West Chester University - Serpentine Yearbook (West Chester, PA)

 - Class of 1917

Page 21 of 340

 

West Chester University - Serpentine Yearbook (West Chester, PA) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 21 of 340
Page 21 of 340



West Chester University - Serpentine Yearbook (West Chester, PA) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 20
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Page 21 text:

THE SERPENTINE Page 13

Page 20 text:

Page 12 CLASS NINETEEN SEVENTEEN Professor Thorndike, of Colunibia University, has made a comprehensive study of the individual differences and gives the following causes: influence of sex, influence of race, differences in intellect due to race, the overlapping in the race, the influence of ancestry, and the influence of education, Psychologists say that there is a point where secondary education should be- gin, and that this occurs at a period coinciding with the dawn of adolescence; that this period is characterized by a marked mental change, which should be recognized in both the content and in the mcthud of instruction; and that a six- year high school course would lend itself in the eleventh and twelfth years to a differentiation along lines of business, mechanical arts, pnd professional prepara- tion. Superintendent E. V. Robinson says: Children differ widely at the age of twelve, and to attempt to teach them all everything offered in the grades is a grievous mistake of the pupil ' s time, the teachers energy, and the people ' s money. The second claim that the new organization makes an easier transition from the elementary school to the high school is well founded. It is recommended that a si.x-ycar course, beginning v ' ith the seventh .grade, is the natural turning point in the pupil ' s life, and that an easier transition can be made from the one-teacher regime to the system of special teachers; that by this the result will be a more closely articulated system with a larger percentage of graduates from the high school. At this time adolescents can be more closely associated in a class by themselves and thus form a better wcrking unit. The third claim that the junior high school lessens elimination is based in theory on tlic sharp Ijreak between the elementary school and the high school. President Butler, of Columbia University, says : I have never known a child who needed more than six years in which to complete the elementary course. Professor Briggs, of the same University, says, that the elemination after the seventh, eighth and ninth grades has been one of the greatest reproaches on the American school system. So far as this plan of the juninr high school has been tried, it has proven the assertion of the claim. The last claim for the junior high school is that it jjrovides for reforms in methods of instruction. When the seventh, eighth and ninth grades are congre- gated at central points they may be taught by specialized teachers who will in- troduce some high school methods and so improve conditions generally. To begin high school methods at the age of twelve will meet the needs of pupils who arc at that age restless and seeking larger and more varied aims. This proposed time scheme of organization makes a better economic division between prepara- tion for life and active life. This plan also makes possible the extension of de- partmental work in the seventh and eighth grades, and is desirable in that it gives the pupil daily contact with several personalities and thereby creates a better intellectual atmosphere. While the junior high school is not a cure for all the ills in education, yet it does present an opportunity for exploration — an exploration of the various school subjects and of the capacities of the individual pupils. But an opportunity is all that any progressive schoolman really desires. Foster Henry Starkly.



Page 22 text:

Page 14 CLASS NINETEEN SEVENTEEN E- S U

Suggestions in the West Chester University - Serpentine Yearbook (West Chester, PA) collection:

West Chester University - Serpentine Yearbook (West Chester, PA) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

1914

West Chester University - Serpentine Yearbook (West Chester, PA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 1

1915

West Chester University - Serpentine Yearbook (West Chester, PA) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

West Chester University - Serpentine Yearbook (West Chester, PA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918

West Chester University - Serpentine Yearbook (West Chester, PA) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

1919

West Chester University - Serpentine Yearbook (West Chester, PA) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

1920


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