University of Virginia Library



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SUMMER SCHOOL OF THE
UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA

OFFICERS OF THE SUMMER SCHOOL

Administration Board.

EDWIN ANDERSON ALDERMAN, D. C. L., LL. D.,
President of the University.

CHARLES GILMORE MAPHIS,
Professor of Secondary Education.

Director of the Summer School.

CHARLES WILLIAM KENT, M. A., Ph. D., LL. D.,
Professor of English Literature.

WILLIAM HOLDING ECHOLS, B. S., C. E.,
Professor of Mathematics.

THOMAS FITZHUGH, M. A.,
Professor of Latin.

WILLIAM HARRY HECK, M. A.,
Professor of Education.

HARRIS HART, A. B.,
Superintendent of Schools, Roanoke, Va., Registrar.

W. P. McBAIN,
Local Manager, Rooms and Boarding.


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FACULTY

                                                         

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ELLA AGNEW  Demonstration Work 
(Director Girls' Demonstration Work for Virginia). 
ALBERT BALZ  Psychology and Philosophy 
(Adjunct Professor of Philosophy, University of Virginia). 
B. A., M. A., University of Virginia; Graduate Student, Columbia University
Summer School, 1910; Instructor in Psychology and Philosophy,
University of Virginia, 1910-1912; University Fellow in Philosophy, Columbia
University, 1912-1913. 
ANNA BARRINGER  Drawing 
(Director of Manual Arts, Industrial Institute and College, Columbus,
Mississippi). 
Student of Art, Newcomb College, New Orleans; Student University of
Virginia Summer School of Art; New York School of Art; Two Years
at Teachers' College, Columbia University. 
ALON BEMENT  Drawing 
(Assistant Professor of Fine Arts, Teachers College, Columbia
University). 
Graduate, Boston Museum School of Fine Arts; Graduate, Naas Institute,
Sweden; Student, Ecole des Beaux Arts, Paris; Tutor and Instructor in
Art, College of the City of New York; Instructor in Painting and Illustration,
Teachers' College, Columbia University; Instructor in Art, Groff
School; Lecturer on Art. 
ROBERT MONTGOMERY BIRD  Chemistry 
(Professor of Chemistry, University of Virginia). 
B. A., B. S., Hampden-Sidney College; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University;
Assistant in Chemistry, Johns Hopkins University; Professor of Science
and Mathematics, Frederick College; Professor of Chemistry, Mississippi
Agricultural College; Professor of Agricultural Chemistry, University of
Missouri. 
ARTHUR V. BISHOP  Latin 
(Instructor in Latin, University of Virginia). 
B. S., Virginia Polytechnic Institute; Principal Blacksburg High School;
M. A., University of Virginia. 
WILLIAM G. BISHOP  Physical Geography 
(Professor of Geography, Nebraska Wesleyan University, Lincoln,
Nebraska). 
A. M. University of Nebraska, 1910. 
WINIFRED BRAINERD  Manual Arts 
(Supervisor Manual Training in Grades, Indianapolis, Indiana). 
Graduate Oneonta, N. Y., State Normal School; Teacher Manual Training
in Normal School; Special Work at Cornell and Teachers' College. 
BESSIE B. COLEMAN  Reading 
(Institute Instructor). 
Primary Teacher; Institute Instructor in Primary Methods; Specialist in
Reading, Primary Grades, New York City. 
STERLING H. DIGGS  Physics 
(Instructor in Psychology, University of Virginia). 
B. S., M. S., University of Virginia; Instructor, Charlottesville High
School; Instructor in Physics, University of Virginia. 
WILLIAM HOLDING ECHOLS  Mathematics 
(Professor of Mathematics, University of Virginia). 
B. S., C. E., University of Virginia. 
GRAHAM EDGAR, B. S., Ph. D.  Chemistry 
(Associate Professor Chemistry, University of Virginia). 
RABBI HARRY W. ETTELSON  Education 
(Head of the Reformed Jewish Temple, Hartford, Conn.). 
B. A., University of Cincinnati; Graduate of the Hebrew Union College,
Cincinnati; Graduate Student, Chicago University Summer School, 1906,
1908, 1910; Yale University, 1912-13, 1913-14. 
WILLIAM HARRISON FAULKNER, M. A., Ph. D.  German 
(Professor Germanic Languages, University of Virginia). 
THOMAS FITZHUGH  Latin and Greek 
(Professor of Latin, University of Virginia). 
M. A., University of Virginia; Student of Philology and Archæology, Berlin,
Rome and Athens; Instructor, Bingham School, North Carolina; Instructor,
Bellevue High School, Virginia; Professor of Latin, Central University,
Kentucky; Professor of Latin, University of Texas; Professor of
Latin and Greek, Texas-Colorado Chautauqua; Author of Philosophy of the
Humanities, Outlines of Classical Pedagogy, Prolegomena to the History
of Italico-Romanic Rhythm, The Tonic Laws of Latin Speech and Verse,
The Sacred Tripudium, Italico-Keltic Accent and Rhythm, The Literary
Saturnian, Parts I-II, Indoeuropean Rhythm,
and Contributor to the Journals
of the American Philogical Association and the Archæological Institute
of America, etc. 
R. B. GAITHER  Spanish 
(Student University of Virginia). 
Resident Mexico City. 
C. B. GIVENS, JR.  Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds. Algebra 
(Principal Bellevue Grammar School, Danville, Virginia). 
B. S., Milligan College; Principal of High Schools; Professor of Mathematics
Milligan College; Student University of Virginia 1906-1909. 
MARGARET WINIFRED HALIBURTON  Primary Methods 
(Supervisor Primary Schools, Waco, Texas). 
Graduate of Greensboro Female College; Student in Teachers' College, N.
Y.; Principal of Training School of State Normal College, Greensboro, N.
C. Supervisor of First and Second grades in Farmville State Normal, Va.;
Instructor in Primary Methods at the Summer School of the South, Knoxville,
Tenn., in 1902, 1904, 1905; Author of Graded Classics, "Playmates,"
"A Primer;" "Phonetics in Reading," "A Manual for Teachers," "Teaching
Poetry in the Grades," and "The Haliburton Readers." 
JOAN HAMILTON  Domestic Science 
(Instructor Household Arts, Regina Normal School, Canada). 
Graduate Macdonald Institute, Guelph, Canada; Toronto Normal School,
Ontario; Instructor Household Arts, Guelph, Ontario; Instructor Normal
School. Regina, Saskatchawan, 1909-13; Institute Lecturer, Organizer
Women's Clubs; Special Student Teachers' College, New York. 
HARRIS HART  History and Education 
(Superintendent of Schools, Roanoke, Virginia). 
B. A., Richmond College; Student in History, Summer Sessions of Harvard
University and Chicago University; Instructor, Richmond College; Instructor,
Bowling Green, Virginia; Principal of High School, Roanoke,
Virginia; State School Examiner, Virginia. 
WILLIAM HARRY HECK  Education 
(Professor of Education, University of Virginia). 
M. A., Wake Forest College; Fellow, Columbia University; Assistant Principal,
Raleigh Male Academy, North Carolina; Assistant Secretary, General
Education Board. 
MARY CLAY HINER  English 
(Instructor in English Language, State Normal School, Farmville,
Virginia). 
Graduate, State Normal School, Farmville, Virginia; Student, University
Summer School, Charlottesville, Virginia, 1905, 1907; Teacher of Elementary
Grammar and Language Methods, Summer School of Methods, Farmville,
Virginia, 1909, 1910, 1911. 
LIDA HOOE  Drawing 
(Supervisor of Drawing, Dallas, Texas). 
Art Student, New York University; Art Institute of Chicago; Student
Harvard University Summer School. 
H. CLAY HOUCHENS  Manual Training 
(Instructor and Director of Woodwork and Applied Arts, Richmond
Public Schools). 
Student Miller Manuel Labor School, 1890-1898; Journeyman Woodworker,
1898-1905; Instructor of Manual Training and Mechanical Drawing, Richmond
Public Schools, 1905-1911; Student Teachers' College, Columbia University,
New York City, Summer Sessions 1907, 1909, 1910, 1912; Student
University of Michigan, Summer Sessions 1907, 1909, 1910, 1912; Student
University of Michigan, Summer Session 1908; Instructor of Mechanical
and Architectural Drawing, Virginia Mechanics Institute (Night School of
Technology) 1905-1913. 
J. WALTER HUFFINGTON  History 
(Principal Caroline High School, Denton, Maryland). 
B. A., M. A., St. John's College, Annapolis, Principal of High Schools and
Institute Conductor. 
JOHN R. HUTCHESON  Agriculture 
(Principal of Jones County Agricultural School, Ellisville, Mississippi). 
M. S., Virginia Polytechnic Institute; Assistant in Agronomy, Virginia Agricultural
Station; Instructor in Agriculture, Winchester and Galax, Virginia,
Summer Normal Schools. 
KARE JANSEN  Swedish Corrective Gymnastics 
(Swedish Lecturer and Instructor in Swedish Gymnastics). 
Educational Lecturer; Instructor in Languages, Voice, Fencing and the
Swedish System of Physical Culture. 
JAMES GIBSON JOHNSON  Mathematics 
(Superintendent of Schools, Charlottesville, Virginia). 
B. A., M. A., Milligan College; M. A., Ph. D., University of Virginia;
Teacher and Principal in Rural and City Elementary and High Schools;
Conductor of Summer Institutes; Superintendent of City School. 
CHARLES W. KENT  Lecturer 
(Professor English Literature, University, Virginia). 
M. A., University of Virginia; Ph. D. Leipsic, Germany; Ll. D. University
of Alabama; Formerly Professor of English and German, University
of Tennessee; Literary Editor of Library of Southern Literature, Southern
Poems, Selected Poems of Burns, etc.; Author of numerous monographs
and magazine articles; Member of Authors' Club of England, etc. 
WILLIAM ALLISON KEPNER  Biology 
(Associate Professor of Biology, University of Virginia). 
B. A., M. A. (Franklin and Marshall College); Ph. D. (University of 
Virginia). Professor of Biology Millersville Normal School Pennsylvania,
1901; Government Teacher in Philippines, 1901-1903; Student at University
of Gœttingen; Maule Fellow in Biology, Princeton University; Adjunct
Professor in Biology, University of Virginia. Author of various papers on
zoological subjects and joint author with Prof. Ulric Dahlgren of Princeton
University of "Principles of Animal Histology." 
WILLIAM ALEXANDER LAMBETH  Field Botany 
(Professor of Hygiene, University of Virginia). 
Ph. D., University of Virginia; M. D., University of Virginia; Director
of Athletics, University of Virginia. 
DABNEY L. LANCASTER  Agriculture 
B. A., University of Virginia; Graduate Student in Agriculture, Virginia
Polytechnic Institute. 
ALBERT LEFEVRE  Logic and Philosophy 
(Professor of Philosophy, University of Virginia). 
B. A., University of Texas; Graduate Student, Johns Hopkins University
Ph. D., Cornell University; Lecturer in Philosophy, Instructor in Philosophy,
and Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Cornell University; Student, University
of Berlin; Professor of Philosophy, Tulane University. 
BESSIE C. LEFTWICH  Domestic Economy 
(Assistant Critic Instructor in the School of Industrial and Household
Arts, Teachers College, N. Y.). 
Instructor in English and Physiology, Mary Baldwin Seminary; Graduate
Mary Baldwin Seminary; Student Domestic Science, Teachers' College, N. Y. 
W. CLYDE LOCKER  Writing 
(Supervisor of Penmanship, Richmond Public Schools, Principal
John Marshall Night High School). 
Graduate, The Drillery, Washington, D. C. (formerly); Principal Business
Night High School; Supervisor of Penmanship in Public Schools, Roanoke,
Virginia; Instructor State Summer Institute, Emory, Virginia; Author
Fifteen Hundred Words Most Commonly Misspelled. 
J. MOORE McCONNELL  History 
(Professor of History and Economics, Davidson College). 
B. A., Davidson College; M. A., Ph. D., University of Virginia; Associate
Principal Pantops Academy, Virginia; Associate Professor Latin and Mathematics,
Davidson College; Editor Southern Orators, Macmillan Pocket
Classics. 
JAMES SUGARS McLEMORE  Latin 
(Adjunct Professor in Latin, University of Virginia). 
M. A., Ph. D., University of Virginia. 
HOWARD MORGAN McMANAWAY  History 
(Division Superintendent of Schools, Albemarle County). 
Student Richmond College, Richmond, Virginia; Stokes Fellow University
of Virginia; Graduate M. A. Courses in History and Education, University
of Virginia; Principal Toano High School; Instructor in History, English
and Chemistry, Charlottesville High School; Instructor in Pedagogy, Seaside
Summer Normal, Newport News, Virginia. 
WALLACE HOPKINS MAGEE  Manual Training 
(Director Metal Work and Mechanical Drawing, John Marshall
High School, Richmond, Virginia). 
Graduate Manual Training High School, Louisville, Kentucky; Kentucky
State University, Mechanical Engineering Department; Special Apprentice
Atlas Engine and Boiler Works, Indianapolis; Teacher of Woodwork and
Mechanical Drawing, Richmond Public Schools; Head Metal Department,
Manual Training High School, Louisville, Kentucky. 
SARAH ROSETTER MARSHALL  Aesthetic Gymnastics 
(Director Physical Training, High School, Lawrenceburg, Kentucky). 
A. B., University of Kentucky; Director Physical Training Margaret College,
Kentucky; Instructor of Classic Dancing, University of Kentucky;
Instructor of Swimming, University of Kentucky; Teacher of English and
History, High School, Lawrenceville, Kentucky. 
MELVIN ALBERT MARTIN  Education and Psychology 
(Professor of Education and Philosophy, and Dean of Woman's
College, Richmond, Virginia). 
B. A., Richmond College; M. A., Columbia University; Graduate Student,
University of Chicago; Head Master, Mossy Creek Academy; Principal,
Southside Female Institute; Professor of Mathematics, Woman's College;
Professor of Philosophy and Education, Woman's College. 
JOHN CALVIN METCALF  English 
(Professor of English, Richmond College). 
M. A., Georgetown College; M. A., Harvard University; Litt. D. Georgetown,
Graduate Student, University of Chicago, Harvard University University
of Leipzig; Professor of Modern Languages, Mercer University;
Professor of English, Georgetown College; Lecturer in University of Chicago;
Author of A History of English Literature; Editor of The Sir Roger
de Coverley Papers
and of Macbeth; Author of The English in the South
(in The South in the Building of the Nation), Life of George Cary Eggleston
(in Library of Southern Literature); etc. 
GRACE ELDRIDGE MIX  Kindergarten Education 
(Supervisor of Kindergarten Education, State Normal School,
Farmville, Va.). 
Student Wellesley College, 1891-2; Graduate Kindergarten Training School,
Worcester, Mass., 1895; Kindergartner Worcester Public Schools, 1895-7;
Training Teacher, Grand Rapids, Mich., Training School, 1907-12; B. S.,
Columbia University, 1912. 
MARY S. MOFFETT  Arithmetic 
(Supervising Principal of Herndon High Schools, Virginia). 
Graduate of Cincinnati Normal School; Principal of School, Cincinnati;
Principal, Rockbridge Normal School; Instructor University of Virginia
Summer School since 1903. 
WALTER ALEXANDER MONTGOMERY  Latin and Greek 
(Professor of Latin, Richmond College). 
B. A., Johns Hopkins University; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University; Professor
of Latin and Greek, University of Arkansas; Professor of Greek,
University of Mississippi; Professor of Classics, Sewanee Grammar School,
University of the South; Professor of Latin, College of William and Mary. 
WELDON THOMAS MYERS  English 
(Adjunct Professor of English Literature, University of Virginia). 
B. A., Bridgewater College; M. A., Ph. D., University of Virginia; Professor
of Ancient Languages, Bridgewater College, 1901-1905; Instructor in
Latin, University of Virginia, 1906-1909; Instructor in English Literature,
University of Virginia, 1909-1911. 
GEORGIA O'KEEFE  Drawing 
(Supervisor Drawing, Amarillo, Texas). 
Graduate Chatham Institute; Student Chicago Art Institute; Student New
York Art League. 
JAMES MORRIS PAGE  Mathematics 
(Dean of the University of Virginia). 
M. A., Randolph-Macon College; Ph. D., University of Leipzig; Fellow
in Mathematics, Johns Hopkins University; Professor of Mathematics, University
of Virginia. 
THOMAS WALKER PAGE  History and Civil Government 
(Professor of Economics, University of Virginia). 
M. A., Randolph-Macon College; Ph. D., University of Leipzig; Student
of London, Berlin; Lecturer in Chicago University; Professor, University
of California; Professor, University of Texas; Member Tariff Board, Member
State Tax Commission. 
JOHN SHELTON PATTON  Library Methods 
(Librarian of the University of Virginia). 
Former Secretary of the Faculty, University of Virginia; Author of Jefferson,
Cabell and the University of Virginia;
Joint Editor of The Book of the
Poe Centenary.
 
