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Page 23 text:
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DIVISION OF EDUCATION Dr. Manfred H. Schrupp Although in California only two- thirds of all educofion graduates enter active teaching, here 01 San Diego Sfate 80 per cent of the edu- cation graduates take up teaching careers. uSTiII, the state is not meeting half of the Teacher demand, says Dr. Manfred H. Schrupp, dean of edu- cation and chairman of fhe Di- vision of Education. The stme needs about 16,000 new Teachers per year. Even though the division moved into a new building last year, it has already outgrown it and c: three-story Education building is in the planning stage. This year closed-circuif television experiments were conducted as part of the teacher training pro- gram in The Campus Laboratory Schoof, a Training ground for fu- ture elementary school Teachers, where 200 pupils are enrolled. 19
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Page 22 text:
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Dr. John R. Adams Study of the humanities places a student in the position of a seeker, a position where the iiberul arts fields of history, philosophy, Eng- lish, and Jforeign Eanguages are opened to him. The facilities here with which a student may continue to seek were greatly increased this year when the Division of Humanities moved into the new $2 million Humani- ties-Social Sciences building. iiOur division has undergone quite a big developmentj' says Dr. John R. Adams, chairman of the divi- sion. New, well-equipped laboratory facilities have been installed, one for foreign languages and another for Engiish reading and compre- hension. 18 DIVISION OF THE HUMANITIES
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Page 24 text:
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20 Dr. David S. Milne DIVISION OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCES The second division which moved this year 10 the new $2 million Humanities-Social Sciences build- ing is the Division of the Social Sciences. This development has finally per- mitted us to carry out some of the things we have always wanted to do, but haven't been able to be- cause of The lack of space and fa- cilities, says Dr. David S. Milne, division chairman. Some of the new facilities are lob- oru'rory additions for cartography, anthropology, and photography, plus a city room for iournalism, a public administration center for gruduafe work in government service, and o socioiogy lab for work in community surveys and population trends. By next fall, extensive meteorlogicul equipment will be installed.
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