Spring Hill College - Torch Yearbook (Mobile, AL)

 - Class of 1932

Page 19 of 140

 

Spring Hill College - Torch Yearbook (Mobile, AL) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 19 of 140
Page 19 of 140



Spring Hill College - Torch Yearbook (Mobile, AL) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 18
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Page 19 text:

X mo0'HQl!Q9W'H::m:12w,ff REV. D. R .NEEDHAM. S. J., PREFECT OF DISCIPLINE REV, E. J. CASSIDY, S. J.. STUDENTS SPIRITUAL COUNSELLOR strengthened, the value of a proof is properly estimated, the vulnerable points of error are readily detected, and truth comes forth triumphant from every conflict of mind with mind. Finally, the Jesuit System does not share the delusion of those who seen to imagine that education understood as an en- riching and stimulating of the intellectual faculties, has of it- self a morally elevating influ- ence in human life. While con- ceding the effects of education in energizing and refining the student's imagination, taste, un- derstanding and powers of obser- vation, it has always held that knowledge and intellectual de- velopment of themselves have no moral efficacy. Religion alone can purify the heart and guide and strengthen the will. This being the case, the Jesuit Sys- tem aims at developing side by side the moral and intellectual faculties of the student, and sending forth into the world men of sound judgment, of acute and rounded intellect, of upright and manly conscience. It main- tains that to be effective, moral- ity is to be taught continuouslyg it must be the underlying base, the vital force, supporting and animating the whole organic structure of education. It must suffuse with its light all that is read, illuminating what is noble and exposing what is base, giv- ing to the true and false their relative light and shade. In a word, the purpose of Jesuit teaching is to lay a solid sub- structure in the whole mind and character for any superstructure of science, professional and spe- cial, as well as for the upbuild- ing of moral life, civil and re- ligious. I

Page 18 text:

V V I I H H AM' H' I. I ,!,l!.f.,,'l V, I--l,.,4.L.,-.,l,,','. .,, csuil Education HE officers and teachers in the College are for the most part members of the Jesuit order, an organization which from its origin has devoted itself to the education of youth. It conducts high schools, colleges and uni- versities throughout the United States and has more than twen- ty-five thousand students in its various institutions. As understood by the Jesuits, education in its complete sense, is the full and harmonious de- velopment of all the faculties that are distinctive of man. It l fundamental in their system l at different studies have dis- tinct educational values. Mathe- REV' EDWARD AQESJMMINGS' S' J matics, the Natural Sciences, Language and History are complimentary instruments of education to which the doctrine of equivalent cannot be applied. The best educators of the present day are beginning to realize more fully than ever before that prescribed curricula, embracing well chosen and co-ordinate studies, afford the student the most efficient means of mental cultivation and development. While recognizing the importance of Mathematics and the Natural Sciences, which unfold the interdependence and laws of the world of time and space, the Jesuit System of education has unwaveringly kept Language in a position of honor, as an instrument of culture. Mathematics and the Natural Sciences bring the student into contact with the material aspects of nature, and exercise the deductive and inductive powers of reason. Language and History effect a higher union. They are manifestations of spirit to spirit and by their study and their acquirement the whole mind of man is brought into widest and subtlest play. Much stress is also laid on Mental and Moral philosophy, as well for the influence such study has in mental development, as for its power in steadying the judgment of the student in his outlook on the world and on life. But to obtain these results, Philosophy must not content itself with vague groping after light, with teaching merely the history of Philosophy: detailing the vagaries of the human mind without venturing to condemn themg it must present a logical, unified, complete system of mind-culture in accord with the established laws of human thoughtg it must take its stand on some definite propositions expressive of truth, it must rise to the dignity of a science. With such a definite system to defend against attack, the mind becomes more acute and plastic, the logical powers are 14



Page 20 text:

N response to a need of many of her students who intend to follow the teaching profession, Spring Hill organized, during the past year, a Department of Edu- cation. Shortly after the open- ing of classes in this new field, the Department of Education of the State of Alabama was form- ally petitioned to grant its ap- proval of the curricula of the college for the academic and pro- fessional training of teachers. Dr. B. L. Parkinson, Director of Teacher Training, Certification and Elementary Education, in response, personally inspected our institution and a few days later Wrote in part to Rev. J. M. Walsh, S. J., President: It gives me pleasure to inform you that the organization of your curriculum, your teaching staff and your student teaching, as well as your equipment, meet the requirements for preparing teachers for secondary schools, and that We shall take pleasure in certificating such of your graduates as you may recom- mend for the professional C and the professional B secondary cer- tificatesf' To follow courses in the De- partment of Education, the ap- proval of the Head of the De- partment and of the Dean of the College is required. These courses are not open to Fresh- men, and no one in any year who manifests a faulty use of Eng- lish either written, or spoken, or any other defect which, in the judgment of the Head of the De- partment, renders him unfit for high school teaching will be per- mitted to pursue a major in the Department of Education. REV. MICHAEL J KENNY S J PSYCHOLOGY AND SocIoI.ocv. REV. WILLIAM OBERING, S. J. S CIOLOGY, ETI-IIcs, RELIGION AND SPECIAL METAPI-I

Suggestions in the Spring Hill College - Torch Yearbook (Mobile, AL) collection:

Spring Hill College - Torch Yearbook (Mobile, AL) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929

Spring Hill College - Torch Yearbook (Mobile, AL) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930

Spring Hill College - Torch Yearbook (Mobile, AL) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

Spring Hill College - Torch Yearbook (Mobile, AL) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

Spring Hill College - Torch Yearbook (Mobile, AL) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Spring Hill College - Torch Yearbook (Mobile, AL) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940


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