High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 18 text:
“
-:-0 := 0 0v (Ennimprrial lE uratinn BY HON. ' . J. TIDBALL. IhiN. V. J. Tii i:. i.[,. I HE principal occupation of people who inhabit the earth is to live, that is, to be able to move, think and be happy. The chief end of man may be different. But to be able to live is important in reaching our destination. One of the means by which we try to accomplish this desired end is education. Therefore it would seem that that system of education is best which prepares human beings for the prob- lems of life. Under different stages of civilization different activities are required in order to live successfully. For example, should a citi- zen of Wyoming suddenly decide to promenade in a leopard skin and live in a cage, subsisting by means of raw meat and roots, he would not, in all probability, be taken into our swell society and invited to participate in the festivities of pink teas and bridge parties. Or should a high-browed Bostonian go among the savages of Africa and live in a marble palace, eating beans and brown bread, and dress- ing in swallow tail and silk hat, the fair inhabitants of Africa ' s savage jungles, not understanding the marks of our civilization, s ' ould doubt- less consider him a mollycoddle. We do not critize either manner of living, but simply desire to point out that adaptability to the present day stage of civilization is indispensable. Therefore a system of education to be a success must be in practical harmony with the civilization which it seeks to represent. To develop citizens who, under the social, economic and political conditions in which they live, will be independent, sell -supporting, honest, law-abiding, and able to keep apace of civilization is the aim of every worthy educational system which has existed or ever will exist. A different object is a confession of weakness and in- vO = 0 9
”
Page 17 text:
“
H -0 = 0- ®I|f Alumni Aaaortatinn. Formed March 26, 1895. Article I, Section 1, Constitution: The object of this Association shall be the promotion of University interests and the affiliation of its graduates. Officers of the Association for 1909-10 are: President- Mrs. Harol D. Coburn, ' 00 First Vice President Herbert L. Kennedy, 08 Second Vice President. ...Dorothy Reed Patterson, ' 04 Secretary Mrs. R. B. Moudy, ' 98 Treasurer Mrs. Hilda D. Roach, ' 01 Secretary Scholarship Fund Alice Holliday, ' 00 REUNION. The Commencement season of 1911 will be the twenty-fifth anniversary of the founding of the University, and the twentieth an- niversary of the graduation of the first class. A suggestion, which emanates from President Merica, will be brought up for discussion at the coming business meeting of the Alumni Association, to the effect that the Alumni make the meeting of 1911 a very big occasion indeed, and worthy of the finish of the first quarter-century of the exist- ence of the University of Wyoming. The suggestion, in brief, is as follows: That the Association take two nights of the commencement week, one night for a banquet and the other night for the presentation of a play, to be written by an alumnus or by several alumni in collaboration, the play to have the University or the State of Wyoming for a theme. Further, Dr. Merica would be glad to secure alumni to deliver both the Bac- calaureate sermon and the Commencement address, and promises the attendance of a number of the very biggest men in the state. The play could be written during the coming year, the parts could be assigned at the meeting of 1910, and learned during the succeed- ing year, it being only necessary for the principal characters to meet at Laramie any length of time previous to the presentation for re- hearsal, the lesser characters being able to get along with less practice. The celebration of 1911 need interfere in no sense with the plans of the class of 1900 to celebrate its tenth anniversary in 1910, but could be made a precedent for a big celebration every five years. o o ::r 0 ' :-
”
Page 19 text:
“
• 0 adequateness and is absolutely valueless. In accordance with this principle, we see that every nation that has developed an independnt civilization, has produced at the same time a distinct type of school- ing. India, Persia, Greece, Rome, Europe of the middle ages, and to a lesser extent each of the great modern nations has produced an educational system in accordance with the demands of its social, eco- nomic and political life. Among modern nations the distinction in type has not been so decisive, for the reason that the trend of civilization among all modern nations of the Occident has been along practically the same lines and moreover because modern people, bound by the traditions of the past, have not been so free to develop along indi- vidual lines as were the nations of the past. Yet in every great country of Europe and in America today there has been developed an edu- cational system distinctive in many ways. And the great problem now before the educational world is how to make education more in accordance with present day conditions; how to lay off from our schools much that has served its days of usefulness m an earlier stage of the world ' s development and has today become an incubus on the social body of the race. This is an industrial age. There have been greater develop- ments along industrial lines in the past fifty years than in all the centuries before since the birth of nations on the earth. And the end is not yet. In fact this is but the beginning of a commercial evolution that will finally end in industrial democracy in which the kings of industry will be dethroned and the crown given to the people, just as the French and American revolutions snatched the political crown from the brow of aristocracy and placed it upon the brow of a mighty people. This, then, being an industrial age, and true education the means by which we are guided on our forward march, it follows that industrial education must take the place of the old bookish kind. We must educate children for business. And, indeed, the most important movement in the history of modern education has been that towards industrial education of the young, which has come forward to some extent in the past few years. Based on the conviction that the ordinary curriculum of the public schools of today is not in harmony with the life of today, this new- movement has in a decade become the greatest educational problem confronting the world. Such a problem being taken up by those who are at present directing the educational activities of the world, is in- deed an encouraging sign. It demonstrates that life and education are in accord. The course of study in our public schools had its origin in that period that culminated in the French revolution and the great in- dustrial revolution of the eighteenth century. It was based upon the demands of a bourgeoise civilization, on the needs of the shopkeeper and the small manufacturer. Additions to this course have been made from time to time but no general revision has ever taken place and perhaps never will, for the educational world is notoriously conesrva- tive. Next to theology and law it is the most conservative of existing institutions. Such changes as have taken place have been grafted on to the old. The result has been a hodge-podge list of subjects, some suited to the needs of medieval times, some to the requirements of the bourgeoise period of industrial history, and some to the demands of the present age of commercialism. What then are some of the conditions confronting us? Eet us take the course of the elementary public school. In a general way our work in teaching the child to read and spell has shown improvem.ent, and in the case of the former subject has been fairly satisfactory. In writing we have ignored the demands of the practical business world and produced penmanship that is slow, stilted, awkward, and im- practicable. Our mathematics through all grades is the remnants of a day when the only persons who could do more than count and solve simple problems on their fingers, were those who, fascinated by the subject, devoted their lives to the intricacies of mathematical theory. • (xz»- 0 =»?
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.