Highland Park College - Piper Yearbook (Des Moines, IA)

 - Class of 1918

Page 133 of 212

 

Highland Park College - Piper Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 133 of 212
Page 133 of 212



Highland Park College - Piper Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 132
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Highland Park College - Piper Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 134
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Page 133 text:

V1 s q, xt ' ' Al 'iv r! 1 ing '-f- if Q, t. , Q' ,,l.,f M5 K ' n , Kin, ,Jr Rv .,v,,..,. , . , yr.. ,. I .,,, Yi, x5,. 5 ,- .- l ,c f ,J JY I, Ai x -L l.SL4,, is Fa fi 1 ,,., g i , . The Extension Department For Non-Resident Students Page I' N THE final Annual of Highland Park College, it is fitting that the Extension Depart- I ment should have a word of farewell. Extension teaching has become such a vital part of the educational work of a college that no matter what changes may come in ggi i management and administration, the Extension work, like Tennyson's Brook, should go on forever. There is no more reason for confining the educational facilities of a college within the four walls of the buildings than there is for lighting a candle and set- ting it under a bushel. Better results are secured by setting the candle upon a candlestick so that it giveth light to all that are in the house. lf a teacher assigns a lesson from a text and the student studies the lesson in his room at the dormitory, is there any good reason why a student living one hundred or more miles away cannot study the same lesson assigned in writing by the same teacher from the same text? The only difference in the recitation is that tl1e resident student goes to the classroom and recites orally, while the non-resident student recites in writing. The non-resident student will do ten times as much reciting as the resident student will do in a class of ten students, because the non-resident student does all the reciting himself. The mechanical action of form- ing the answer into words tends toward exactness and also assists in impressing the matter upon the memory. I The Extension Department has iendered great service to some of the old students who, because of financial difficulties, had been forced to leave college before graduation. Through this department these students have been able to secure the necessary credits, graduate and receive a degree and state certificate. Such students have been profuse in their praise and appreciation of the advantages afforded by the Extension Department. Not all who enroll for an Extension course, however, are successful. Some who enroll imagine that they are buying an education and that, by some mysterious process, they will absorb knowledge from the typewritten lessons like a sponge absorbs water. When the text- books and lessons arrive and the would-bef' student finds that it requires work to master the lessons, he throws down his books and quits in disgust, declaring that extension work is a fake and a sham. There is no royal road to learning, eitherthrough resident or non-resident work. Many resident students go to college and spend their precious time and money dodging classes and lessons, fooling the instructors, fiunking the examinations and making utter fail- ures. Be not deceived. The lazy student will make no progress either at school or at home. In Memoriam On August 24, 1917, Mr. R. R. Wilson, the Field Manager of the Extension Department, passed away. Mr. Wilson had been Field Representative for the Department for nine years, and during the past five years had been Field Manager. By strict devotion to duty, untiring and unceusing effort, earnest and faithful persistence through sunshine and storm, Mr. Wilson carried the name of Highland Park College and the Extension Department to every city and hamlet in the country. He was known far and wide as an earnest and sincere advocate of education and many a man and woman acknowledges a debt of gratitude to Mr. Wilson for his encouragement and plans proposed for giving students an education at school or at home. We miss him and acknowledge a debt of gratitude to him for his efforts to lighten life's burden for others. - Jas. F. Page. Fi , 4 ni Nl -I--'I 5-' I . .hi l 15, K ia. l 1 ' 1 L 4 ,tt n I wi gf itll' .gl fin Www 4 ' 4 ,rw ,f .vi ll n I 1.4 wxll xkp, li F U, ff. T A is hifi. I

Page 132 text:

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Page 134 text:

-ffw ffl 'M k 1 3 'QQ-'liv .1 ':!:7'i-15, 2.1! :YT 'ful x .A fu I w , r i I- L: ,X ll ,Q ev. x' 1 .X . N 1 1 1 X V 'Aj N kb, X W f l ,419 'W fi ng- l ri' . UP J, .ek rn faf'Tjf -31, e L 'Y JOSEPH E. BELL, M. Di. JAMES F. PAGE, A. M. LL B Field Manager Director and Business Manager Instructor Ella Allison, Ph. B Enrolling and Mailing Clerk Elizabeth Bullet Clyde L. Burrows W. W. Delzell E. J. Guernsey L. E. Gibson Mrs. Belle Wilson Stenographers Representatives Grace Frisby Mary Spick Frank Hickenlooper J. C. Hirschler A. M. Hendee

Suggestions in the Highland Park College - Piper Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) collection:

Highland Park College - Piper Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

Highland Park College - Piper Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 173

1918, pg 173

Highland Park College - Piper Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 200

1918, pg 200

Highland Park College - Piper Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 98

1918, pg 98

Highland Park College - Piper Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 15

1918, pg 15

Highland Park College - Piper Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 41

1918, pg 41


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