ELIZABETH TRIPPE PICKETT  Games 
(Primary Teacher, Public Schools, Norfolk, Virginia). 
Student, Norfolk College; Graduate and Post-Graduate Student, Kindergarten
Training School, New York; Instructor, Childrens' School Farm,
Jamestown Exposition; Director, Ghent Kindergarten, Norfolk. 
THERON H. RICE, D. D.  Religious Education 
(Professor of the English Bible, Union Theological Seminary,
Richmond, Virginia). 
HERR ERWIN SCHNEIDER  Piano and Violin 
Graduate of the Royal Music School at Montabaus, Provin of Hessen Nassau,
Germany; Pupil of Capellmeister Jane at Wiesbaden and Joseph Schneider,
Bandmaster of the Duke of Nassau; Musical Director, Nashville College
for Young Ladies, Nashville, Tenn.; Southwestern Baptist University, Jackson,
Tenn.; Virginia College, Roanoke, Va.; and Lewisburg Seminary and
Conservatory of Music; Lewisburg, W. Va. 
ELEANOR LIVINGSTON SCHUYLER  Industrial Arts 
Graduate of Oswego Normal School 1911; Student, Teachers' College,
Columbia University Summer Session 1912; Supervisor of Drawing and
Industrial Art, Fairport, New York, 1911-1913; Student, Teachers' College,
Columbia University, 1913-1914. 
EDWIN H. SCOTT  Agriculture 
Professor Agriculture and Biology, Georgia Normal and Industrial
College 1908-13). 
Graduate Massachusetts Agricultural College, B. S., 1906; Instructor in
High School, Northampton, Massachusetts, 1903-04; Principal Evening
Drawing School, Northampton, Mass., 1905; Principal of Agricultural
High and Graded Schools, Petersham, Mass., 1906-08; Registrar and Instructor,
Massachusetts Summer School of Agriculture for Teachers, 1907;
Instructor in Pedagogy of Agriculture, Connecticut Summer School for
Teachers, Storrs, Conn., 1909; Graduate Student, Dartmouth Summer
School 1910, 1911 and 1912. 
MYRON T. SCUDDER, A. B. A. M.  Rural Education 
(President of The Scudder School in New York City). 
Graduate, Rutgers College, 1882; Graduate Student, Yale, 1898-99; Professional
Experience; District School, Fort Plain, N. Y., 1882-83; General
Secretary Y. M. C. A., Yonkers, N. Y., 1883-84; Principal Village School,
Fort Plain, N. Y., 1884-88; Principal Rome Free Academy, Rome, N. Y.,
1888-90; Teacher of Greek and Latin, Plattsburg State Normal School,
1890-92; State Inspector of Regents Schools, New York, 1892-97; Principal
Hillhouse High School, New Haven, Conn., 1897-99; Principal State
Normal School, New Paltz, N. Y., 1899-08; Professor of Education, Rutgers
College, 1909-13. 
HUBERT GIBSON SHEARIN  English 
Professor of English Philology and Dean of Hamilton College,
Transylvania University, Lexington, Ky. 
Ph. D., Yale, 1902; Professor of English Ripon College, Wisconsin. 
THOMAS McNIDER SIMPSON, JR.  Astronomy 
(Professor of Methematics, Converse College). 
B. A., Randolph-Macon College; M. A., University of Virginia; Fellow
and Assistant in Astronomy, University of Virginia; Acting Professor of
Mathematics and Physics, St. Stephen's College; Instructor in Mathematics,
University of Virginia. 
DUNCAN SMITH  Art 
(Instructor Art Students League, New York). 
Graduate University of Virginia; Member Mural Painters' Society, New
York; Portrait Painter. 
CARROLL MASON SPARROW  Physics 
(Adjunct Professor of Physics, University of Virginia). 
A. B., Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University; U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey,
1902-1907; Instructor in Physics, Johns Hopkins University, 1910-11;
Member American Physical Society; Member American Mathematical Society;
Member Circolo Matematico di Palermo. 
MABEL LEIGH STEPHENSON  Domestic Economy 
(Director of Domestic Economy Friends School, Baltimore). 
Tome Institute 1903; Pupil Assistant Domestic Economy 1903-4; Graduated
School of Domestic Science, Boston, Mass., 1905; Director Domestic
Economy Episcopal School, Savannah, Ga., 1905-7; Home Economics Instructor,
Baltimore County, Md., 1908-11; Graduated Teachers College,
N. Y., 1912; Summer Session, Columbia University, 1912. 
MARIETTA STOCKARD  Story Telling and Kindergarten 
(Assistant Kindergarten Training Teacher, Washington, D. C.,
Normal School, and Lecturer in Children's Literature in
George Washington University). 
A. B., George Washington University; Graduate Phoebe Hearst Kindergarten
College; Student, Teachers' College, N. Y. 
ELLA L. SWEENY  Primary Methods 
(Assistant Superintendent of Schools, Providence, Rhode Island). 
Student in Brown University, Chicago University, Clark University, Rhode
Island Agricultural College and University of Wisconsin; Visitor in European
schools during two extended trips. 
WILLIAM HAY TALIAFERRO  Biology 
(Assistant in Biology, University of Virginia). 
Joint Author with Dr. W. A. Kepner of "Sensory Epithelium of Parynx
and Ciliated Pits of Microstoma Caudatum" and "Reactions of Amoeba Proteus
to Food." 
A. F. WARE  Elementary Algebra 
(Head Master Ware's Select School for Boys, Cordele, Georgia). 
Georgia Institute Conductor; Principal of Warrenton Academy; Teacher
of Boys, Augusta, Georgia; Principal of Aribi Institute; Superintendent of
Cordele Public Schools; Assistant Principal of Albany Academy; Superintendent
of Wadley Public Schools; President of Warthen College. 
CHARLOTTE M. WATERMAN  Music 
(Director of Music, Oswego State Normal and Training School,
Organist and Choir Director, First Methodist Church, Oswego,
N. Y.). 
Graduate Oswego Normal and Training School; Cornell University Music
School; Organ, graduate pupil, William F. Joebel, Leipsic; Supervisor
Music, Terre Haute, Indiana; Associate Teacher of Music, Indiana State
Normal. 
GEORGE ARMSTRONG WAUCHOPE  English 
(Professor of English, University of South Carolina). 
M. A., Ph. D., Washington and Lee University; Graduate Student, Berlin
University and Harvard University; Assistant Professor of English, Washington
and Lee University; Assistant Professor of English, University
of Missouri; Professor of English, University of Iowa; Supply Professor
of English Literature, University of Virginia; Author of The Writers of
South Carolina;
Editor of school and college editions of Spenser's Faerie
Queene,
Lamb's Essays of Elia, De Quincey's Confessions of an Opium
Eater,
Longfellow's Ballads and Other Poems, George Eliot's Silas Marner,
etc.; Assistant Literary Editor of Library of Southern Literature. 
ROBERT FRANKLIN WEBB  Commercial 
(Principal Commercial Department of City High School, Charlottesville,
Virginia). 
Student Western Kentucky State Normal School; postgraduate work in
summer schools; B. C. S., Bowling Green Business University, Kentucky;
Teacher in Bowling Green Business University and in the Metropolitan
Business College, Chicago; Principal of Commercial Department of City
Schools. 
LETITIA E. WEER  Domestic Economy 
(Supervisor of Home Economics, Baltimore County, Maryland). 
Graduate, State Normal School, Maryland; Graduate in Domestic Science
and Art, National Training School, Washington City; Student in Domestic
Science, Chautauqua, New York; Graduate in Domestic Science, Teachers'
College, Columbia University; Principal, Elementary School, Baltimore
County. 
ARTHUR GEORGE WILLIAMS  Modern Languages 
(Professor of Modern Languages, Emory and Henry College). 
A. B., A. M., Roanoke College; Graduate Student in Germanics at the
University of Chicago, Summer Quarters 1912 and 1913; Instructor in
Modern Languages, High School, Roanoke; Professor of Modern Languages,
Emory and Henry College; Instructor in German, University of
Chicago (Summer Quarter 1913); President of Modern Language Association
of Virginia. 
OSCAR I. WOODLEY  Education 
(President of State Normal School, Fairmont, West Virginia). 
B. A., Albion College; M. A., Columbia University; M. Pd., Ypsilanti
Normal College; Superintendent, City Schools, Passaic, New Jersey; Institute
Lecturer; Author of Foundation Lessons in English. 
HUGH SKIPWORTH WORTHINGTON  French 
(Professor of French, Sweet Briar College, Virginia). 
M. A., University of Virginia; Instructor in Modern Languages, Richmond
College; Professor of Modern Languages, Southern Female College;
Associate Professor of French and Spanish, Virginia Polytechnical Institute;
student in France, 1905, 1907, 1911, 1912. 
RICHARD THOMAS WYCHE  Story Telling 
(Story Specialist). 
University of North Carolina; University of Chicago; Author, "Some Great
Stories and How to Tell Them;" Co-editor, "Foundation Library for Young
People;" Editor, "The Story Teller's Magazine;" Lecturer, University of
Chicago, Summer Schools of Michigan, Ohio, Alabama, Georgia; Boards of
Education, Baltimore, Cincinnati, Detroit, San Antonio; President National
Story Teller's League. 

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Page 10

ANNOUNCEMENTS

The University of Virginia Summer School is conducted for teachers
and students in high schools, academics and colleges and for those
who desire professional training for primary and grammar grade
work. It also offers many courses for college credit, and others to
meet the needs of students preparing for college entrance or who have
conditions to absolve. It takes as its peculiar province, not the
ordinary summer institute, but the solid and substantial training of
high school teachers, college teachers, college students, and teachers
who either have professional or life certificates or wish to procure
them. Because the courses of instruction in high schools are not
clearly defined but merge into the grammar grades below and into
the lower college classes above, the high school offers itself as a
strategic center around which to build up instruction, the emphasis of
which is upon subject matter. The justification of such a summer
school for high school teachers is the unusual activity in the South
just now in behalf of secondary education. The large number of high
school and college teachers attending the Summer School last year
is an additional proof of the need of such a school. In addition to
courses for high school teachers, the demand for courses for primary
and grammar grade teachers is fully met.

LOCATION.—Charlottesville, the seat of the University of Virginia,
is in a picturesque and healthful situation among the foot-hills
of the Blue Ridge Mountains. It is at the junction of two great lines
of railway, the Chesapeake & Ohio and the Southern, and is thus of
easy access from every part of the country. The sanitary arrangements
of the University are excellent. The climate is invigorating,
healthful, and free from malarial conditions, the average elevation of
the surrounding country being about six hundred and fifty feet above
sea level; the water supply is pure, being drawn by gravity from a
mountain reservoir six miles away; the system of drains and sewers
is complete. One mile from the University is an excellent iron
spring connected with the Jefferson Park Hotel, a much frequented
resort.

LABORATORIES AND MUSEUMS.—The equipment possessed
by the University for the work of instruction, alike in academic and
in the professional departments, has been much augmented in recent
years, and is now excellent in quality, as well as extensive. In scientific
studies large facilities are offered by the Rouss Physical Laboratory,
the Chemical Laboratory and the Museum of Industrial Chemistry,
the Lewis Brooks Museum, the Biological Laboratory. The
large Education Building with laboratories for Manual Arts and
Domestic Arts will be ready for occupancy this summer.

THE GENERAL LIBRARY.—The General Library is open to
the corps of instructors and the students of the Summer School from
9 A. M. to 1:30 P. M., 3 to 5, and from 7:30 to 10 P. M. The collection
contains about seventy thousand volumes, including the standard
books of history, literature, and science, and is particularly rich
in materials for the study of education and other social subjects. The
reference section is well supplied with encyclopædias and other
sources of information.

All books withdrawn from the library must be charged at the desk.
Usually books are lent for one week but there are exceptions, and


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the loan expires on the date stamped in the book. Prompt return not
later than the date on which the loan expires is expected and borrowers
will be fined ten cents for each day delinquent. Students are
expected to give prompt attention to all communications from the librarian.
Volumes in the reference collection are not available to borrowers
but may be freely consulted in the library, and works in current
general use in connection with any course of instruction will be
temporarily placed on reference and made subject to this rule. All
bound magazines are classed as reference books.

REST AND STUDY ROOMS.—Madison Hall, the beautiful new
building of the Young Men's Christian Association, which was recently
erected at a cost of seventy-five thousand dollars, will be open
to students of the Summer School from nine o'clock in the morning
until ten at night. Students will have access to the current periodicals
in the reading room during the day and until ten at night. The
other rooms will be used for rest, for study, for recreation, and for
social gatherings. North of the building there are nineteen tennis
courts which will be equipped for the use of the students.

DAILY GENERAL ASSEMBLY.—Daily from 11:30 to 12:15 there
will be a period in which the students may have the privilege of attending
a gathering of the entire body. At this time there will be
short addresses on interesting topics by prominent speakers invited
for this purpose, and a brief prayer and song service. Generally the
singing will be choral, under the direction of the instructor of music,
but occasionally, as opportunity offers, prominent soloists will be procured.

SUNDAY VESPER SERVICES.—Experience has shown that no
Sunday service held here during the summer has been more attractive
or more appreciated than what has sometimes been called the Sunset
Service. Holding this service at this hour enables all the faculty
and the students of the summer school to unite in one common service
without at all interfering with their attending the churches of their
choice in the city. This service, which will always be kept within one
hour, will begin at seven o'clock. It will consist of congregational
singing and a brief address by some prominent minister or layman.
The pipe organ used when held in the chapel is the work of one of
the best organ makers in the country, and is admirably adapted, both
in size and tone, for church purposes. When the weather permits
the service is held out of doors on the north steps of the Rotunda.

RECREATION.—Provision has been made to keep the Fayerweather
Gymnasium open for regularly registered students during
the summer, under the control of a competent gymnasium director.
No fee will be charged for the use of the gymnasium, and it is
hoped that every student will come prepared to take advantage of the
physical training courses. A portion of each day set apart to systematic
physical development will be profitably spent. The swimming
pool and baths will be at the service of the students. The tennis
courts belonging to Madison Hall will also be kept in readiness, duly
marked and with nets in place. The splendid athletic field, one of the
finest in the South, with base-ball ground and quarter mile running
track, will be at the disposal of those who wish to engage in the manly
sports. Within three minutes' walk from the Academic Building, the
woods may be reached. These woods and the neighboring mountains
furnish ample opportunity for pleasant strolls or for longer tramps on


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the part of those more vigorous. One of these walks leads to Fry's
Spring, a most efficacious chalybeate spring, which may also be
reached by street car.

EXCURSIONS.—Under the directorship of a competent guide,
there will be excursions to neighboring points of interest such as
Monticello, the home of Thomas Jefferson; the Natural Bridge; Luray
Caverns; the Grottoes of the Shenandoah; the battle fields in Virginia;
and any other points to which a sufficiently large number may care
to go. The proximity to Washington and Richmond (three hours
ride to each) should make a visit to either exceptionally interesting.
Saturdays will be reserved for these excursions. On designated
clear nights parties will leave Cabell Hall at 8 o'clock to visit the
McCormick Astronomical Observatory, where they will be shown
the stars through the large telescope in the Observatory.

ORGAN RECITALS, ENTERTAINMENTS, AND LECTURES.
—The pipe organ in Cabell Hall is one of the best products of one of
the largest organ manufacturers in America. It is an antiphonal organ
with fifteen hundred pipes, and exhibits all the possibilities of
organ manufacture. To bring out these possibilities requires a master
organist, and it is the purpose of the management of the Summer
School to procure distinguished organists for the recitals.

A Musical Festival and other entertainments will be announced during
the session of the Summer School. Last session a Lyceum Course
consisting of twenty high class entertainments was given for $2.00 for
a season ticket. The numbers included the Frank Lea Short Players,
Evan Williams, John Kendrick Bangs, Henry Southwick, The Mary
Sherrier Concert Company, and similar attractions. This year contracts
have already been made for three plays each by the Frank Lea
Short Company and the Coburn Players, and for a return engagement
by the Mary Sherrier Company, Dr. H. S. Southwick, Henry
Hatfield, Karl Jansen, and many others will be arranged. This has
proven one of the very best features of the Summer School.

FOURTH OF JULY PAGEANT.—Each year an elaborate pageant
is given in connection with the Fourth of July Celebration. An
extensive celebration will be a feature this year.

RURAL LIFE WEEK.—The time between July 13th and July 18th
will be devoted to the study of problems of rural life in general, and
rural school problems in particular. The discussions will center
around the large topics of better educational facilities for rural communities;
better means of communication; improved methods of cooperation;
the improvement of sanitary conditions; good roads; etc.
Especial emphasis is to be placed on woman's work in the country,
and the country preacher. Distinguished speakers from all sections
of the United States will participate in these conferences.

There has been no more helpful, interesting, and vital enterprise connected
with the Summer School than this conference. It is of interest
not only to the students attending the Summer School, but to county
superintendents, progressive farmers, and citizens' improvement
leagues. The proceedings of the Conference for last year were published
and distributed and there was a wide-spread demand for copies.
Many similar conferences have been organized as the result of this
one. The Virginia State Horticultural Society will meet in connection
with the Conference on Wednesday, July 15. Governor Stuart,
of Virginia, has already accepted an invitation to make an address on
the 15th and Secretary Houston, of the United States Department of


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Agriculture, has been invited. The chief topics for the remainder of
the week will center around the Rural Church, and a large gathering
of country preachers and leaders is expected.

TEACHERS' POSITIONS.—The University Appointment Committee
receives demands for teachers each year. This Committee
would be glad to have well qualified teachers who are in attendance
upon the Summer School leave their applications with the Director,
who is a member of the Committee.

