Salem State University - Clipper Yearbook

 - Class of 1930

Page 22 of 200

 

Salem State University - Clipper Yearbook online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 22 of 200
Page 22 of 200



Salem State University - Clipper Yearbook online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 21
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Salem State University - Clipper Yearbook online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 23
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Page 22 text:

75 M effmzz'-vermfy 1 930 The needs of a complex society must be supplied by a more elaborate system of education than that of former years: and there must be a corresponding differentiation in the preparation of teachers. Special needs must be met by more highly specialized training. Longer and more intensive courses of professional training have become imperative. Such professional standards demand a degree of material reward that will attract to, and retain in the profession, teachers of the highest type. The increasing demand for teachers of physical education should be met by one of our normal schools rather than by private institutions. The courses offered should make liberal provision for instruction in anatomy, physiology and hygiene, carried beyond the elementary stage, as vvell as for a complete program of instruction in physical training and athletics. Public school systems are finding employment for school nurses, and but few who have had adequate professional training for this particular form of service are avail- able. One of the normal schools might profitably engage in the preparation of school nurses in cooperation with one or more selected hospitals. The library facilities in many normal schools throughout the country are inade- quate. The library should occupy quarters which vvill accommodate large numbers of students who vvill use it as a study hall. The library itself should be carefullychosen, vvith especial reference to the needs of each department in the school, and the general library should include a large and comprehensive collection of books calculated to meet the general needs of an educational institution of a high grade. It should be under the direction of one or more trained librarians vvho have sufficient ability as teachers to give instruction in library methods to all students. . There should also be adequate opportunity for graduates in service to secure professional degrees. In part, this may be accomplished by a closer co-ordination between the normal schools and the State Division of University Extension and by establishing closer relations vvith university departments of education. At least some of the normal schools should at once be authorized to confer the master's degree. It is a question for careful consideration vvhether the school year should not be divided into quarters so that the summer quarter, at least in certain schools, may constitute a definite unit of professional Work. Such an arrangement of the calendar would facilitate the continuation of professional work by teachers in service, and would be of great assistance in the evaluation of credits. . There is novv a marked tendency to require at least the equivalent of a master's degree as a prerequisite for a position as a teacher in a normal school. This degree should be based in large measure upon professional Work, unless adequate professional training in addition to four years of academic Work is already possessed by the candi- date. Obviously, successful experience in teaching should be another requirement, and continued professional training in the service should be encouraged, if not absolutely required. It is apparent that no less professional training should be required of reach? ers in the training school, since they are the instructors who set definite ezfamples in the technique of teaching and who apply the theory of the normal school in apractical, not to say philosophical, way, The normal schools ought to be leaders in curricula and selected subject matter as 18

Page 21 text:

I 93 0 75146 Q!g,7Z7ZZ'7J67'.S'd7'j1 in an experimental stage. Preparation for admission was inadequate, and the course of study was short. Specialization was unknown. 4 Changes came but gradually. The history of this school is typical of the evolution of the whole American system of teacher training. It was not until 1866,-twelve years after the school was established,-that the course was prolonged from one and one-half to two years. Four years later an advanced course of four years was offered. Forty years had passed before high school graduation was required for entrance. In 1896, the present main building was erected and a training school, occupying the first floor, was gradually developed. The training school building,-a model of its kind, was erected in 1912, one-half of the cost of construction being contributed by the City of Salem, which was equally liberal in the contract governing its operation and maintenance. In 1908, the commercial department,--probably the first in the country to com- bine in a functioning manner the technical and the professional training of teachers of the Commercial subjects,-was established. This course has evolved from one of two to one of four years, leading to the degree of bachelor of science in education. More recently departments for the preparation of teachers for junior high schools and for mentally retarded children have been established. Each of these courses is three years in length. The elementary course has also been prolonged .to three years. After a century of experimentation and slow growth there has evolved a science of education, and teaching is atlast generally recognized as a profession, but a thought- ful analysis of the past achievements and a careful inventory of present conditions,- great as our accomplishments have been,-leaves no doubt of the need of further development of our teacher training institutions. What, then, of the future? Without depreciating the quality of service that is now being rendered by the normal schools of this State and by normal schools and teachers' colleges and uni- versity departments of education throughout the country, it is expedient to anticipate, if we may, -the future development of these institutions during another period of ninety years. This may seem a bold venture, but there can be no doubt that much more of liberal education, of technical knowledge and experience, and of sound and exten- sive professional training will be required of our teachers in all fields in the future than has been expected in the past. Massachusetts has long since adopted the policy of admitting to her normal schools only qualified graduates of secondary schools and of requiring of them not less than two years of professional work. By natural processes of evolution courses of three and four years, the latter leading to the degree of bachelor of science in educa- tion, having been established. We are now well on the way toward making three years the minimum amount of time allowed for the preparation of teachers for the elementary school, in all the normal schools of the State. This will naturally lead to the adoption of a four-year curriculum for the junior high school department, as well as for the senior high school department and the several departments engaged in pre- paring teachers of art, music, household arts, manual arts, the commercial and other special subjects. 17



Page 23 text:

I 930 75 iff QAf'n7zzVzJef'sazfy we.ll as in methods of teaching, and their faculties should contain members especially trained in educational research. Although expensive, it is highly desirable that each normal school should have at its disposal three somewhat distinct types of elementary schools: a school of ob- servation taught entirely by teachers of outstanding ability in the techniqueiof teach- ing, a training school in which the most of the teaching is done by normal school students for practice as at present, and a school maintained primarily for the purpose of carrying on long continued experiments in education. With these facilities, there should be a closer co-ordination between the normal schools and the training schools than sometimes exists under present conditions. A modern normal school plant should provide for the housing of a large propor- tion of the students in residence halls. This would make possible a well-rounded institutional life, the educative influences of which can be made of the greatest im- portance in the preparation of teachers. These suggested improvements in a steadily growing profession imply increased cost, but the American public is ever ready to make real investments in popular educa- tion. .Because of this spirit,-and only because of it,-have the ideals of Horace Mann and his immediate co-workers and those of the founders of this oldschool, become realities. - Zmihgematet, the Mother uf Salem , DR. ARTHUR C. BOYDEN, Prinripfzl of the Bridgezwzfer Normal School RIDGEWATER congratulates Salem on its long and splendid career. We are especially proud of the fact that the first principal, Richard Edwards, and his assistant, Miss Martha Kingman, were distinguished graduates of the Bridgewater School. Salem was founded on the work of these two professionally trained teachers who brought the highest devotion to the school. It is a noteworthy fact that the Massachusetts Normal Schools were established as teaching inrtitatfonr, not as academies with teaching attachments and not as method institutions built on some system of pedagogy. This was due to two reasons. First, the Massachusetts Schools were established on the general plan of Normal Schools in Prussia and France, where they were distinct institutions established by the govern- ment for a specific purpose. The early friends of Normal Schools in Massachusetts wisely insisted upon this new form of teacher-training institution as best adapted to the situation, a decision which was far-reaching in its influence, on the whole country. e The second reason for the development of this idea was the fact that the first principals were selected because of their unusual teaching ability. These two teachers who came to Salem brought the two great essentials of a teacher,-personality and the fine aft of teaching. The science of education is-today making great advances and will be of invaluable assistance, but nothing can supersede the supreme elements of a teacher which these two persons who built the foundations ofthe Salem School possessed. - 19

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