to JANUARY 6, A' M. Christmas recess. ll ,. 1 'yrs ll ll JANUARY 25, Day of prayer for colleges. Q X -lgjggijgk FEBRUARY 1, Beginning ot' second term, IQOI-I902. Q 32- , FEBRUARV 22, Washingtonls Birthday. ff - MARCH 27, 5 P. Q XZ to APRIL S' IO A- M Easter recess. ' Ex Af, 1Ql'iQigiiTTTg,,E, lYlAY 23-30, Annual examinations. ffi gif jf.f'f'Yif fir- - MAY 27-30, Entrance Examinations. I E' 2-:!7if-iliiiii-l-'iff'ij! MAX' 30, Alto Dale Day. Q!12,gg23-aiu fifif. is 59' JUNE 1, II A. M Baccalaureate sermon. 'L 'fix' me? l NE 3, 4 P. Conterring of degreesg end of Session 14
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