REDUCED RAILWAY RATES.—All students coming to the Summer
School from points within the territory covered by the Southeastern
Passenger Association, i. e. the territory lying south of the
Potomac and east of the Mississippi, should apply some time in advance
to the local agent for reduced rates. At a meeting of the
Conference Committee of the Southeastern Passenger Association,
the individual lines announced that they would authorize fares
for the University Summer School on a basis of approximately three
cents a mile plus 25 for the round trip. In case the agent has received
no instructions for selling reduced rate tickets to Charlottesville, Virginia,
the applicant should write promptly to the Director of the Summer
School, or Mr. Joseph Richardson, Secretary Southeastern Passenger
Association, Atlanta, Ga. Reduced rate tickets can be bought
only on one of the following dates: June 20th, 21st, 22nd, 23rd, 24th,
25th, 26th, 27th, 28th.

The Southern Railway Company, the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway
Company, the Norfolk and Western Railway Company, and all
railways within this territory will co-operate in the sale of these reduced
rate tickets. Application has also been made to the Trans-Continental
Passenger Association for similar rates, from the territory
west of the Mississippi, and teachers coming from the Western states
should write to the Director of the Summer School for instructions.

In Virginia reduced rate tickets will be on sale at all railroad stations.
Announcement of dates will be made later by the Department
of Public Instruction. Application has been made to have them correspond
with the above.

A committee will meet all incoming trains night and day, from
June 22nd to July 1st, to assist teachers in finding boarding places,
to attend to baggage and to render any other service needed. On arriving
teachers should inquire at the station for members of the committee
who will wear suitable badges. A committee of ladies from
the Y. W. C. A. will assist in welcoming teachers attending for the
first time.

BOARD AND ROOMS.—Board and room may be had at prices
ranging from $4.00 per week, where several stay in the same room,
upwards, according to accommodations and proximity to the University,
the average being $4.50 to $5.50 per week. Many of the
boarding houses immediately adjoin the University grounds.

One hundred single rooms and one hundred and twenty-five double
rooms in the University dormitories will be reserved in the order of
application upon the following terms: The price will be $5.00 for the
full term of six weeks for a single room, and $8.00 for a room which
will accommodate two. No reduction will be made for parts of a
term. Applications for rooms must be accompanied with the full
amount of the fee in order to have them reserved. The amount of


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the fee will be returned for good reason and room released if application
is made before June 10th. No rooms will be rented to any person
who does not register and pay the fee in the Summer School.
Rooms that are reserved will not be held later than July 1st. No room
will be open for occupancy before June 22nd. Each room is lighted
by electricity and will contain one bed, one mattress, one pillow, one
chiffonier, one table, one rocking chair, one straight chair. Double
rooms will be furnished with two single beds complete, unless a
double bed is especially desired; one chiffonier, except where there
are more than two in room; one rocking chair or one morris chair
and two single chairs. Wash stands and toilet sets will be provided
where necessary. Roomers must provide themselves with necessary
bed clothes, towels, etc. The Randall Building, East and West Lawns and
East and West Ranges will be reserved exclusively for ladies and will
be under the charge of Mrs. M. P. Harris, an experienced matron and
chaperone. Some members of the faculty will be located in each set
of dormitories. No cooking allowed in rooms. The rooms on Dawson's
Row will be reserved for men. The location of these dormitories
in the University grounds and the social advantages resulting
from bringing so many teachers close together make this
arrangement a very desirable one and the rooms are eagerly sought.

The University Commons, the handsome new dining-hall, will be
open for summer students and will provide table board for three hundred
and fifty persons at the very low price of $3.75 a week. The
University Commons will be managed this year by Mr. Charles
Jaimes a caterer and restaurateur of wide experience. A Restaurant
a la Carte and lunch counter will be run in connection with the
Commons, open from 9:30 A. M. to 11 P. M.

Application for dormitory rooms should be sent promptly, with retaining
fee, to Mr. C. H. H. Thomas, Assistant Bursar, University,
Virginia.

For list of boarding houses, rates, see page 68.

TIME AND PLACE OF RECITATIONS AND LECTURES.—
Recitations will begin in all courses Wednesday, June 24th, at 8:30 A.
M. Students should be present themselves at the first meeting of their
classes with the required text-books and be prepared with tablets to
take notes on introductory lectures. There will be no classes on Saturday
except possibly on Saturday, June 27th, when classes will
meet at the usual hours. The length of recitation will be one
hour, ten minutes of which will be allowed for transfer from one
room to another. Tuesday, August 4th, Wednesday and Thursday,
August 5th and 6th, will be used for examinations; the determination
being to provide for six full weeks of recitation over and above
registration and examination days.

Following the outline of each course in this announcement will be
found the time and place of meeting for each class. The courses outlined
will be given as scheduled. Students should therefore follow
the schedule in selecting courses that will not conflict. It is well for
the student to select such courses from this catalogue before the opening
of the Summer School, so that little delay may be experienced in
registration. The Summer School lecture rooms are for the most part
restricted to six buildings—the Education Building, Cabell Hall.
Rouss Physical Laboratory, Mechanical Laboratory, Rotunda and the
Law Building.


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Page 15

REGISTRATION.—Tuesday, June 23rd, will be devoted to the registration
of students. All students who can possibly do so should register
on this day. Those who fail to register before June 24th will
be permitted to attend classes and register as promptly as possible
at other hours. The Registrar's office, located in the New Education
Building, will be open continuously June 23rd, 24th, and 25th from 8:30
a. m. until 6:30 p. m. Students should consult freely with members of
the Faculty in case of difficulty in choosing courses. No certificate
will be granted to students who fail to register before Wednesday,
July 1st, except a certificate of attendance. Students preparing to
stand the examination for teachers' certificates held at this place by
the State Department of Public Instruction, July 23rd, 24th and
25th should enter twenty days prior to July 23rd.

Promptly at 9:30 Tuesday morning, June 23rd, all applicants for
registration will assemble in the auditorium of the New Education
Building for instructions in regard to filling out their cards, the location
of lecture rooms, and for consultation with members of the
faculty in regard to the courses of study they desire to pursue, or any
other matters upon which information is desired.

The form of registration will be as follows: Each student upon application
will receive a card with space for name and address, and for
courses to be taken. This card should be presented to the Registrar,
after it has been filled out, for purposes of filing. In exchange for it
the student will receive two cards filled out and signed by the Registrar.
These cards should then be presented to the Bursar, together
with the fee, if any, for each course. The Bursar will sign and return
one card to the student, who should present it to the instructors
in charge of the courses prescribed on the card. The student, after
presenting the card to the various instructors for enrollment in the
classes, will retain the same as a receipt from the Bursar, and for future
use. No student will be admitted to any course without a registration
card naming the course in question and properly signed by the
Registrar and the Bursar.

In registering, students must state upon the registration card what
credit, if any, is desired, as arrangements for credit must be made before
taking the courses. No course may be counted toward a certificate
without the consent of the Director or Registrar, and instructors
will not admit students to any course not mentioned on their registration
cards, which must be signed by the Registrar and the Bursar
to be valid.

IMPORTANT NOTE.—Every teacher who is applying for a Virginia
State Teachers' Summer School Professional Certificate of any
kind should bring with her and when registering file whatever certificate
she holds and which she desires to use as a basis of entrance
on such professional work.

NON-VIRGINIA TEACHERS.—The regulations in regard to
teachers' certificates and the requirements for entrance to certain
courses in the Summer School do not apply to teachers from other
states than Virginia unless they desire to apply for a Virginia Teachers'
certificate.

STUDENTS' MAIL.—In order to insure safe and prompt delivery
of mail, students should have all mail directed to University, Virginia,
giving always the street and number of their boarding place or the
number and location of their room in the University.

FEES FOR NON-VIRGINIA STUDENTS.—A single registration
fee of twelve dollars will be charged each person who registers


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from outside of Virginia. This fee will entitle the student to enter any
of the courses outlined in the catalogue (except a few special
courses which are so designated). No student, however, will be allowed
to take more than three advanced courses or six elementary
courses without special permission in writing from the Director.

Fees for Virginia Teachers.—Tuition will be entirely free to all
Virginia teachers in all the regular courses, both elementary and
advanced, leading to the professional and first grade certificates.
There are a few special courses offered to meet certain demands
but not necessary for certificate credit, for which fees will be
charged to all who take them. The fee attached to each is designated
in the catalogue. Small fees in laboratory courses will also
be charged all students who register in them.

Students from Virginia who are not teachers or preparing to
teach next session will be charged the same tuition as non-Virginia
students.

Fee for Course of Entertainments.—A Lyceum Course of high
grade entertainments and lectures will again be provided, as announced
on page 12. There will be altogether about twenty entertainments
and lectures, for many of which a single admission of
$1 to $1.50 is usually charged. Some of the plays will be "Pomander
Walk," "Merry Wives of Windsor," and "Robin Hood" by the
Frank Lea Short Company; "The Taming of the Shrew," "Joan
d'Arc" and "Iphigenia" by the Coburn Players; no one of which
could be seen for less than the prices mentioned.

Season tickets of admission to all the entertainments will be sold
to registered students of the Summer School for $2.50, though no
person will be required to purchase such ticket.

REGULATIONS CONCERNING CREDIT.—The instructor giving
each course will keep the class grades, and attendance, hold the
examination, and average the class grade with the examination
grade, returning to the Director the general average grade of each
student in each course. Absences or delayed entrance will be
counted against the student. A certificate for each course completed
with an average grade of 75 per cent will be signed by the instructor
and the Director of the Summer School, and mailed to the student.
When all of the certificates issued by the Director, which are required
for any State Teachers' certificate applied for have been received,
the Department of Public Instruction should be notified, and the appropriate
State Teachers' certificate will be issued in exchange for
the individual certificates noted above. Notice of the completion
of courses counted towards University credit should be made to the
Registrar of the University of Virginia.

Credit Allowed by Other States than Virginia.—Application has
been made to other Southern States for credit equal to that accorded
by the Virginia Department of Public Instruction. Credits
are now allowed toward the extension of the certificates by certain
other States. Some States authorize the University Summer School
instructors to hold State examinations. In other States arrangements
may be made upon application of the teachers from those
States. All persons wishing to arrange for credits with their respective
school authorities should correspond with the Director of
the Summer School.


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University of Virginia College Credit.—Below are stated the conditions
upon which credit in the University of Virginia may be
granted for work done in the Summer School.

(a) The student must satisfy the entrance examination requirements
of the University of Virginia and matriculate before he can
receive credit in the College for any work done in the University of
Virginia Summer School.

(b) The Dean of the College will accept the completion of the
courses in the Summer School in lieu of the entrance examinations
in the same subject, provided that in his judgment the courses are
equivalent to those required for entrance to the University of Virginia,
and provided, that the certificates of courses completed be approved
by the University of Virginia professor concerned.

(c) The Dean of the College and the professor in charge of the
school in which credit is desired will accept certificates of completion
of summer courses in lieu of "A" courses in the University of Virginia,
provided that such summer courses be approved by the University
of Virginia professor concerned as the full equivalent in character
and scope of the corresponding "A" courses in the University.

(d) Certificates of completion of certain summer courses approved
by the Academic Faculty will be accepted in lieu of portions of "B"
courses, provided that in each case the Dean of the College, the
Faculty Committee on Degrees, and the professor in charge of the
courses for which credit is desired certify in writing that the summer
courses completed are equivalent in character and scope to that portion
of the regular sessional work for which credit is desired.

(e) The character of the examinations and the numerical standard
(75 per cent) required for their successful completion shall be the
same as those of the sessional examinations.

(f) Courses which satisfy the conditions above stated will be
credited toward the B. A. and B. S. degrees offered in the College of
the University as follows:

1. Courses in which not less than thirty (30) hours of lecture instruction
are given will be credited as one session hour.

2. Courses in which not less than thirty hours of lecture instruction
and not less than sixty (60) hours of laboratory instruction is
given will be credited as two sessional hours.

(g) No student wishing University credit will be permitted to
take more than three courses in one session except by special permission
of the Director upon the recommendation of the professors
offering the courses he desires to take.

VIRGINIA STATE CERTIFICATES.

Note.—Teachers outside of Virginia are not limited in the choice
of their courses to the conditions under which Virginia certificates
are issued, unless they desire to teach in Virginia and apply for
a certificate issued in this State. In this case only state certificates
from other states will be recognized as a proper basis for professional
work.

Teachers from other States will receive credit for all work done at
the University Summer School in accordance with the certificate
regulations of those States from which they come.

The Virginia certificates with which the courses of study at the


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University Summer School are immediately concerned are the following:

  • The Summer School Professional Certificate—College Grade.

  • The Summer School Professional Certificate—Advanced Grade.

  • The Summer School Professional Certificate—Grammar Grade.

  • The Summer School Professional Certificate—Primary Grade.

The following general conditions must be fulfilled by all applicants
before they can enter upon the work toward the certificates. The
applicant must be the holder of a Virginia first grade certificate or
of a Virginia first grade high school certificate and must have had
at least five months of actual teaching experience. When necessary,
the certificate which entitles the teacher to enter upon the summer
school professional courses may be revived or extended for one year
from time to time provided that part of the professional course
prescribed for the year is successfully completed. No certificate
which has expired can be revived for more than one year upon the
basis of completing any one year of professional work.

No credit can be allowed for the Summer School Professional Certificate
except for work completed at a registered college or normal
school in Virginia and in those of equal grade outside of Virginia
whose courses have been approved and registered by the State Board
of Education.

The applicant shall make at least 75 per cent on class standing and
examination on each subject required for the certificate. The course
must be completed within a period of five years if taken in summer
terms of four weeks each, or in four years if taken in summer terms
of six weeks each. The minimum time allowed for completing the
Summer School Professional Certificate is three terms of four weeks
each or two terms of six weeks each. A minimum of 300 recitation
periods of at least 40 minutes each is required, and for courses of College
Grade a minimum of 180 recitation periods of at least 60 minutes
each.

Summer School Professional Certificate—Advanced Grade.—This
certificate entitles the holder to teach only in the elementary schools.
The course must embrace the following branches of college grade:
Required, two courses—English and Education. Electives, four
courses to be chosen from the following: Agriculture, Biology,
Field Botany, Chemistry, Drawing, French, Geography, Domestic
Science, German, History, Latin, Domestic Economy, Library Methods,
Music, Mathematics, Hygiene and Sanitation, Physics, Psychology,
Philosophy, Manual Training.

Summer School Professional Certificate—Grammar Grade.—This
certificate entitles the holder to teach only in the elementary schools.
The following subjects are required in this course, five of which are
to be taken each term and a total of ten courses are to be completed
for the certificate: Principles of Teaching, Methods of Teaching
Language, Arithmetic, Advanced Observation, Work and Practice,
Teaching, Hygiene, Reading, Civics, Geography, Drawing, Literature,
History, Manual Training, Domestic Economy, Elementary Agriculture
and School Gardening.

Summer School Professional Certificate—Primary Grade.—This
certificate entitles the holder to teach only in the elementary schools.
The following subjects are required in this course, five of which are
to be taken in each term and a total of ten must be completed for
the certificate: Principles of Teaching, Music and Games, Nature


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Study and Geography, Hygiene, Language, Observation Work and
Practice Teaching, Drawing, Arithmetic, Primary Industrial Work,
Primary Methods in Reading.

The Summer School Professional Certificate—College Grade.
This certificate entitles the holder to teach in the high schools. The
holder of a First Grade High School Certificate, or a certificate based
upon an equivalent amount of work may be issued the above certificate
upon the completion of work of college grade in the University
of Virginia Summer School, provided the work shall occupy the
minimum hours or recitation periods of sixty minutes each as given
in the following table. The applicant must have had in an accredited
summer school a course of at least thirty hours in Educational
Psychology and the Principles of Teaching.

This certificate entitles the holder to teach both high and elementary
school branches.

Agriculture, 90 hours.

Botany, 60 hours.

Chemistry, 150 hours, of which 60 hours must be laboratory work.

Drawing, 90 hours.

English, 120 hours, including 30 hours in English Grammar, 30
hours in Rhetoric and Composition, and 60 hours in English and
American Literature.

Domestic Science, 90 hours.

French, 90 hours.

German, 90 hours.

History, 120 hours, including 60 hours in General History, 30 hours
in English History, and 30 hours in American History and Civics.

Latin, 90 hours, including a review of Cæsar, Cicero, and Vergil.

Manual Training, 90 hours.

Mathematics, 120 hours, including Algebra, Plane and Solid Geometry,
and Plane Trigonometry.

Music, 90 hours.

Physics, 150 hours, of which 60 shall be laboratory work.

Physical Geography, 60 hours.

Zoology, 60 hours.

First, Second and Third Grade Certificates.—The requirements
for the First, Second and Third Grade Certificates are given below.
Courses leading to these certificates are offered at the
University Summer School. Excellent general and coach work is
arranged particularly for teachers who desire preparation for these
certificates. The examination for first, second and third grade
certificates will be held at the University Summer School, by the
Department of Public Instruction July 22nd, 23rd, and 24th. The
questions will be prepared and the papers graded by the Department
and not by the instructors of the Summer School. The courses above
named will be a review of subject matter preparatory for the State
examinations, and the outlines furnished by the Department of Public
Instruction will be followed.

(a) Examinations will begin promptly at 9 A. M. each day. Subjects
for the first day are: geography, spelling, grammar and composition,
theory and practice of teaching, and civil government and
reading. Subjects for the second day are: drawing, physiology and
hygiene, arithmetic, history of Virginia and United States history.
Subjects for the third day are: elementary algebra, science, and English
history or general history. Writing will be graded from Form
E, No. 2.


