Louisiana Polytechnic Institute - Lagniappe Yearbook (Ruston, LA)

 - Class of 1910

Page 10 of 198

 

Louisiana Polytechnic Institute - Lagniappe Yearbook (Ruston, LA) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 10 of 198
Page 10 of 198



Louisiana Polytechnic Institute - Lagniappe Yearbook (Ruston, LA) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 9
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Page 10 text:

The Louisiana Industrial Institute. The school ... established ttodet authority Ac. 68 of ,l„ General Assemble ,89, The act provides for an tnstitttte -for the ednc.tion white children o, l.onisiatta h, the arts and sctence, a, which sttch children tttay ae,.,i,e a thorough academic and liter,,, tinea ton. together w„h the knowledge of kindergarten instruction, telegraph,. I ; ° f draWhlg ' Pai ting - a d engraving, in their .stria “■ 3 ° ' eC,ge ° f fancy practicaI ’ aild general needlework; also a knowledge of ■ beeping, and of agricultural and mechanical art, together with such other practical industries as from time to time may he suggested by experience, or such as will tend to promote t e genera, object of said institution, to-wit: fitting and ' preparing such e 1 re male and female, for the practical industries of the age.” ’ th T the SCh00l aims t0 train the ™ d through the hand to skilful participation in the work of the world, thus making more efficient members of society, the students are given through head, hand and heart, a clear vision of the larger meanings of life to the end t tat they may work with a mind in intelligent sympathy with their environment The complete courses m academic studies presented and related to the industrial courses give to 1m graduates of the school the increasing earning capacity and the preparation for social efficiency which all public education should provide. This school differs from the ordinary college in that it aims to give an education with nd pi,rpose withoiit —- - - - r This school goes further than manual training-abstracting the principles of trades and teaching them-.t teaches the processes of a given vocation from the first attack on fouiidat ' T , t0 ' aSt t0l ' CheS ° f the finished produ together with the theoretical foundations of the vocation. Hence it gives the worker a technical knowledge of the vocation and begins the development of skill in the practice of it This , , , , to teach not alone the fundamental processes of a vlti £ • js chief emphasis upon giving to its students such practice as mav bring them up to the practice TT ' “ rePr ° d Ce 35 as possil e conditions of actual p.act.ce. In stressing industrial education we do not abandon the discipline of the „ , nit appreciate that the real craftsman is more than his craft and th t • • ■ ’ fian the place he fi„s in the industrial life of his col 2LZ ,argC ' ' required with parallel industrial courses. ' cadent,c courses are .... ;l::: ' »sr s 8i,l! ot s “ ' - »—- -— There are five distinct courses of study, and their scope is wide 411 nr i . meet a definite need. All the courses combine good general education, gold teclmLd’educa 0 an 1 — .. ”0 «» • « citizens. 7 6

Page 9 text:

DEDICATION. To Her So Generous in Learning’s Garner, So Brave and Pleasing in Manner, So Dauntless, Kind, and True in Daily Toil, ' To Miss Helen Graham, Our Teacher, Companion and Friend We Dedicate This Sixth Volume of Lagniappe. 5



Page 11 text:

in any one of the courses is equipped for “self-support and the means of progressive effi¬ ciency and responsibility.” Briefly the courses are as follows: The Mechanical Course includes exercises in carpentry, general construction work, joinery, wood-turning, pattern-making, forging, foundry, machine work, firing boilers, tending enoine, electrical engineering, mechanical and freehand drawing, and the making of iron and steel tools. Also, complete and related courses in grammar, composition, rhetoric, literature, vocal music, arithmetic, algebra, plane, solid and analytic geometry, trigonometry; calculus, United States and general history, ethics, civics, physics, chemistry, physiology, machine design, electricity, hydraulics, material of construction, kinematics of machinery, graphic statics, and applied mechanics. The Business Course includes work in bookkeeping, stenography and typewriting, tele¬ graphy and typewriting, and printing. Also, complete and related courses in grammar, composition, rhetoric, literature, arithmetic, algebra, plane, solid and analytic geometry, trigonometry, United States history, civics, general history, English history, ethics, sociology, political economy, physics, chemistry, physiology, zoology, geology, botany, freehand drawing, commercial arithmetic, English usage, commerce, commercial law, constitutional history, and vocal music. The Domestic Science Course includes practical and scientific work in sewing, millinery, dressmaking, embroidery, basketry, weaving, cooking. Also complete and related courses in food analysis, household economy, vegetable botany, bacteriology, grammar, composition, rhetoric, literature, arithmetic, algebra, plane, solid and analytic geometry, trigonometry. United States history, civics, constitutional history, general history, English history, ethics, sociology, political economy, physiology, geology, botany, zoology, chemistry, physics, free¬ hand drawing, chemistry of cookery, and vocal music. The Industrial Art Course offers work in freehand drawing, composition, designing, historical ornament, metal work, tooled leather work, water color and pastel or oil. Also, complete and related courses in grammar, rhetoric, composition, literature, Latin, United States history, general history, English history, constitutional history, sociology, political economy, ethics, arithmetic, algebra, plane, solid and analytic geometry, trigonometry, physiology, freehand drawing, botany, vegetable botany, bacteriology, zoology, geology, physics, chemistry, and vocal music. The Music Course includes the pianoforte, band and stringed instruments, and voice. Also, all of the complete courses in the academic subjects required in the Industrial Art Course, with courses in theory, harmony, and musical history. Special (elective) Teaching Courses are offered during the Senior year (in the different courses) to those wishing to teach the industrials, etc. Other practical courses (industrial and academic) will be added as are found necessary to meet the demands of an up-to-date industrial school. The faculty consists of twenty-eight men and women of mature scholarship, experience and teaching ability. Outside of the class room they are persons fitted to be the natural 7

Suggestions in the Louisiana Polytechnic Institute - Lagniappe Yearbook (Ruston, LA) collection:

Louisiana Polytechnic Institute - Lagniappe Yearbook (Ruston, LA) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 1

1907

Louisiana Polytechnic Institute - Lagniappe Yearbook (Ruston, LA) online collection, 1908 Edition, Page 1

1908

Louisiana Polytechnic Institute - Lagniappe Yearbook (Ruston, LA) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 1

1909

Louisiana Polytechnic Institute - Lagniappe Yearbook (Ruston, LA) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

1911

Louisiana Polytechnic Institute - Lagniappe Yearbook (Ruston, LA) online collection, 1912 Edition, Page 1

1912

Louisiana Polytechnic Institute - Lagniappe Yearbook (Ruston, LA) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922


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