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Page 21 text:
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The Moberlyalgnior Colleee The Moberly junior College was organized by the Board of Educa- tion of the Moberly School District, after more than a year of study and careful investigation of the needs of this community for college work. The response by the people of Moberly and surrounding territory has proven the wisdom of this movement. - During the year just closing courses have been offered only for students doing the iirst year of college work. With the opening of the second year in September, 1928, additional courses will be offered, mak- ing the college a regular two-year junior college. All courses which are offered are accepted by the University of Missouri and by other universities and colleges of the middle west, hour for hour, making it possible for students to complete two years of stan- dard college wcrlc at a great reduction in cost. Thcse students who are preparing to enter professional courses will find little difficulty in selecting courses which will prepare them foren- trance into the particular professional course which they wish to enter. The following courses offered during the year l927-28 were ap- proved by the University of Missouri: Biological Science General Botany .- - 5 HFS- Physical Science Elementary Inorganic Chemistry .......................... 5 n 4 ' Inorganic Chemistry and Qualitative Analysis .,,.. J English Composition and Rhetoric 6 ' English Literature ........ 6 ' Foreign Language French Elementary French .,,........................ 5 ' ' Reading, Syntax and Composition ,,., 5 ' Spanish i Elementary Spanish .. 5 K Intermediate Spanish -. 5 Advanced Spanish .... 5 ' History , European History . 6 ' American History - .- 6 Mathematics Trigonometry ..... .. 2 ' College Algebra ..... .. 3 ' Analytic Geometry .... .- 5
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Page 20 text:
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The Junior Colleze Dr ROV L yyilbur Stanford University. summarizes the case for the junior college in these sign1i5C21Hf WOfflS1 The presence' of the junior college in a community means that an opportunity is offered for those in their teens to give themselves a thor- ough try-out, without great economic disadvantage and without leaving home after high school graduation. The great CX1J2l1lSlO11 ill U16 SVC of the student-bodies in the colleges and universities of this country. gorging them beyond any possibility of successful instruction, has com- pelled the creation of the junior college. The large student mortality in the freshman and sophomore years of the great universities has been mortifying and humiliating to thousands of our youth. The junior col- lege offers the opportunity for students to find out more about their own interests and capacities, and helps them through the preparatory stages if they know that they want to become lawyers, teachers. doc- tors, business men or women, research workers, and so on. lt provides for those who have neither the capacity to profit by university instruction nor the necessary financial backing, the chance to round out their edu- cation by two years of work of college grade, given usually in smaller classes and vvith more personal supervision than is possible in the larger colleges and universities of the country. Experienced and capable teachers who plan to make teaching a life work make up the faculty of the junior colleges. The boy or girl who is developing maturity slowly will thus have a much better opportunity under such instruction than is possible in the crowded classes of the ordinary university, taught by be- ginners oriby the lecture system. . dll hile serving as a trying-out place for the youth of the country. the Einior college, by relieving the university of the elementary work of the rst two years. can set the American university free to carrv out its own great purposes. These institutions can offer, too, an Oppgrtunitv fm- those boys who are mechanically minded and for those girls who are ClO1 '- f ' - s . . . . . . . Uestlsallb mlllflefl, so that while delevoping their abilities in using v can also obtain a better appreciation of their bodies in useful ways the time-S i ' - - ' . . s 3 DOW them llY W01'lX 111 languages, historv, mathematics, govern- nien ' , - t, and other subjects, and thus acquire a broader culture. in We can lool ' - - 4 UPON the Jllnior college movement which is noxv as the most wholesome and sig- cation in the present century. spreading tliroughut the United States nificant occurrence in American edu
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Page 22 text:
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TH E IEACU LTIY l ts an excellent faculty It is composed of The Junior College is A g - - D men and women who are trained specialists in their various departments, and who have had much successful experience in teaching. All teachers are approved by the University of Missouri, and by the State Depart- ' A ' Y h' hithe co. ment of Education, for the special work W ic y BOARD OF EDUCATION SCHOLARSHIP The Moberly Board of Education offers each year free truition in l 'no highest in the graduating class the Junior College to the student ran ci g g g of any high school in this state. AMOUNT OE XIYORK I Regular work for students, devoting all their time to college work. is l-l-I6 hours per week, exclusive of physical education. By an hour is meant one sixty-minute period a week for one semes- ter. . RE OI STRATI O N Students desiring to enter the Junior College should confer with the superintendent or dean in the High School building at as early a date as possible and make a selection of subjects to be pursued during the com- ing college year. p LIBRARY AND LABORATORIES The library and laboratories of the Junior College are adequate in U ery way to meet the needs of the courses which are offered. GENERAL I NEORM ATION 71 .lhl I ' A N - . , b 1 3. lgggorlgpjcif thc school year l928-1929 will begin Mondav, Septem- e- , , , - - ' . A , . ' P L .gegistration should bc completed before this date. erso Q - - . F5 0 m2lfUfC age. not candidates for degrees, may register as adult special students and do such work ag thev are p1.ep,1rCd for pg A. A. DEGREE rr Ilhe dee-1-Q ' I K e of As o' R i, L - who hqxve f S Mate Sf Aft? CA-3.5 is conferred upon students 1 . completed the required SlX'ty 11011143 of Wm-k.
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