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(b) The examinations in 1914, on theory and practice of teaching
will be based upon What Children Study and Why, by Gilbert; in
physiology and hygiene, upon Ritchie's Human Physiology; in reading
and drawing, the examination will be on both methods and subject
matter.

(c) No applicant under 18 years of age shall be permitted to take
the examination.

SUMMARY OF COURSES AND CREDITS FOR EACH.—The
term course used in this announcement refers to those courses outlined
separately and preceded by arabic numerals under the various
subjects. The courses which count towards the various certificates
and toward University credit are given below. No course may be
counted twice.

The courses are grouped for the sake of convenience of those students
who desire credit, but any one desiring to take any course
for the content alone and not desiring credit will have no difficulty
in doing so with advantage.

Courses which may be taken for University College Credit.—Astronomy
1, 2, 3, and 4; Biology 1 and 2; Chemistry 3 and 4; Latin
5, 6, and 7; Education 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6; English 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and
8; French 1, 2, and 3; German 1, 2, and 3; History 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and
6; Mathematics 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7; Philosophy 1, 2, and 3; Physics 5,
6, 7, and 8; Psychology 1 and 2.

Note.—No student applying for University credit will be permitted
to take more than three courses in one session, except by permission
of the Director of the Summer School upon the recommendation
of the professors offering the courses he desires to take.

Courses which may be taken for Summer School Professional Certificate—Advanced
Grade.
—Agriculture 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7; Biology
1, and 2; Field Botany; Chemistry 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5; Latin 1, 2, 3, 4,
5, 6, and 7; Domestic Economy 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6; Drawing 2, 3, and
4; Education 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6; English 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8;
French 1, and 2; Games, Sec. 3; Geography 1, and 2; German 1,
2, and 3; History 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6; Hygiene 1; Library Methods;
Manual Training 1, 2, 3, and 4; Mathematics 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and
8; Music 1, 5, 6, and 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, and 14; Physics 1, 2, 3,
4, 5, and 6; Psychology 1, and 2.

Note.—No student registering for Summer School Professional
Certificate may take more than three courses in one summer.

Courses which may be taken for the Summer School Professional
Certificate—College Grade.
—Agriculture 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7; Biology
1, and 2; Field Botany; Chemistry 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5; Domestic
Economy 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6; Drawing 2, 3, and 4; Education 1, 2, 3,
4, 5, and 6; English 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8; French 1, 2, and 3; Geography
1, and 2; German 1, 2, and 3; History 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6; Hygiene
1; Latin 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7; Library Methods; Manual Training
1, 2, 3, and 4; Mathematics 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8; Music 1 and
5, 6, and 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, and 14; Physics 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7;
Psychology 1, and 2.

Note.—No student applying for Summer School Professional Certificate—College
Grade may take more than three courses in one
summer.


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Courses which may be taken for the Summer School Professional
Certificate—Grammar Grade.—
Agriculture 1, 8 and 9; Domestic Economy
1, 3 and 6; Drawing 2, 3 and 5; Education 7, 8, 9, 10 (Sec. III
and IV); English 9, 10 and 11; Games (Sec. I and II); Geography 3
and 4 (Sec. I); History 5, 6 and 8; Hygiene 1; Manual Training 3 and
6; Mathematics 10 and 11 (Sec. II); Music 6 and 7, 8, 9, 10; Physical
Training 1; Psychology 3 and 4 (child study); Writing.

Note.—Three hundred recitation hours are required for this certificate,
i. e., one hundred and fifty hours, or five daily recitations,
each summer for two sessions. The same course may not be counted
twice.

Courses which may be taken for the Summer School Professional
Certificate—Primary Grades.
—Agriculture 1, 8 and 9; Drawing 1 and
5; Education 7, 9, 10 (Sec. I and II), 11, 12, 13 and 14; English 9, and
10; Games (Sec. I and II); Geography 3 and 4 (Sec. II); Hygiene 1;
Manual Training 3 and 6; Mathematics 11 (Sec. I); Music 2, 3, 4, 5;
Physical Training 1, Psychology 3 and 4 (child study); Story Telling,
Writing.

Note.—Three hundred recitation hours are required for this certificate,
i. e., one hundred and fifty hours, or five daily recitations,
each summer. Those registering for a course in Music and a course
in Games will be credited with sixty hours. The same credit will be
allowed those taking Nature Study and Geography. Those taking
two sections of Education 10 will be given credit for sixty hours and
may be credited with the fulfillment of the requirements in Reading
and one other thirty period course of those required. The same
course may not be taken twice for credit.

Courses which may be taken to prepare for the State Examinations
for Certificates.
—The following courses are especially arranged as
review courses for the state examinations, though teachers may take
any of the other courses they may desire: Agriculture 1 and 8; Drawing
1 and 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12; English 11; Geography 4; Hygiene 1;
Mathematics 9 and 10; Writing.


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ANNOUNCEMENT OF COURSES.

AGRICULTURE

Students completing six of the first seven courses in agriculture
will be qualified to teach the subject in agricultural schools and other
high schools of the country. They will be so recommended. Agriculture
1, 8 or 9, or the equivalent should be taken preliminary to or
parallel with the more advanced courses, which may be taken in any
order. Six pupils are required to form a class in the advanced courses.

1. General Agriculture.—This course is intended for new students
and will be of a very practical nature, planned to fit directly into
school-room needs. The newest and most useful methods will be discussed.
Exercises suitable for schools will be carried on in classrooms,
field and garden. Lessons will be made real by objects and
materials. The teaching will be done by demonstrations and experimental
proofs of principles. The following topics will be treated:
corn selections; production of good seed corn; testing seeds for
vitality; butt, middle, and tip kernels of seed corn; conditions for
germination; testing soils for acidity; soils and their characteristics;
the office of root-hairs of plants; saving soil moisture; rotation of
crops; study of nodules on legume roots; renovation of wornout
soils; clover and alfalfa seeds; alfalfa in the eastern States; roots of
corn plants; curing clover hay; weeds and how to kill them; cotton
seed and its products; use of soiling crops; catch crops and cover
crops; cuttings for house plants; layering and plant divisions; budding
peach trees; pruning a fruit tree; the home garden; the school
garden.

Text-Book.— Davis' Productive Farming.

Daily, Sec. I, 9:30 to 10:30; Sec. II, 4:30 to 5:30. Professor Hutcheson,
Chemical Laboratory.

2. Laboratory Agriculture.—This course is intended for students
who wish to teach Agriculture in high schools or upper grades.
Course 1 or 8 or 9 or an equivalent, should be taken prior to or parallel
with this course. It will be chiefly a Laboratory Course, and one hour
a day should be allowed for work aside from the class hour in
lieu of text book work. Small collections of legumes, grasses, seeds,
weeds, and insects are made for school use. Laboratory exercises in
soils, fertilizers, drainage studies, feeds, plant propagation, plant physiology,
special crops, dairying. Field trips are taken to study systems
of cropping and management and to familiarize students with
farming details. The problems and exercises in Warren's Elements of
Agriculture
are used.

Daily, 4:30 to 5:30. Professor Scott and Mr. Lancaster. South
End West Range, Laboratory.

3. Soils and Fertilizers.—This course will treat each of the subjects
outlined by assigned lessons and laboratory experiments. Soils:
origin, formation, and distribution of soils, their chemical and physical
properties as related to fertility; classification of soils and their
adaptation for specific lines of farming; soil moisture; soil temperature;
tillage and management of soils. Fertilizers: plant food constituents;
their sources and relative importance; how plants feed; the


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source of supply of fertilizer materials; character, composition, and
variation in unmixed fertilizer materials; home mixtures; manufactured
mixtures; how to buy and use fertilizers. Manures: green manure
crops, cover crops and methods of using them; barn-yard manure,
value, and composition from different animals, solid and liquid parts,
influence of feed, age, and litter; management and use of manures;
combining with other fertilizers. Lime and its uses: commercial
forms of lime, relative values, cost, transportation, application, frequency
of liming, special reasons for applying lime.

Text-Book.—Snyder's Soils and Fertilizer.

Daily, 12:15 to 1:15. Professor Scott. South End West Range,
Laboratory.

4. Horticulture.—This course will consider each of the following
subjects in the order named. Propagation of plants: propagation by
seeds, cuttings, layerage, budding and grafting; principles of pruning.
Practical pomology: a study of the principles of fruit growing; selection
of soils and subsoils; selection of a site for an orchard; selection
of varieties; ordering trees; treatment of trees before planting;
laying out orchards; setting trees; fertilization; intercropping in
orchards; systems of orchard management; the object and value of
cover crops; how to pick, pack, and market fruit; fruit packages;
storage of fruits. Small fruits: grapes, raspberries, blackberries, dewberries,
currants, gooseberries, and strawberries. Soils: preparation
of the land; propagation; planting; cultivation; fertilization; pruning;
spraying; picking and marketing; varieties; insect enemies and fungous
diseases. Market gardening: selection of location; relative importance
of character of soil, labor, transportation, and market problems;
soils best adapted for market gardening; principles of management
of soils for the production of vegetable crops; practical principles
and suggestions upon the growing and marketing of the principal
vegetable crops, including peas, beans, beets, cabbage, cauliflower,
celery, carrots, parsnips, onions, spinach, lettuce, sweet corn,
tomatoes, rhubarb, asparagus.

Text-Book.—Waugh's Apple Orchard.

Daily, from 2:30 to 3:30. Professor Scott. Chemical Laboratory.

5. Insects and Diseases.—Under the general subject of insects the
following topics will be taken up: the general structures, life histories
and habits of insects; the principal injurious types together with
methods of treatment and prevention; microscopic study of forms
and structures of economic insects; the best methods of combating
them; use of spray materials and machinery; spraying for injurious
insects; solutions for spraying. Under the diseases of plants the
following topics will be considered: how the lower forms of plants
develop and become distributed; fungous diseases; principles of prevention
and control of forms injurious to fruit and vegetables; spraying.

Text-Book.—Weed's Farm Friend and Farm Foes.

Daily, 10:30 to 11:30. Professor Scott. Chemical Laboratory.

6. Animal Husbandry and Crop Production.—The course in Animal
Husbandry will embrace a study of the principal breeds of
horses, cattle, sheep, swine and chickens. The care, feeding and
breeding of these classes of live stock. The production of clean
milk; the making and handling of good butter; and the handling of
chickens at a profit. Wherever possible the students taking this
work will be given practical work in these subjects.


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In crop production will be studied the profitable production of
our most important crops. Preparing the soil, fertilization, planting,
cultivation and harvesting each crop will be taken up in detail.

Daily, 8:30 to 9:30. Professor Hutcheson and Mr. Lancaster. Chemical
Laboratory.

7. Poultry and Canning.—a. The work in poultry will occupy four
weeks and treat of natural and artificial incubation and brooding,
breeds of poultry, construction of homes and apparatus, feeds and
feeding disease and sanitation, killing and marketing.

Actual experience will be given with incubators and brooders
where practicable and trips will be made to various poultry plants
in Charlottesville.

b. The course in canning will run for two weeks and will be a
practical study of the subject of canning. It will include the theories
at the basis of successful canning of fruits and vegetables for the
home and for commercial purposes, such as, the selection of materials,
choice and care of utensils, sterilization of food and cans,
different methods of preserving and canning and subsequent care
of canned goods.

All students will be given practical experience in the canning of
fruits and vegetables in glass or tin.

Daily, 3:30 to 4:30. Professor Scott. Education Building, S. W.
Basement.

8. Elementary Agriculture.—This course is primarily intended for
those who have not previously made a study of the subject and
should be taken by those expecting to stand State examinations.
The following topics will be treated: soils and their formation; principles
of plant growth; the offices of the plant; plants and water; the
moisture in the soil; what tillage is, what is does, and how it is performed;
humus and its use; cover crops and their uses; enriching the
soil; permanent fertility; propagation of plants; purity of seed, vitality,
cuttings, layerings, grafting, building; stock of the farm; poultry,
swine, sheep, cattle, horses, and their care, feeding, and management.

Text-Book.—Duggar's Agriculture for Southern Schools.

Daily, 12:15 to 1:15. Professor Hutcheson. Chemical Laboratory.

9. Nature Study and School Gardens.—This course will be practical
and helpful, especially to teachers of primary and intermediate
grades. The subjects will be closely correlated, many of the nature
lessons being based upon school garden work. Much time will be
devoted to the successful management of school gardens. A model
school garden will be conducted upon the University grounds. Other
nature lessons will deal with wild flowers, grains, grasses, birds, insects,
minerals, and other objects suitable for the school room.

Daily, 8:30 to 9:30. Professor Hutcheson and Mr. Lancaster.
Cabell Hall, Room 8.

Note.—An incidental fee of one dollar will be charged to cover
garden expenses.

Certificate Credit.—Summer School Professional Certificate—Advanced
Grade—Agriculture, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7; Summer School
Professional Certificate—College Grade—Agriculture, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6,
and 7; Professional Grammar Grades Certificate—Agriculture, 1, 8,
and 9; Professional Primary Grades Certificate—Agriculture, 1, 8,
and 9.


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ASTRONOMY

Astronomy will be taught by text-book, lectures, problems, and
observational exercises. A knowledge of plane trigonometry is prerequisite.
Any one electing the four courses will be required to devote
entire attention to the one subject.

1. Practical Astronomy.—The topics treated will be co-ordinates
of position and their transformations, astronomical instruments, the
fundamental problems, observations and their correction.

Daily, from 8:30 to 9:30. Professor Simpson. Rouss Physical
Laboratory. Upper Floor.

2. The Solar System—Mathematical Considerations.—The topics
treated will be the motions of planets and satellites, eclipses, the
problems of two of three bodies, tides, and determination of the
sun's distance.

Daily, from 9:30 to 10:30. Professor Simpson. Rouss Physical
Laboratory. Upper Floor.

3. The Solar System—Physical Considerations.—The topics treated
will be the forms, magnitudes, constitution, and physical conditions
of the sun, planets, and satellites.

Daily, from 10:30 to 11:30. Professor Simpson. Rouss Physical
Laboratory. Upper Floor.

4. The Stellar Universe.—The topics treated will be as follows:
comets, meteors; constitution, light, distance, and motion of the
stars; double stars, clusters, nebulæ, and the theory of stellar evolution.

Daily, from 12:15 to 1:15. Professor Simpson. Upper Floor.
Physical Laboratory.

Text-Book.—Young's General Astronomy will be used in all courses.

University Credit.—Any student who fulfills the conditions set
forth on page 16 and who completes successfully the four courses
outlined above will be credited with Astronomy B1, with the exception
of such practical work of the course as the limitations of the
time and season make it impossible to include in the summer course.
Credit will be allowed for such practical work as is completed, and
the remainder may be taken during the regular University session
without requiring attendance upon the sessions of the class and without
additional fee.

BIOLOGY

The courses in biology have been organized with two ends in view.

First, to give teachers adequate training to carry courses in botany,
zoölogy and biology in their public school work and to give
them instruction that will supplement their work in physiology, hygiene
and agriculture.

Second, to enable premedical students to fulfill the medical entrance
requirements as prescribed by the American Medical Association
in June 1913.

1. Botany.—This course is outlined primarily to give the student
a knowledge of how plants live, grow and propagate themselves, and
of their structure. An introduction to the systematic study and naming
of ferns and flowering plants will be included in this course.


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The teacher completing this work will be prepared to place an introductory
course of botany in his or her high school curriculum.
This work will also supplement, in a helpful manner, his or her work
in drawing geography and physiology. No text-book required.
Laboratory fee for teachers $1.00, for premedical students and for
those seeking University credit $10.00, which fee includes the registration
fee.

Daily, 8:30 to 9:30; Laboratory 9:30 to 11:30; Laboratory for premedical
students and University credit students 11:30 to 12:30. Professor
Kepner and Mr. Taliaferro. Cabell Hall, Room 12.

2. Zoology.—This course is outlined primarily to give the student
a knowledge of how animals live, grow and propagate themselves,
and of their structure. The teacher completing this work will be
prepared to place an introductory course of Zoölogy in his or her
high school curriculum. This work will also supplement, in a helpful
manner, his or her work in drawing, geography and physiology.
No text-book will be required. Laboratory fee for teachers $1.00,
for premedical students and for those seeking University credit
$10.00, which fee includes the registration fee.

Daily, 2:30 to 3:30; Laboratory 3:30 to 5:30. Professor Kepner
and Mr. Taliaferro. Cabell Hall, Room 12.

Certificate Credit.—Summer School Professional Certificate Advanced
Grade—Biology, 1 and 2; Summer School Professional Certificate—College
Grade—Biology 1 and 2.

University Credit.—Students who complete the work of either of
these courses, together with at least thirty additional laboratory
periods in experimental work, will be given credit for a term's work
in a B1 course of biology.

FIELD BOTANY

The outline projected is intended to give to the student a systematized
course of study, making it an easy and agreeable task for him
to identify the various plant families in his locality and acquire methods
of study by which children may identify and become familiar
with the individual plants of their neighborhood.

At the beginning of the course attention will be given to plant
morphology and physiology, but the course will be of a practical
character and performed in the fields and forests near the University
where the plant life is diversified and rich in both indigenous and imported
varieties, furnishing exceptional opportunities for the purpose.

During the term each student will, under direction, collect, identify,
mount, and preserve, characteristic types, so that he will have
commenced the accumulation of an herbarium for use in his teaching,
and to which he can continually add specimens from his own locality
or that in which he is teaching.

