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Page 29 text:
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COLLEGES
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Page 28 text:
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ROBERT G. HAI KOHI DR. WIM.IAM M. I.AMERS lllf'AMIIA Al CIIIIIAM't Unic|uc in its activities outside the University, the Vocational Guidance unit has extended its services to preparatory schools throughout the state. Although established in 1928 primarily as a University activity, high school students now share in lectures and consultations comparable to the freshman orientation course designed for Marquette students. The lectures, now a fixed program on many high school calendars, are devised to help the students choose the correct vocation before entering college. This year's address, What Kind of a Person arc You? was given in approximately two hundred and thirty schools by the following faculty members: Robert G. Haukohl, director of vocational guidance; Dr. William M. Laniers, director of the School of Speech; Dr. George I:. Vandcr Beke, professor of education; Frederick C. Mayer, professor of chemistry and materia medica, and Dr. Russell L C Putsch, associate professor of education. A committee of five deans supervises Vocational Guidance: The Rev. Donald J. Keegan. S.J., Dr. Henry L. Banzhaf, Dr. J. Freeman Pyle, J. L. O'Sullivan, Franz A. Kartak. Robert G. Haukohl is secretary of the committee. JOHN P. TREACY DR. G. E. VAN’DER BEKE FREDERICK C. MAYER
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Page 30 text:
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MAH U U E TT E (! II A IIII AT E L' tit utlvunctnunl trull hj . lmlj .inA SCHUIIL TtJtUXcl ■Rc . Edward A. McGrath. S.J., Repent of the Graduate School. The largest number of decrees in the history of the Marquette Graduate school was conferred last June when fifty-one students received their Master's degrees and seven were awarded the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Organized as a department in 1922 and formally incorporated as a part of the University two years later, the Graduate school has annually added to its reputation in the fields of advanced study and research, under the capable guidance of Dr. Edward A. Fitzpatrick, dean since 1924- From a faculty of three and an enrollment of twenty-five the Graduate Department of the University now serves approximately three hundred students annually and during the past year has added twenty professors to its active teaching body. The increasing demands made by the professional world result in an ever-increasing number of students desiring graduate courses. For that reason the Graduate school offers advanced study and research in the fields of education, classical and modern languages, philosophy, English, history, laboratory and social sciences, as well as in the professional fields of law, medicine, dentistry, engineering, journalism and business administration. Four degrees are offered to students possessing the necessary qualifications of scholarship. They are the degrees of Master of Arts, Master of Science. Master of Education, and Doctor of Philosophy. The Master's degree represents at least one year's study beyond the Bachelor's degree and implies advanced study in the student's major field with a reasonable general knowledge of this field as determined by examination independent of courses, an introduction to the scientific method of research, practice in this method, and the completion of a piece of scientific research in either arts, science, or philosophy which shows a wide knowledge of the specific subject studied, together with an oral defense of this subject. A year's residence at Marquette is required of all candidates for Master’s degrees. For the degree of Master of Education, three years of experience in teaching are necessary. ■Dr. f-Mward A. Fitzpatrick. Dean of the Graduate School. Page f
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