The results of the work contemplated should be of great value to
the State, not only for its educational influence, but also for its economic
importance as well. It would be fair to assume that with the
teachers followed by their pupils working out the plants of all parts
of the Commonwealth, it would only be a brief period until, from the
collaboration of these collections, a complete and systematic symposium
of Virginia's flora would be available, and the information now


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limited to a few, and possessing only scientific importance, would become
common knowledge and acquire economic value, influencing
agriculture, horticulture, and many important manufacturing industries.

The hours for daily exercises will be arranged as far as possible
so that they will not conflict with other courses taught in the Summer
School.

Daily, from 5:30 to 6:30. Professor Lambeth. Rotunda, Room 3.

Text-Book.—Gray's Manual of Botany.

Certificate Credit.—Summer School Professional Certificate—Advanced
Grade and College Grade.

CHEMISTRY

Instruction in chemistry is offered to high school teachers and
such others as are indicated below. The ample facilities of the
School of Chemistry of the University are available and its laboratory
and library will be used.

1. General Chemistry for High School Teachers.—This course is
designed to meet the needs of those who may have to give instruction
in chemistry in high schools. A daily discussion of the elementary
principles of the science will be held and simple lecture table
demonstrations made.

Daily, from 10:30 to 11:30. Professor Bird. West Range Laboratory.

2. Laboratory Course for High School Teachers.—The sole object
of this course is to train each member of the class to give laboratory
instruction in secondary schools; the situation that is likely to confront
each one will be considered individually. The following topics
will be discussed: the particular branches of the subject which should
be taught high school students; the apparatus and chemicals necessary
and their cost; how to equip a laboratory and how to make the
best use of facilities likely to be found in a high school. It is
planned to have the teacher perform, under the eye of the instructor,
all experiments that the pupils should perform and such demonstration
experiments as seem desirable. Special attention will be given
to the fitting up of apparatus at a nominal cost, and the apparatus
thus assembled may be taken away for future use. The essential
pedagogic points of the experiments will be discussed fully and an
effort made to show the teacher how to instill life into the laboratory
work of the pupil, by pointing out its practical bearing. The chief
emphasis will be laid upon the essential phenomena and laws of
matter changes, especially those of daily occurrence.

Daily, 2 hours before 2 P. M. Professor Bird and Professor Edgar.
West Range Laboratory.

3. The Principles of General Chemistry.—This course is offered
especially for those who desire University credit in general chemistry,
or who are preparing to enter some medical school requiring
chemistry for entrance. It will deal mainly with the more important
phenomena of inorganic chemistry and the fundamental laws of
chemical science.

Daily, hours to be arranged. Professor Bird.

4. Laboratory Course.—The facilities of the laboratory and library
are offered to those who wish to do special work in general or


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analytical chemistry. The instruction in this course will be such as
to meet the needs of the following groups of students: those who desire
experience in the analytical methods used in a particular line
they may seek to enter; those who contemplate taking a civil service
examination in chemistry and who wish additional laboratory instruction;
those who need additional laboratory experience in order
to meet the entrance requirements of professional schools; those
who desire to apply for University credit.

Daily, hours to be arranged. Professor Bird and Professor Edgar.
West Range Laboratory.

5. Household Chemistry.—This course is to be given in connection
with the work in domestic science. The lectures will consider the
chemistry of air, water, food, and sanitation, with reference to the
processes that go on in the home. So far as their previous training
will permit, students will be expected to study experimentally the
composition of pure and impure air; the chemistry of combustion;
the composition of cleansing agents, their reactions with "hard"
water, their effects on fabrics, etc.; the chemistry of disinfectants;
the composition of foods and the changes they undergo when cooked;
the chemistry of fermentation and decay; the adulteration and preservation
of food. The laboratory work will consume about two
hours a day.

Daily, lectures 8:30 to 9:30, laboratory hours to suit, before 2 P. M.
Professor Bird and Professor Edgar. West Range Laboratory.

Note.—In addition to the regular fee for Courses 2 and 5, all except
high school teachers will be charged a laboratory fee of three
dollars, and everyone must deposit two dollars to cover breakage.
Such portion as is not consumed will be refunded. In Course 4 a
laboratory fee of ten dollars and a breakage deposit of five dollars
will be required.

University Credit.—Credit for Course B1 of the regular session
in general chemistry will be given to any one who complies with the
following requirements: The conditions set forth on page 16 must
be fulfilled; Courses 3 and 4 above must be completed satisfactorily
and not less than one hundred and fifty hours devoted to these two
courses; an examination equivalent to that of the regular session
must be passed. Credit for one or two terms of Chemistry B1 outlined
in the University catalogue may be attained. The entrance requirements
in chemistry of the Medical School may be fulfilled.

Certificate Credit.—Summer School Professional Certificate—Advanced
Grade—Chemistry 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5; Summer School Professional
Certificate—College Grade—Chemistry 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5.

CLASSICAL PHILOLOGY

It will be the aim of the courses in Latin and Greek to open to all
teachers and students the advantages of University instruction in
those subjects. Courses 1-4 are especially intended to illustrate the
teaching of Latin in the secondary schools. Courses 5-7 are intended
to open to teachers and summer students the more important fields
of college Latin. The desirability of a knowledge of Greek and of at
least one Romanic language is specially commended to all who wish
to reap the full cultural and scientific benefit of the college courses
in Latin. Greece is the fountain head of European culture, and Rome


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its universalizer and transmitter to the modern world. The instruction
will aim to exhibit these relations and thus to emphasize the
unity and continuity of all human culture. Course 1 is preparatory.
Thereafter the work is organized in all courses as follows: Latin
language—systematic study of Latin grammar, with oral and written
exercises in prose composition; Latin literature—systematic study of
the Latin authors, as nearly as possible in culture-historical sequence;
Roman life—systematic study of Roman culture-history in English,
in conjunction with the reading of the authors.

1. Beginners' Latin.—This course is intended for teachers in high
schools and academies, for college preparation and for students of
Latin at large. It involves the Roman pronunciation; careful study
of accent and quantity; thorough drill in declensions and conjugations;
the fundamental principles of the syntax of the cases, tenses,
and moods, the accusative and infinitive, relative and conditional
sentences, uses of the subjunctive; and the main laws of indirect discourse.
These grammatical principles will be illustrated in systematic
exercises in translating easy detached sentences into Latin;
translation into English of easy Latin prose preparatory to Cæsar
will also be required.

Text-Book.—Bain's Beginners' Book.

Section I, daily, from 8:30 to 9:30; Section II, daily, from 2:30 to
3:30. Professor Montgomery. Cabell Hall, Room 1.

2. Cæsar.—This course is offered for teachers in high schools and
academies, for college preparation, and for students of Latin at
large. It involves Cæsar's Gallic War I-IV, with collateral readings
in Viri Romae and Roman history. The study of the author will be
not only grammatical, but also literary and culture-historical. Constant
practice in sight reading and systematic study of high school
Latin grammar, with accompanying prose composition based on
Cæsar, will be required. Grammar and prose composition will be
treated on Tuesdays and Thursdays, and literature and life—Cæsar
varied with Viri Romae and the broad outlines of Roman Culture-history—on
Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays.

Text-Books.—Bennett's Latin Grammar and Preparatory Latin
Writer;
Caesar's Gallic War; Viri Romae; Myers' Ancient History and
Kiepert's Atlas Antiquus.

Daily, from 9:30 to 10:30. Professor McLemore. Cabell Hall,
Room 1.

3. Cicero.—This course is offered for teachers in high schools and
academies, for college preparation, and for students of Latin at
large. It involves Cicero's Four Orations against Catiline, The Manilian
Law,
and Pro Archia, with collateral readings in Nepos' Lives,
and the private life of the Romans. The study of the author will be
grammatical, literary, and culture-historical. Constant practice in
sight reading will be required, and high school grammar with accompanying
prose composition based on Cicero will be continued.
Grammar and prose composition will fall on Tuesdays and Thursdays;
Cicero, varied with Nepos and the private life of the Romans,
on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays.

Text-Books.—Bennett's Latin Grammar and Latin Composition;
Cicero's Orations; Nepos' Lives; Johnston's Private Life of the
Romans.

Daily, from 3:30 to 4:30. Mr. Bishop. Cabell Hall, Room 1.


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4. Vergil I-VI.—This course is offered for teachers in high schools
and academies, for college preparation, and for students of Latin
at large. It involves Vergil's Aeneid I-VI, with collateral readings
in Ovid's Metamorphoses, the principles of Latin quantitative versification
as applied to the dactylic hexameter, and the mythology of
the Greeks and Romans. The study of the author will be grammatical,
literary, and culture-historical. Constant practice in sight reading
will be required, and high school grammar, with accompanying
prose composition based on Cæsar and Cicero, will be concluded.
Grammar and prose composition will come on Tuesdays and Thursdays;
Vergil, varied with Ovid, and the mythology of the Greeks and
Romans on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays.

Text-Books.—Bennett's Latin Grammar and Nutting's Supplementary
Latin Composition;
Vergil's Aeneid; Ovid's Metamorphoses (Miller);
Fairbanks' Mythology of Greece and Rome.

Tuesday and Thursday, from 9:30 to 10:30. Professor Bishop.
Cabell Hall, Room 1.

Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, from 9:30 to 10:30. Professor
FitzHugh. Cabell Hall, Room 1.

5. Cicero.—This course is offered for teachers in colleges, for college
students, and for students of Latin at large. It is identical
with the third term of course A1 in the winter; involves Cicero's
De Amicitia, De Senctute, and Tusculan Disputations, along with the
study of the public life of Romans, college grammar and prose composition.
The grammar and prose composition, comprising ten selections
from Moulton-Collar's Preparatory Latin Composition,
chapters 1, 17, etc., will be held on Tuesdays and Saturdays, the literature
and life on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays.

Text-Books.—Gildersleeve-Lodge's Larger Latin Grammar; Moulton-Collar's
Preparatory Latin Composition; Cicero's De Senectute, De
Amicitia,
and Tusculan Disputations (together with the Somnium Scipionis;
Tighe's Roman Constitution.

Tuesday and Thursday, from 10:30 to 11:30. Professor Bishop.
Cabell Hall, Room 1.

Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, from 10:30 to 11:30. Professor
FitzHugh. Cabell Hall, Room 1.

6. Quintilian.—This course is offered for teachers in colleges, for
college students, and for students of Latin at large. It is identical
with the third term of course B2 in the winter. It involves Quintilian's
Training of the Orator and Cicero's Brutus, along with the study
of Roman art, college grammar and prose composition. The grammar
and prose composition, comprising ten selections from Bennett's
Second Latin Writer, exercises 1, 16 etc., will be given on
Wednesdays and Fridays, the literature and art on Tuesdays, Thursdays,
and Saturdays.

Text-Books.—Gildersleeve-Lodge's Larger Latin Grammar; Bennett's
Second Latin Writer; Quintilian's Training of the Orator; Cicero's
Brutus; Goodyear's Roman Art.

Wednesday and Friday, from 10:30 to 11:30. Professor McLemore.
Cabell Hall, Room 1.

Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday, from 10:30 to 11:30. Professor
FitzHugh. Cabell Hall, Room 1.

7. Lucretius.—This course is offered for teachers in colleges, for
college students, and for students of Latin at large. It is identical
with the third term of course C2 in the winter. It involves Lucretius'
De Rerum Natura and Cicero's De Natura Deorum, together with


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the study of the philosophic life of the Romans, historical grammar,
and ten exercises in Nettleship's Passages for Translation into Latin
Prose,
exercises 3, 9, etc. The historical grammar and prose composition
will be given on Wednesdays and Fridays, the literature and
history of philosophic thought in antiquity on Tuesdays, Thursdays,
and Saturdays.

Text-Books.—Grandgent's Vulgar Latin; Nettleship's Passages for
Translation into Latin Prose;
Lucretius' De Rerum Natura; Cicero's
De Natura Deorum; Pater's Marius the Epicurcan.

Wednesday and Friday, from 12:15 to 1:15. Professor McLemore.
Cabell Hall, Room 1.

Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday, from 12:15 to 1:15. Professor
FitzHugh. Cabell Hall, Room 1.

Note.—Course 5 is the full equivalent of the third term of Latin
A1 in the University of Virginia catalogue; Course 6 is the full
equivalent of the third term of Latin B1 or B2 in the University of
Virginia catalogue; Course 7 is the full equivalent of the third term
of Latin C1 or C2 in the University of Virginia catalogue.

University Credit.—Any student who fulfills the conditions set
forth on page 17 and who completes successfully Courses 5, 6, and 7
will receive credit for the corresponding courses in the University of
Virginia catalogue.

8. Homer.—This is a free course, and is suitable for teachers in
high schools and academies, for college preparation, and for all students
and lovers of literature. It is an invaluable accompaniment to
the study of Vergil. The Homeric poems were the first great literary
monument of European culture, and the ultimate source of all subsequent
artistic inspiration. They were the models which Vergil kept
always before him. The Iliad will therefore be read and interpreted
in its relation to European culture in general, and to the Æneid in
particular, upon every page of which it throws illumining and inspiring
light.

Text-Book.—Homer's Iliad.

Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday, from 9:30 to 10:30. Professor
FitzHugh. Cabell Hall, Room 1.

9. New Testament Greek.—This is a free course, and will consist
of the reading and interpretation of selected books of the New Testament.

Three times a week, hours to be arranged. Professor Montgomery.
Cabell Hall, Room 1.

10. Ancient Art.—This course is free, and intended for all who are
interested in the origin and history of human culture as illustrated in
art. The purpose of the course is to portray with the aid of lantern-slides
the origin and history of European culture with special reference
to the typical monuments of art in the palaeolithic, neolithic,
Egyptian and Oriental, Aegean, and Graeco-Roman periods.

Text-Book.—Reinach's Apollo; An Illustrated Manual of the History
of Art throughout the Ages.

Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, from 12:15 to 1:15. Professor
FitzHugh. Cabell Hall, Room 1.

Note.—No fee will be charged for courses 8, 9, and 10, unless taken
for credit.

Certificate Credit.—Summer School Professional Certificate, Advanced
Grade—Latin 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7; Summer School Professional
Certificate—College Grade—Latin 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7.


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COMMERCIAL COURSES

1. Bookkeeping.—This course is outlined to give the student a
good working knowledge of the principles and methods of modern
bookkeeping in as short a time as is consistent with thoroughness.
Both Single and Double Entry books are studied and written up in
a practical and systematic manner. Due attention is given to statements,
Trial Balances, Balance Sheets, Opening and Closing Books.
A modern text is used as a basis, supplemented by lectures on important
points. The instruction is to a great extent individual; therefore,
perfect classification can be secured by those who have had
some of the subject as well as by those who are taking it up for
the first time. While it is impossible to complete the subject in this
brief time, the student is carried far enough to make it possible to
continue the study to excellent advantage outside of school and without
the personal aid of an instructor.

Daily, 8:30 to 9:30. Cabell Hall, Room 4. Professor Webb.

2. Shorthand.—This course covers the entire manual of one of the
leading systems of phonography—a system which has won its permanent
place in High Schools and Commercial Colleges because it
possesses to a greater extent than any other system the three fundamental
essentials: Simplicity, Legibility and Speed. The alphabet is
taken up and mastered in logically arranged sections. Sentence writing
is introduced in the first lesson; therefore, when this text is completed,
the student not only has learned the rules and principles by
which every word in the language is written, but has had considerable
experience in writing. Those who finish this course properly
should be able, with additional speed practice on their part, to
do office work.

Daily, 2:30 to 3:30. Cabell Hall, Room 4. Professor Webb.

3. Typewriting.—The Touch System of Typewriting is used. Careful
attention is paid to technique, and the methods selected will yield
the best results with the least expenditure of energy. Due attention
is devoted to the use and care of the machine, fingering, etc. The
progress of the student depends to a great extent upon his application
and ability, as the work is almost entirely individual. This is a
subject that can be pursued with the aid of the text to excellent advantage
after an introductory course has been taken. Underwood
typewriters will be used.

Daily, hours to be arranged. Cabell Hall, Room 4. Professor
Webb.

4. Commercial Arithmetic.—This course is outlined to give the
student a thorough working knowledge of those classes of problems
that come up for solution in every day business life. Common and
decimal fractions, bills and statements, all the divisions of percentage,
such as interest, discount, taxes and banking, equation of
accounts, and problems dealing with partnerships and corporations
together with many practical examples are taken up and treated
thoroughly. Accuracy and systematic methods are stressed throughout.

Daily, 9:30 to 10:30. Cabell Hall, Room 4. Professor Webb.

Note.—These courses are not free to Virginia teachers. A fee of
$5 for any one course will be charged, or $10 for any two or more
courses.


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DOMESTIC ECONOMY

1. Study of Foods.—This course is arranged for teachers who desire
to begin the study of domestic science, for teachers who desire
a better understanding of the care of the body, and for all young
women who wish to make their education more practical. The lectures
will treat of food principles, practical diatetics, marketing, cooking
and serving of meals, and the chemistry of cookery. Each student
will be required to do the practical work in actual cooking each
day.

Section I, daily, from 8:30 to 10:30; Section II, daily, from 10:30 to
12:15; Section III daily, from 2:30 to 4:30. Miss Hamilton, Miss
Leftwich. Domestic Science Laboratory, N. W. Basement Education
Building.

2. Home Management.—This course is supplementary to Course 1
and in addition the following topics will be treated: home decoration;
house furnishing; home sanitation—ventilation, disposal of
garbage, removal of dust, care of milk, preservation of foods, danger
of flies, provision for light and heat, etc. Home care of the sick—invalid
diet, baths, kind, purpose of each, precautions, best method,
time; ventilation of sick room—importance, methods; general care of
sick room—dust, sunlight, order, furnishings; the nurse—clothing, exercise,
food, rest; making of bed—arrangement of bedding, method
of moving patient; co-operation with physician—giving medicine
promptly, regarding directions conscientiously.

Daily, from 2:30 to 4:30. Miss Hamilton and Miss Leftwich. Domestic
Science Laboratory, N. W. Basement Education Building.

3. Sewing and Study of Textiles.—This course is designed for those
preparing to teach sewing, and to furnish a fundamental knowledge
of practical sewing. The topics treated will be as follows: Elementary
stitches and their uses; study of textiles—cotton, wool, linen,
silk; economics of purchase of material, kind, price, etc., in relation
to use; adaptation of bought patterns: simple fitting, repairing and
mending; principles involved in making garments—suitability, style,
color, designing. Each student will complete a book of twenty
models, a shirt waist, and two other garments.

Text-Book.The Dressmaker, Butterick Publishing Company.

Section I, 8:30 to 10:30; Section II, 2:30 to 4:30. Miss Weer and
Miss Stephenson. North End West Range, Laboratory.

4. Study of Foods or Dietics (Advanced).—Review of food principles—study
of each in detail, study of foods to suit special physical
conditions, study of caloric value of foods, making of menus, study
of methods of teaching foods in rural schools, study of simple equipment
for rural schools, practice teaching done by students with class
as critics.

Daily, 10:30 to 1:15. Miss Hamilton. Domestic Science Laboratory,
N. W. Basement Education Building.

5. Household Chemistry.—This course is to be given in connection
with the work in domestic science. The lectures will consider the
chemistry of air, water, food, and sanitation, with reference to the
processes that go on in the home. So far as their previous training
will permit, students will be expected to study experimentally the
composition of pure and impure air; the chemistry of combustion;
the composition of cleansing agents, their reactions with "hard"
water, their effects on fabrics, etc.; the chemistry of disinfectants;


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the composition of foods and the changes they undergo when cooked;
the chemistry of fermentation and decay; the adulteration and preservation
of food. The laboratory work will consume about two
hours a day.

Daily, lectures 8:30 to 9:30, laboratory hours to suit, before 2 P. M.
Professor Bird and Professor Edgar. West Range Laboratory.

6. Theory and Practice of Teaching Domestic Economy.—This
course is designed for those who expect to teach Domestic Economy—sewing
or cooking—in elementary and high schools. Special
application will be made to rural school problems. The course will
include planning simple equipments, courses of study, cost, lesson
plans, correlation with grade work. Students will have opportunity
for observation and practice teaching. Section I. Daily, 12:15 to
1:15. Miss Weer and Miss Hamilton. Domestic Science Laboratory,
Education Building.

7. Sewing and Study of Textiles—Advanced.—This course is arranged
for those who wish to teach sewing in elementary and high
schools. It will include tests for adulterations in cotton, linen, silk
and wool; methods of removing stains; stenciling; use and adaptation
of patterns; drafting; study of color and style in relation to
wearer; suitability of apparel in relation to use and income; hygiene
in dress. Each student will complete a simple lingerie gown and
two other garments.

Text-Book.Textiles, Dooley—D. C. Heath & Co.

Section I. Daily, from 9:30 to 11:30. Miss Weer and Miss Stephenson.
North End West Range, Laboratory.

Note.—A fee of fifty cents will be charged in each course except
seven for material.

Note.—It is recommended that students wishing to specialize in
domestic economy take Hygiene 1 and Chemistry 5 as these courses
are planned with special reference to the work in domestic economy.

Note.—A short practical course for those teachers in rural schools
who desire to introduce some domestic science instruction in their
schools will be offered, if there is sufficient demand for it.

Certificate Credit.—Summer School Professional Certificate Advanced
Grade—Domestic Economy 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7; Summer
School Professional Certificate—College Grade—Domestic Economy
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7; Professional Grammar Grades Certificate
—Domestic Economy 1, 3, and 6.

DRAWING

The classes in drawing are planned to give the teachers of the
primary, grammar and high-school grades and supervisors of drawing,
a practical knowledge of drawing as now taught in the most
modern and progressive schools. The purpose will be to give not
only facility in representation but to teach the fundamentals that
underlie design, composition, pictorial and imaginative drawing.
More emphasis will be placed on composition than on representation
and every step will be taken up in turn and definite ways suggested
for use in the school room with each lesson.

An attempt will be made to suit the courses to the needs of all applicants
and especially to the needs of those teachers who fancy they
cannot draw.

A special art certificate will be given to those who complete the


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course here outlined which will certify that the holder is competent
to do supervisors work.

Drawing 1.—For teachers of grades from one to four, inclusive.
This is so arranged that the lessons will be in progressive order, following
as closely as possible the development of the child. The
classes will be conducted in the following manner: First, the careful
explanation of design, its intent and processes: Second, an exhibition
of fine examples of work by teachers and children who have
already taken the course: Third, processes carried out by the class
under the supervision of instructors.

First Year—First Grade: Cut paper to paste, outlined filled in with
color, play with water color, copy color natural objects, pose drawing
with brush, illustration, doll house furnishing (make wall paper, etc.,
repeating design).

Second Grade: Cut out own objects to paste, original design for
border, (outline) mixes own color for above, border design colored
with crayon, landscape mass (brush or crayon).

Second Year—Third Grade: Drawing still life (pencil and brush),
memory drawing (object before pupil's eye only a few seconds), simple
book-making, design for cover, execution of same, simple lettering.

Fourth Grade: Exercise in color composition, outline filled with
cut paper, design, drawing still life (outline to fill in with color).

Section I. First and Second Grade. Daily, from 8:30 to 9:30. Professor
Bement and Miss Barringer. Mechanical Laboratory, Room 2.

Section II. Third and Fourth Grade. Professor Bement and Miss
Barringer. Daily, 9:30 to 10:30.

Section III. 2:30 to 3:30. Professor Bement and Miss Hooe. Mechanical
Laboratory, Room 2.

Drawing 2.—For teachers of grades from five to eight inclusive,
and will supplement Course 1—the lessons being the continuation
of that course. The course will be conducted in the same manner—
explanation of the meaning of the design, then good examples of
the work done by teachers and children will be shown, then the class
will work out each problem.

First Year—Fifth grade, design for rug (color, charcoal), still life
(light and dark), landscape (light and dark color), illustration of
home industry.

Sixth Grade: Wood block printing, nature drawing (light and
dark), design for home utensils, design colored, simple illustration
with figures.

Second Year.—Seventh grade: Beginning perspective, still life
group (light and dark three tones), exercise in arrangement. Eighth
grade: Landscape (three tones, charcoal), lettering (ink and color),
book-making, end page for above in color, posters (one, two and
three colors).

Section I. First and second grade. Daily, from 9:30 to 10:30.
Professor Bement and Miss Barringer. Mechanical Laboratory, Room
1. Section II. Third and fourth grade. Daily, 12:15 to 1:15. Miss
Barringer. Mechanical Laboratory, Room 1.

Drawing 3.—For teachers of high schools. It supplements Courses
1 and 2 and aims to give the teachers a few simple problems that


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will when worked out give the students not only some dexterity of
hand but give them real appreciation of the fine things about them.
The conduct of the class will be the same as 1 and 2—the explanation,
exhibition of work actually done by high-school students, carrying
out the operation described.

First Year—Spacing in lines (a) Geometric design for tiles, spacing
in tone and color (b) putting same design into tone and color,
design: repetition, subordination, opposition (a) border to be used
for stencil straight or curved lines, using natural forms, as flowers,
trees, birds, etc., perspective, drawing of historic houses in line, with
colored chalk on dark paper.

Second Year—Illustration, in cut paper; also in chalk or crayola
on dark paper, still life drawing in charcoal and color, to illustrate
incidents of every-day life, small or bright color and letting paper
show for the shadow side, personal expression in art, memory
sketches, drawing from figure, small figures copied from large drawing
of Millet, using chalk on black paper. Elementary principles of
constructive drawing or mechanical drawing illustrated and applied.

Section I, daily, from 8:30 to 9:30. Miss O'Keefe. Mechanical
Laboratory, Room 1.

Drawing 4.—The class in pure design is for those teachers who
have completed the work in the grades, those who are required to
teach design, those who wish to do special work in decoration, or
those who find themselves weak in that department of the general
course. Its aim is to give a complete understanding of the principles
of design, etc., practical application of the design to the material in
which it is to be reproduced, and the technical skill necessary to
render the design.

First Year—Border design in light and dark, surface pattern colors,
simple color scales, block printing, textile design. Second Year
—Color harmony, practice in color scales, animals and design, human
figures in design, wall paper (surface design), interior arrangement,
architectural design. One hour.

Method of Supervision.—For supervisions of drawing, and for
those who have had experience in the elementary grades and wish
to specialize in drawing. The aim of this course is to deal with problems
of supervision, the arrangement of a course of study, lesson
plans, type lessons, selection of material, etc. One hour.

Daily, from 3:30 to 5:30. Professor Bement and Miss O'Keefe.
Mechanical Laboratory, Room 2.

Drawing 5.—For the teachers of ungraded schools and aims to
give them as much training in the fundamental principles that underlie
Courses 1, 2 and 3 as the time will permit. The teacher will
be given in a condensed form the sequence in all the grades. Each
step will be explained and demonstrated by the instructor, but only
the most important ones will be carried out in class. An attempt
will be made to study the needs of the individual teacher. This
course prepares for the state examination.

First Year—Drawing of simple objects, perspective drawing, spacing,
line, mass, color; original design of useful objects, stenciling,
woodblock printing, simple manual training. Practical Drawing Books.

Section I, daily, from 10:30 to 11:30. Miss Hooe. Mechanical Laboratory,
Room 1.


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History of Art 6.—A lecture course and is open to all students in
drawing and all are expected to attend. The lectures will be on the
following topics: architecture, historic ornament and design; Raphael's
School of Athens; Great Painters of the World with lantern
slides.

Weekly, from 5:30 to 6:30. Professor Bement. Mechanical Laboratory,
Room 1.

School in Art 7.—The school in Art was begun a number of years
ago under the direction and personal instruction of the well-known
illustrator and alumnus of the University of Virginia, Mr. Graham
Cootes, and for many summers was successfully conducted by him
with the help of such artists as George Bellows, Bredin, Scott and
Duncan Smith. It will be reopened this summer under Mr. Smith's
care, with every prospect of a successful season. The school is
unique in that it offers the great advantage of more personal attention
and individual criticism than is given at any other summer
school. Mr. Smith, who is an alumnus of the University of Virginia,
is a member of the Mural Painters Society of New York, and instructor
in two Evening Life Classes at the Art Students League
of New York. The course offered for the summer will be for ten
weeks from June 23rd to August 20th and will thus extend two
weeks beyond the regular summer term.

It is designed for those desirous of making a profession of illustrating,
cartooning, poster work, portrait, landscapes and decoration
painting, and also for those who desire it as an aid in teaching or
who are interested in art for their own pleasure.

A model in costume will pose every morning of the week, except
Saturday, from 9:30 until 1 o'clock. There will be poses especially
arranged for illustrations and compositions of more than one figure.
The afternoons will be devoted to landscape work. Daily criticism
will be given, and on Saturday criticism of compositions made by
the more advanced students on subjects previously announced.
Special attention is called to this feature.

The rates will be $9.00 per month, half day, $20.00 per term, half
day. $15.00 per month, full day. $30.00 per term, full day. An
initiation fee of $2.00 will be asked of new students. All fees are payable
in advance, and no tuition will be refunded for absence from
class unless by special arrangement. Four weeks constitute the
month.

Tuition in the School of Art is not free to Virginia teachers, and
should be paid directly to Mr. Smith. A prize will be awarded for
the best painting made during the term.

For further particulars address Mr. Duncan Smith, 42 Washington
Square, New York.

Daily, from 8:30 to 4:30. Sections to be arranged. Mr. Smith,
Education Building, Room 5, S. E., Upstairs.

Certificate Credit.—Summer School Professional Certificate—Advanced
Grade—Drawing 2, 3, and 4; Summer School Professional
Certificate—College Grade—Drawing 2, 3, 4, and 7; Professional
Grammar Grades Certificate—Drawing 2 and 5; Professional Primary
Grades Certificate—Drawing 1 and 5.


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EDUCATION

1. The Health of the School Child.—The aim of this course is to
acquaint teachers and principals with the necessary requirements of
school hygiene. Not only will the proper hygienic ideals be discussed
but they will be related to the local conditions and difficulties
as brought out in the class conferences. The divisions of the
subject will be as follows: growth and development; defects and
hygiene of sight, hearing, breathing, posture, etc.; contagious diseases;
medical inspection; teaching of hygiene; the daily school program—recitations,
study periods, recesses, home study, etc.; play,
games, and gymnastics; the hygiene of school buildings and equipment;
community hygiene.

Text-Books.—Terman's Hygiene of the School Child; Dresslar's
School Hygiene; Bulletins of the Virginia State Board of Health.

Daily, from 9:30 to 10:30. Professor Heck. Education Building,
Room 2.

2. School Management and Methods.—This course is based upon a
round-table discussion of the teacher's life work. Each member
of the class is expected to own at least three of the small books
mentioned below and to use them in preparation for class discussion.
Emphasis is given to the teacher's health, personality, preparation,
certification, salary, and expenditures. The teacher's relations
to officials, colleagues, parents, pupils, and community are
discussed in detail. The latter half of the course is devoted to
the teacher's daily and weekly schedule of work and recreation and
to various problems of management and instruction.

Text-Books.—Riverside Educational Monographs as follows: Perry's
Status of the Teacher; Terman's Teacher's Health; Palmer's Ideal
Teacher;
Dewey's Moral Principles in Education; Dewey's Interest and
Effort in Education;
Bett's Recitation.

Daily, from 10:30 to 11:30. Professor Heck. Auditorium Education
Building, Room 5.

3. School Administration.—This course is arranged for principals
and for teachers who are in charge of schools. Conditions in Virginia
and the South will furnish the basis for much of the class discussion.
The main topics treated in the course will be the mission of the public
schools in a democracy; the problems of State and local administration;
school revenues and expenditures: the selection, pay, and improvement
of teachers; the elementary school and its course of study; the
secondary school and its course of study; grading and promotion; reports;
vocational education; the relations of school and home.

Text-Book.—Dutton and Snedden's Administration of Public Education.

Daily, from 10:30 to 11:30. Professor Woodley. Education Building,
Room 3.

4. Matter and Method in the High School.—This course is especially
designed to meet the needs of principals and teachers responsible
for the construction and administration of high school curricula.
The chief topics for discussion will be: the function of the high
school in its relation to other institutions of learning, to the pupils,
and to society; educational aims; educational values; the place and
importance of each subject in the curriculum, the relative worth of
the topics within the several subjects; time allotments to topics;
constants; electives; construction of curricula and daily schedules;
the qualifications and equipment of high school teachers; the peculiar


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characteristics and needs of high school pupils; the high school
of the immediate future.

Text-Book.—High School Education—Johnston.

Daily, from 8:30 to 9:30. Professors Woodley and Maphis. Education
Building, Room 4.

5. Educational Psychology and the Principles of Teaching.—Inasmuch
as the principles of teaching are based upon a working knowledge
of the fundamental processes of consciousness the first half of
this course is devoted to the study of the facts of mental growth and
development as presented in Thorndike's Elements of Psychology
with special emphasis upon that portion of the text dealing with
Functional Psychology. To control human nature the teacher needs
to know it. The second half of this course is devoted to studying
how the teacher may best produce and prevent changes in his pupils
and thus preserve and increase the desirable qualities of body, intellect
and character and get rid of the undesirable. Since the basi
of a mind's action—the starting point of the life of intellect, feeling
and conduct—is its equipment of instincts and capacities, its native
or unlearned tendencies; especial emphasis is put upon the study of
the methods of their control and utilization for ideal ends. Since the
mind assimilates knowledge by means of knowledge already acquired
many detailed applications of the General Law of Apperception are
presented and discussed. Other subjects for study and discussion
are: Interest; Individual Differences; Attention; Habit Formation;
Memory; Analysis; Reasoning; Moral Training; and Formal Discipline.

Text-Books.—Thorndike's Elements of Psychology; Thorndike's
Principles of Teaching.

Daily, from 9:30 to 10:30. Professor Martin. Education Building,
Room 4.

6. History of Modern Education.—A very brief review will be
given to the slow evolution of educational conceptions, purposes, and
ideals first up to the Reformation, then from the Reformation to the
opening of the nineteenth century. The main study in the course
will be confined to the period from the year 1800 to the present.
Special attention will be given to the inseparable relationship between
education and other institutional factors in national life, showing
that educational ideals and educational systems are at the same
time causes and results. Emphasis will be placed upon the present
educational ideals, aims, and tendencies in the United States.

Text-Book.—Monroe's Brief Course in the History of Education.

Daily, from 10:30 to 11:30. Professor Scudder. Education Building,
Room 4.

7. Theory and Practice of Teaching.—This course is offered for
teachers in elementary schools. During the first two weeks, the class
will study school management, including such topics as the preparation
of the teacher, daily schedule, grading, tests, promotion, discipline,
hygiene; during the second two weeks, the class will study
educational psychology, including instinct, interest, attention, habit,
association, memory, apperception, induction, deduction, will; during
the third two weeks the class will study the elements of general
method, as applications of educational psychology, with emphasis on
the art of study.

Text-Books.—Seeley's New School Management; James' Talks to
Teacher's;
McMurry's Elements of General Method.

Daily, from 4:30 to 5:30. Professor Scudder. Education Building,
Room 1.


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8. Grammar Grade Methods.—This course is a detailed consideration
of individual subjects. The aim of each subject and its essential
topics and methods of presenting each will be studied. Among
such subjects will be those of grammar grade language, composition,
history, geography, and arithmetic.

Daily, from 12:15 to 1:15. Professor Woodley. Education Building,
Room 3.

9. Rural School Problems (with special relation to one and two
teacher schools).
—This course should appeal to all teachers, supervisors,
and administrative officers who are interested in the problems
of the open country and the village.

(a) School management: how to open a school, how to close a
school, tardiness, irregular attendance, the bright boy, the slow child,
the lazy child, the stubborn child, leaving the room, getting water,
forming a class, number of classes to be taught, daily schedule, recesses,
children's reports, examinations, tests, reviews.

(b) Courses of study: (subjects to be treated in a practical way
from the country and not from the city point of view) the construction
of curricula; text-books; the daily program.

(c) Methods: reading, spelling, composition, writing, drawing, geography,
industrial, economic, commercial, field excursions, trips; history;
civics; morals; music; personal hygiene and sanitation; home
economics; manual training; invention; nature study and school
gardening; elementary agriculture; farm economics; labor saving
appliances.

(d) Affiliated activities and outside interests: school and traveling
libraries; reading circles; social centers; recreation for rural communities;
clubs for boys and girls, agricultural, corn, tomato, etc.; playground
movement, pagents and festivals; Boy Scouts; Campfire Girls;
Hesperia Movement; Country School Conferences.

(e) Recreation and Playgrounds: Meaning and importance of the
recreation movement. Equipment: laying out playgrounds, fencing,
recreation buildings, other features. Athletics: public school athletic
leagues, badge tests for boys and girls. Games: individual, and group;
with and without apparatus. Evening recreation: in country and city
homes, halls, and play centers. Special recreation activities: clubs:
Boy Scouts, Campfire Girls, dramatics, music, story telling, gardens.
The recreation center as a neighborhood institution, in country and
in city. Problems of organization and administration.

Daily, from 2:30 to 3:30. Professor Scudder. Education Building,
Room 3.

10. Elementary Education—Reading, Language, Literature—Grades
I to IV.
—This course is planned to give primary teachers a brief,
concentrated study of the essentials of (a) materials and methods,
(b) standards of judging, (c) ideals of motivation, (d) social activities
as related to the above topics.

Reading.—History of reading methods, first reading lessons,
phonics in relation to reading, oral or dramatic reading, silent reading,
reading seat work, spelling.

History, Geography, Nature Study—Grades I to II.—The aim of
this course is to (a) present rational material, growing out of the
natural interests of children—viz., social activities of home and
school; acquaintance with conditions, activities, industries, and occupations
of the immediate environment; national holidays and festivals;
(b) to discuss methods of procedure emphasizing motivation,


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group-work activities, and standards; (c) to show correlation of
subject matter to other subjects of the curriculum. Lectures, discussions,
observations of demonstration lessons, lesson plans, private
conferences.

History, Geography, Nature Study—Grades III and IV.—The aim
of this course is to (a) present material emphasizing social interdependence,
based upon the fundamental needs of man—clothing, food,
shelter—choosing problems which grow out of immediate environment
studies and industrial activities; to give briefly the beginnings
of history, through phases—of primitive, pastoral, pioneer and modern
life; (b) to discuss methods of procedure emphasizing motivation
through rational problems, group-work activities, industrial arts,
projects and standards for judging work; (c) to show correlation of
subject matter to other subjects of the curriculum. Lectures, discussions,
observations of demonstration lessons, lesson plans, private
conferences.

Arithmetic, and Its Relation to Other Subjects of the Curriculum—
Grades I, II, III, IV.
—The aim of this course is to present the new
viewpoint in arithmetic teaching as determined by the social efficiency
aim in education. Special emphasis will be placed upon material
and scope for each grade; (a) fundamental processes, stressing
speed and accuracy, (b) problem-making, thought-content, or arithmetic
growing out of other subjects of the curriculum. Method of
procedure will deal with history of arithmetic methods, beginnings
of number relations, sense training, illustrative material and their
use; devices for drill, speed tests, motivation, problem making
around rational centers of interest.

Lectures, observations of demonstration lessons, lesson plans,
group work, private conferences.

The Teaching Process.—The aim of this course is to provide opportunity
for discussion of classroom problems from the standpoint
of (a) how we think; (b) how to study. Analysis of the thinking
process; methods and materials in lesson types development, drill, appreciation,
review lessons, applicable to recitation and study periods.
Special emphasis placed upon motivation and development of standards
for judging the recitation and study, or seatwork of children;
upon methods of directing and supervising study lessons. Lectures,
observation lessons, lesson plans, private conferences.

Text.—Dr. Strayer's A Brief Course in the Teaching Process; McMurry's
How to Study.

Note.—Courses in Elementary Education should include the above
and, in addition, child study, kindergarten, games, hygiene, storytelling,
music, drawing, primary industrial arts, primary methods in
English and arithmetic, etc., all of which will be found in other
courses in the catalogue.

Daily, Section I, first and second grades, from 9:30 to 10:30; Section
II, first and second grades, from 2:30 to 3:30. Miss Haliburton,
Education Building, Room 1; Section III, third and fourth grades,
10:30 to 11:30. Miss Sweeney. Education Building, Room 2; Section
IV, third and fourth grades, 3:30 to 4:30. Miss Sweeney. Education
Building, Room 4.

Note.—For Child Study, see Child Psychology, page 63.

11. Primary Reading.—The Rational Method in Reading, a combination
of the word, sentence and phonetic methods. 1. Value of
the word and sentence method. 2. Aims and value of the phonetic


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method. 3. Combination of the Word and Phonetic Methods. 4.
Reading and spelling correlated.

Daily, Section I, from 8:30 to 9:30. Education Building, Room 3.
Miss Coleman. Section II, from 4:30 to 5:30. Education Building,
Room 3. Miss Coleman.

12. Kindergarten Methods Applied to Primary Work.—The following
subjects will be discussed: Mental and physical characteristics
of the child at the kindergarten-primary age; common educational
principles underlying kindergarten and primary work; kindergarten
methods which may be applied to primary work, including construction
work, music, stories, nature material; possible aims and problems
connected with plays and games, the relation between activity
and mental development; the points of contact in the program of
the kindergarten and primary grades.

Daily, 8:30 to 9:30. Miss Mix. Education Building, Room 2.

13. Kindergarten Program and Methods.—For teachers of experience
in Kindergarten work who desire further study. A review will
be given of the history of the Kindergarten movement, and a study
made of its present aims and needs. The Kindergarten program
will be discussed. The materials of the Kindergarten, gifts, handwork,
games, songs, and stories will be studied in the light of our
present knowledge of the child's needs both physical and mental.
Observation in the Demonstration Kindergarten connected with the
Summer School will be an important feature of the course.

Daily, 2:30 to 3:30. Miss Mix. Education Building, Room 4.

14. Demonstration Kindergarten.—In conference hour questions
arising from observation in the Demonstration School will be answered.
There will also be discussion of method, materials, and
aims of the Kindergarten. Charts of work done by children of the
Washington City Public Kindergartens will be used to illustrate
process and possible result.

Daily, Demonstration 9:30 to 11:30. Conference 12:15 to 1:15. Miss
Stockard, Wash. Hall.

Note.—A series of Round Table Conferences in Education will be
arranged to meet once or twice a week. Separate conferences for
High School teachers, grammar grade teachers and primary teachers
will be held.

Vacation School and Demonstration Classes.—A very important
and helpful feature of the work in elementary education this year
will be a regular vacation school for observation purposes. The city
of Charlottesville will conduct a vacation school for work in all the
grades, which will be in charge of trained expert teachers and under
the general supervision of the instructors in elementary education
in the Summer School. Arrangements have been made for
daily observation work and some practice teaching.

The Montessori Method.—There will be no regular course in Montessori
Method, but Miss Anne E. George, friend and co-laborer
with Dr. Montessori and translator of her book, now director of
Montessori work of the Montessori Educational Association, Washington,
D. C., will give a series of lectures for one week, beginning
June 29. These lectures will be the most authoritative presentation
of this subject made in any summer school in this country and
should attract many persons who are interested in this work.

A small extra fee may be charged for the lectures.

A Study of the Literary and Spiritual Values of the Psalms.—Beginning


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July 9 and continuing until July 30, Rabbi Harry W. Ettelson,
of Hartford, Conn., lecturing under the auspices of the Jewish
Chautauqua Society of Philadelphia, will give a series of fifteen
lectures, daily, from 12:15 to 1:15, in the assembly hall of the Educational
Building on the following topics: Introductory, Aspects
of Hebrew Poetry; The Psalter, Its Musical Terms, etc.; Psalms of
Nature; Psalms of the Law; Patriotic Psalms; Psalms Gloryfying
the Temple; Historical Psalms; The World's Funeral Dirge; Psalms
of Faith and Trust; Psalms of Storm and Stress; Messianic Psalms;
Some Distinctive Miscellaneous Psalms, etc.

Studies in Our English Bible.—A series of lectures on this subject
is being arranged to cover the whole session of six weeks but
definite announcement of the whole course cannot now be made.
Dr. Theron H. Rice, professor of the English Bible in Union Theological
Seminary, Richmond, Va., will deliver eight lectures, July 14
to 17 inclusive, and 21 to 24 inclusive on the following topics: How
We Got Our English Bible; A Bird's-Eye View of Our English Bible;
The Opening Chapter of Our English Bible; The Law of Moses;
The Hebrew Prophets; The Poetry of the Old Testament; The
Prince of Teachers at His Work; A Window into a Mighty Heart.
Other lecturers will be secured to complete the series. Place and
names to be arranged.

School for Scout Masters.—From July 6th to 11th inclusive a
school for Scout Masters will be conducted. The course will be
substantially in accordance with the outline below, and the work
will be under the general supervision of Mr. W. J. B. Housman,
Scout Executive for Virginia, assisted by Mr. S. A. Moffett, National
Field Scout Commissioner, and other approved instructors
in the different fields of scout craft.

  • 1. Boy Life (Lecture Course).

    • (a) Pre-Adolescence.

    • (b) Adolescence.

    • (c) Self-Government.

    • (d) Play Life.

    • (e) The Boy in the Street—The Wage-Earning Boy.

  • 2. Camping (Lecture and Question Methods with Demonstrations).

    • (a) Organization—Supervision—Leadership.

    • (b) Environment—Sanitation — Water Supply — Volunteer
      Service.

    • (c) Cooking—Purchasing—Types of Food—Regularity and
      Efficiency.

    • (d) Scout Craft—Institutes and Contests.

    • (e) The Social Life.

    • (f) Personal Life of Scout Master and Personal Life of Camp.

  • 3. Scout Craft in particular. (Demonstration where possible.)

    • (a) First Aid, Elementary.

    • (b) First Aid, Advanced.

    • (c) Nature Study—Leaves and Trees.

    • (d) Animal Life—Calls—Foot Prints, etc.

    • (e) Nature Study—Bird Life.

    • (f) Knot Tying—Splicing, etc.

  • 4. Principles and Methods of Organization.

    • (a) General City or Community Organization.

    • (b) City Policy.

    • (c) Troop Policy.

    • (d) Statistical Forms and Records.

    • (e) Examinations, Court of Honor.


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Boy Scout Camp.—In connection with this school there will be
located near the University a Boy Scout Camp from June 29th to
July 11th and there will be held an athletic contest and a scout craft
contest in which trophy cups and a number of other prizes will be
offered. Any Scout Master desiring to enter his troop should write
early.

Camp Fire Girls.—There will also be an effort made to effect an
organization of Camp Fire Girls, and a number of demonstrations
will be given.

Certificate Credit.—Summer School Professional Certificate—Advanced
Grade—Education 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6; Summer School Professional
Certificate—College Grade—1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6; Summer
School Professional Certificate—Grammar Grade—Education 7, 8, 9,
10 (Sec. III and IV); Summer School Professional Certificate—Primary
Grade—Education 7, 9, 10 (Sec. I and II), 11, 12, 13 and 14.

ENGLISH

The courses in English are designed to meet the needs of the following
groups of students: present or prospective high school teachers;
professional or technical students who have entered upon their
professional courses and found that their training in English is so
defective as to interfere with their prospects in their chosen professions;
students preparing for college entrance examinations; students conditioned
on their entrance examinations or in their college courses at other institutions;
college professors and instructors who may be especially
interested in methods of teaching English; teachers in elementary
schools who are interested in language study for small children. It
is desirable that all students of English take advantage of the work
in composition, upon which special emphasis will be laid. Private
conferences for criticism and personal supervision of theme writing
will be arranged for by the instructor.

1. Advanced English Grammar for High School and College Teachers.—This
course is designed especially for high school teachers. No
subjects in the high school curriculum are more unsettled than those
of grammar and composition, both being in a transitive stage. The
multiplication of high schools in the South has called attention afresh
to the importance of English but there is still little uniformity in
methods of teaching it. An attempt will be made to suggest standards
of instruction in grammar and composition.

Text-Books.—Meiklejohn's English Grammar (D. C. Heath & Co.);
Joyne's Notes on the Parts of Speech (R. L. Bryan Co.).

Daily, from 12:15 to 1:15. Professor Wauchope. Law Building,
Room 2.

2. Rhetoric and Composition.—The purpose of this course is
three-fold: first, to master as far as possible the subject matter of
the text-book, and in doing this to emphasize particularly accuracy
and correctness in writing; second, to indicate the best methods of
teaching this subject in the schools so as to interest the pupils and
induce them to take advantage of local material and opportunities;
third, to encourage among teachers and pupils alike good reading
both for its own sake and specifically for the sake of mental discipline.
Short themes will frequently be called for and several longer


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papers required. Weekly personal conferences will be held at hours
to be appointed.

Text-Books.—Espenshade's Composition and Rhetoric (D. C. Heath);
Nutter, Hersey, and Greenough's Specimens of Prose Composition
(Ginn & Co.).

Daily, from 9:30 to 10:30. Professor Myers. Law Building,
Room 2.

3. English Literature.—This course is a general survey of the history
of English literature from Milton to Tennyson. Special emphasis
will be laid on the writings that are adapted to high school
work and more specifically on college entrance requirements. An
attempt will be made to give suggestions for future work in all the
periods.

Text-Books.—Any edition of the classics suggested above; any
good history of English literature (preferably Pancoast's) and
Manly's English Poetry.

Daily, from 10:30 to 11:30. Professor Shearin. Law Building,
Room 1.

4. American Literature.—A. This course is a study of the lives and
writings of the principal authors from Washington Irving to Mark
Twain. It will consider the various aspects of American life as they
have found expression in literature. Special attention will be given
to the literature of New England.

Text-Books.—Metcalf's American Literature (B. F. Johnson & Co.);
Page's Chief American Poets (Houghton, Mifflin & Co.).

Daily, from 12:15 to 1:15. Professor Metcalf. Law Building,
Room 1.

5. American Literature.—B. This course is intended for undergraduates
who desire to inform themselves about Southern literature
either as a matter of general culture or for the prospect of teaching
this subject in the schools. It will be a general survey of the intellectual
and literary life of the South from 1607 to the present day.
The course will be conducted mainly by lectures and class assignments,
but parallel reading and occasional written reports will be
required.

Text-Books.—Holliday's History of Southern Literature; Mims and
Payne's Southern Prose and Poetry. Constant reference will be made
to the Library of Southern Literature.

Daily, from 3:30 to 4:30. Professor Shearin. Law Building,
Room 2.

6. Shakespeare.—The work of this course embraces a critical study
of the development of Shakespeare's mind and art. Lectures on
fifteen plays best representing his work at different periods will be
given. Other plays by Shakespeare and his contemporaries will be
read as parallel.

Text-Book.—Any complete standard edition of Shakespeare such
as Neilson's, The Globe, or Leopold editions.

Daily, from 8:30 to 9:30. Professor Wauchope. Law Building,
Room 2.

7. Tennyson and Browning.—A careful study of representative
poems of Tennyson and Browning. Lectures and interpretative readings
will make clear the elements of their art and its relation to the
important movements of the nineteenth century. Parallel reading,
references, and written reports.

Text-Books.—The Cambridge or Globe edition of Tennyson's


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Poems and Browning's Poems (Houghton, Mifflin & Co. and Macmillan
Co.).

Daily, from 4:30 to 5:30. Professor Metcalf. Law Building,
Room 2.

8. Advanced Composition: Narration and Exposition.—This
course in writing is designed for students whose work in general
rhetoric and composition has advanced sufficiently to justify
specialization in the types of discourse. Those who at a previous
session have had the course in Rhetoric and Composition, No. 2, or its
equivalent, will be prepared for this advanced class. The work will
precede by a study and discussion of the principles of narration and
exposition, especially the short story and the short essay, by critical
reading of some of the best specimens from recent American authors,
and by exercise in both types.

Text-Books.—Esenwein's Writing the Short-Story (Hinds, Noble, &
Eldridge); Canby's English Composition in Theory and Practice (Macmillan);
specimens of stories and essays from the best current magazines.

Daily, from 4:30 to 5:30. Professor Myers. Law Building, Room 1.

9. Elementary Language.—This course is planned to give teachers
of the elementary schools a brief, concentrated study of the essentials
of matter and method for the language work of all grades above the
primary. The topics discussed will include the following: the purpose
and plan of language study; vital points in language teaching;
language environment; relation of language to other subjects; the
child's own activities and experience as a basis for language work;
language and character; language and the community; the teacher
of language; literature and language; English for rural schools; importance
of oral language training; types of oral lessons—conversation
lessons, picture lessons, the study of stories, memorizing poems,
dramatization, the correction of common errors of speech; spelling
and word study; the course of study in language; the function and
types of written work; how to secure better written work. The
treatment of these topics will be practical and suggestive, rather than
theoretical.

Text-Books.—Hyde's Two Book Course in English, Book I; Emerson
and Bender's Modern English, Book I. It is recommended that any
series of language books, and professional works on teaching language,
be brought for reference.

Daily, from 8:30 to 9:30. Miss Hiner. Law Building, Room 1.

10. Elementary Grammar.—This course aims primarily at giving
teachers a deeper, surer knowledge of the subject matter of grammar,
and those completing the work satisfactorily should find themselves
thoroughly, prepared for the State examination in this subject. The
instruction will cover the work of the seventh and eighth grades.
Language will be considered mainly from the functional side, and
presented so as to provide training in the actual process of thinking.
There will be a condensed study of the essential features of descriptive
grammar, with especial emphasis upon the more difficult points
—the abstract noun, the comparison of adjectives, the function of
case, the personal pronoun, all phases of analysis, and, above all, the
verb and the verbals. Frequent touches of comparative and historical
grammar will be employed for the sake of the new light and
interest to be gained therefrom. There will be, in addition, some
consideration of the historical development of grammar teaching, the


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elementary schools, the relation of grammar to language work, and
grammar as a record of usage rather than a law of usage.

Text-Books.—Hyde's Two-Book Course in English, Book II; Emerson
and Bender's Modern English, Book II.

Section I, daily, from 10:30 to 11:30; Law Building, Room 2; Section
II, daily from 12:15 to 1:15; Law Building, Room 3. Miss Hiner.

11. Review of English Grammar.—A class for the review of English
grammar will be formed for those teachers who need drill for the
State Examinations. The work of this class will be based on the outline
furnished by the Department of Education. Students preparing
for the State Examinations are advised to take this course rather than
English 9 and 10.

Section I, from 8:30 to 9:30, Cabell Hall, Room 3. Miss London.

Daily, section II, from 2:30 to 3:30. Cabell Hall, Room 3.

University Credit.—Any student who fulfills the conditions set
forth on page 17 and who completes successfully the first four courses
in English outlined above, will be credited with Course A in English
literature in the regular session. Those who have completed the first
eight courses may arrange for relative credit with the professor of
English at the University of Virginia. Due credit will be given to
regularly registered students in the M. A. Course for all work successfully
completed in class work and examination in Courses 6 and 7.

Certificate Credit.—Summer School Professional Certificate Advanced
Grade—English 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8; Summer School Professional
Certificate—College Grade. English 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8.
Professional Grammar Grades Certificate—English 9 and 10; Professional
Primary Grades Certificates—English 9 and 10.

FRENCH

1. Elementary French.—Students having no previous knowledge of
French may enter this course; but they are strongly advised to
elect not more than one other course in the summer school. The
course consists of: grammar through the regular verbs, the more
important irregular verbs; translation; oral and written exercises;
dictation.

Text-Books.—Fraser and Squair's French Grammar (Heath); François,
Introductory French Prose Composition (Amer. Book Co.); David,
Chez Nous (Holt); Labiche et Martin, Le Voyage de Monsieur
Perrichon
(Heath).

Daily, from 10:30 to 11:30, Professor Worthington, Rotunda, Room 1.

2. Advanced French.—Open to students who have had two high
school units in French. This course consists of: grammar, irregular
verbs; the subjunctive; oral and written exercises; dictation; translation;
conversation; parallel reading.

Text-Books.—Fraser and Squair's French Grammar (Heath); François,
Advanced French Prose Composition (Amer. Book Co.); French
Daily Life
(Newson); Augier, Le Gendre de Monsieur Poirier (Heath);
Coppée, Le Luthier de Crémone, le Trésor (Allyn and Bacon); Rostand,
les Romanesques (Ginn); Mérimée, Colomba (Heath); Hugo,
Les Misérables (Heath).

Daily, from 9:30 to 10:30, Professor Worthington, Rotunda, Room 1.


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3. French Pronunciation.—For teachers of French and advanced
students. This course consists of a study of French sounds by the
international phonetic method.

Text-Books.—Matzke, Primer of French Pronunciation (Holt); Paul
Passy, les Sons du francais (librairie Firmin-Didot, Paris).

Daily, from 12:15 to 11:15, Professor Worthington, Rotunda, Room 1.

University Credit.—Students having fulfilled the conditions on
page 17 and having completed courses 1 and 2 and passed the corresponding
examination in each will be considered as having absolved
the requirements of French A1, and will be admitted to
French B1 as outlined in the catalogue of the University of Virginia.
Corresponding credit will be given for course 3.

Certificate Credit.—Summer School Professional Certificate—
French 1 and 2. Summer School Professional Certificate—College
Grade—French 1, 2, and 3.

GAMES

This course is offered as the natural complement of the courses
given in music, story telling and physical training. The course will
be divided into two heads; organized school room games and exercises—action
stories from literature, nature study, industry, civic life
and history, marches, etc., development of games through the interests
and play activities of children; and folk games and dances,
illustrated by English, German, Swedish, French and American singing
games and dances, and their racial and national significance and
recreative and social uses. Games will be played on the Lawn, Monday,
Wednesday and Friday evenings. Sections I and II will consist
of games and folk dances for elementary teachers suitable for
all grades; Section III will consist of theory and practice of play,
games, and folk dances for advanced students who have already received
certificates for elementary work in games. Gymnasium shoes
will be required for class work.

Section I, daily, from 8:30 to 9:30; Section II, daily, from 9:30 to
10:30. Miss Pickett. Section III for Advanced Students; 12:15 to
1:15. Fayerweather Gymnasium.

Certificate Credit.—Professional Grammar Grade Certificate; Professional
Primary Certificate. Sections I and II; Professional Summer
School Certificate—Advanced Grade, Section III.

GEOGRAPHY

It is the purpose in this subject to meet, primarily, the needs of
teachers, whether engaged in elementary or advanced work. A second
aim is to provide courses of practical and cultural value to college
students. The work embraces lectures, laboratory and field instruction
in physical and industrial geography.

1. Physical Geography.—An introductory course in practical physical
geography. Some of the topics treated are: interpretation and
classification of maps; common minerals and rocks, as the materials
of the land; weathering; relief features; origin and careful description
of land forms produced by wind, ground water, rivers, and glaciers.
The relation of physiographic environs to human activities is


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emphasized. Special attention is given to laboratory work suitable
for use in high schools.

Lectures are illustrated by lantern slides, maps, models, and specimens.

Text-Books.—Salisbury's Physiography or Tarr's New Physical Geography;
Bengston's Physical Geography Manual.

Lectures, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday from 9:30 to
10:30. Professor Bishop. Rotunda, Room 4. Laboratory, two
hours to be arranged.

2. Industrial Geography.—This course, suited to the needs of both
grade and high school teachers, is both industrial and commercial.
It gives a general survey of our national resources and their conservation,
and a more detailed description of certain type industries.
Some of the subjects are: coal; petroleum; iron and steel; wheat and
flour; corn; cattle, beef and dairy; cotton; sugar. The forms and
processes involved in transforming commercial raw materials into
finished manufactured products are carefully traced. Values and
commercial relations are discussed following the other details of each
industry. The work is made concrete by the use of illustrative material
and well selected sets of lantern slides. Assigned readings and
reports.

Lectures, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, from 12:15 to
1:15. Professor Bishop. Rotunda, Room 4. Laboratory, two
hours to be arranged.

3. Aims and Methods in Geography.—Consists of lectures, discussions,
and exercises dealing with the actual problems of the class
room. The work is designed particularly for teachers in the grades.
Some of the topics discussed are: geography in the lower grades;
use of the textbook; illustrative material—uses and methods of collecting;
outline and relief maps; field and factory trips; correlation
of industrial and regional geography; simple methods of teaching
earth movements, latitude and longitude, standard time, tides, winds
and wind belts. 30 periods credit can be obtained by completing
readings, reports, and examinations.

Lectures, Tuesday and Thursday, 4:30 to 5:30. Professor Bishop.
Rotunda, Room 4.

4. Primary and Grammar School Geography.—This course is designed
to meet the needs of teachers of primary and grammar grades
and includes the drill in subject matter needed to meet the requirements
of the State examination for a first grade certificate. Subject
matter and methods of presentation will be given attention from the
standpoint of general geographic principles and of good geography
teaching, emphasizing particularly the life relations. The course will
also consider the application of so-called type studies; the use of supplementary
reading; field trips; the extent to which commercial
geography should be taught in the grammar grades; the best aids in
teaching—maps, globes, models, pictures, etc.

Text-Books.—The course will be based on Frye's Geographies.

Section I, Advanced, daily, from 8:30 to 9:30; Section II, Primary,
daily, from 10:30 to 11:30. Professor Johnson. Rotunda, Room 4.

Certificate Credit.—Summer School Professional Certificate—Advanced
Grade, Geography 1 and 2; Summer School Professional
Certificate—College Grade—Geography 1 and 2; Professional Grammar
Grades Certificate—Geography 3 and 4 (Sec. I); Professional
Primary Grade Certificates—Geography 3 and 4 (Sec. II).


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GERMAN

Three courses are offered. In each there are five hours weekly of
lectures or recitations.

1. Beginners' German.—Beginners may take this course: Pronunciation,
elementary grammar, reading, conversation and composition.

Text-Book.—Prokosch's German for Beginners (Henry Holt & Co.).
Five hours a week for six weeks.

Course 1 is the exact equivalent of the first term's work of German
A1, in the regular session of the University and will be so accredited
by the dean of the University and the professor of Germanic
Languages.

Daily, from 8:30 to 9:30. Professor Williams. Rotunda, Room 2.

2. Intermediate German.—A continuation of Course 1, beginning
with the Weak Declension of nouns, and completing an elementary
course in the grammar, with reading, conversation and composition.

Text-Book.—Same as in Course 1, beginning at Lesson XVIII.

Five hours a week for six weeks.

Course 2 is the exact equivalent of the second term's work of
German A1, in the regular session of the University and will be
so accredited by the dean of the University and the professor of
Germanic Languages.

Daily, 9:30 to 10:30. Professor Williams. Rotunda, Room 2.

3. Advanced German.—Two units of high school German are required
as the minimum for admission to this course. Review of
German grammar, reading, conversation and prose-composition.

Text-Books.—Wiehr's German Prose Composition (Oxford University
Press). An additional reading text will be announced at the beginning
of the session. A standard grammar and dictionary will be
needed for reference. Five hours a week for six weeks.

Course 3 will be accepted as the equivalent of one session-hour in
German toward the B. A. or B. S. degree of the University.

Daily, 10:30 to 11:30. Professor Faulkner. Rotunda, Room 2.

HISTORY

1. Greek and Roman History.—After a rapid survey of Egyptian,
Assyrian, Babylonian, Persian and Phœnician civilization, a more
detailed study is made of Greece and Rome.

Text-Books.—Myers' Greece and Myers' Rome. Assigned readings
in standard authorities.

Daily, from 8:30 to 9:30. Professor Huffington. Rotunda,
Room 3.

2. The Middle Age.—From the fall of Rome to the 15th century.
All the great movements and institutions of this period will be
studied; such as, the Germanic Invasions, the Papacy, Mohammedanism,
Monasticism, Feudalism, The Crusades, and the Holy Roman
Empire.

Text-Books.—Thatcher and Schwill's The Middle Ages; Thatcher
and McNeal's Sourcebook of Mediæval History, or Robinson's Readings
in European History, vol. I;
Emerton's Mediæval Europe and Adams'
Civilization during the Middle Ages will be required as parallel.

Daily, from 9:30 to 10:30. Professor McConnell. Rotunda, Room 3.

3. Modern Europe.—From the 15th Century to the present time.
The following topics will be studied. The Renaissance, the Protestant


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Revolution, the development of France, Spain, England and
Prussia under Monarchy, the French Revolution and the Napoleonic
Era and the establishment of Democracy during the nineteenth century.

Text-Books.—Schwill's Political History of Modern Europe, Robinson
and Beard's Development of Modern Europe, vol. II; Robinson's
Readings in European History, vol. II. Parallel readings will be assigned.

Daily, from 12:15 to 1:15. Professor McConnell. Rotunda,
Room 3.

4. English History.—In this course the institutional life of the English
people will be studied. Special stress will be laid on such topics
as: the Growth of Parliament, England's Colonial Empire and Policy,
the Industrial Revolution, Cabinet Government, and the Era of
Reform in the Nineteenth Century.

Text-Books.— Cheyney's Short History of England, Cheyney's Readings
in English History.
Readings will be assigned and required in
Green's Short History of the English People; Traill's Social England,
and the Dictionary of National Biography.

Daily, from 10:30 to 11:30. Professor McConnell. Rotunda,
Room 3.

5. History of the United States.—This course is intended to cover
the general history of the United States. The lectures will deal in
large measure with the economic and social growth of the nation;
while the discussion and assigned readings will bear mainly on constitutional
and political development.

Text-Book.—Students should bring Doub's History of the United
States,
or any modern text in history.

Daily, from 2:30 to 3:30. Professor Page. Rotunda, Room 3.

6. Civil Government in the United States.—In this course, students
will be guided in a study of the structure and working of the Federal,
State, and local governments in the United States. A special effort
will be made to familiarize the student with the literature of political
theories, the growth of political parties, and the present problems of
American government. Instruction will be given by assigned readings,
discussions and lectures.

Text-Book.—Students should bring any modern text in government.

Daily, from 3:30 to 4:30. Professor Page. Rotunda, Room 3.

7. Virginia History.—In this course the principle facts in the history
of Virginia will be reviewed, the purpose being to deepen and
strengthen the knowledge of teachers who are preparing for examination
in this subject.

Daily, from July 1st to July 22nd, from 3:30 to 4:30. Professor
McManaway. Rotunda, Room 4.

8. Review of United States History.—This course is planned for
those expecting to take the State examination for first grade certificate.
Besides the review of subject matter, attention will be given to
methods of study and of presentation, with use of maps, outlines, and
other history helps.

Daily, from 9:30 to 10:30. Mr. McManaway. Cabell Hall, Room 3.

Certificate Credit.—Summer School Professional Certificate—Advanced
Grade, History 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6; Summer School Professional
Certificate—College Grade, History 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6; Professional
Grammar Grades Certificate—History 5, 6, and 8.


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HYGIENE AND SANITATION

1. Household and Personal Hygiene.—This course will be especially
adapted to the needs of teachers, and of students of cooking,
and will cover the matter usually outlined in standard texts upon the
subject. Some time will be spent in the study of each of the following
topics: food and diatetics; the action of household drugs on the
human body; bacteriological decomposition of meats and vegetables;
the sanitary treatment of soil, air, and water; the treatment and disposal
of sewage; the sanitation of dwellings and schools; the relation
of insects to disease; infection, susceptibility, and immunity; personal
hygiene.

Text-Books.—Allen's Civics and Heath; Ritchie's Primer of Sanitation.

Daily, from 4:30 to 5:30. Professor Lambeth. Rotunda, Room 3.

Certificate Credit.—Summer School Professional Certificate—Advanced
Grade, Hygiene I; Professional Grammar Grades Certificate—
Hygiene I; Professional Primary Grades Certificate—Hygiene I.

LIBRARY METHODS

1. Library Methods.—A four weeks course in library methods will
be offered, beginning June 24 and continuing until July 22. This
course will consist of lectures and practice work with particular emphasis
on classifying, cataloguing, and reference work, and will afford
to librarians and teacher-supervisors of school libraries an opportunity
to add four weeks of systematic instruction to their previous
library experience. The work will be so arranged that students
may devote all or a portion of their time to it.

Text-Book.—Salisbury's Library Methods for School Teachers.

Fee $10.00. Course not free to Virginia Teachers.

Daily, from 12:30 to 1:30. Librarian Patton. Rotunda.

Certificate Credit.—Summer School Professional Certificate—Library
Methods.

MANUAL TRAINING

All the work of these courses will be of that practical nature which
will be adaptable to conditions as met in the average school. The
problems will be typical and the principles involved can be applied
under varying conditions as the needs of separate schools may require.
Special emphasis will be placed on economical equipments
and the use of available materials. Note book work will be required
in each course, examined by the instructor and graded as a part of
the regular work. All instruction in manual training will be given
with special reference to the psychological and pedagogical principles
necessary to develop teaching ability in those taking the work. A
course of reading will be outlined dealing with the history, development
and application of manual and industrial training.

1. Wood-Working for High Schools.—The work of this course
will deal with a class of useful projects adapted to the interest and
related as far as possible to the work of the high school student.
Problems applicable to principles of mathematics, physics and chemistry
as well as useful articles for the home and school will be considered.
Methods of construction of all work attempted will be those


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used by the artisan. Recognized principles of good design will be
developed by sketches and drawings, and will be applied to all mechanical
projects.

Methods of milling, seasoning, and finishing of woods will be
studied as will also the tools, their uses and care.

Daily, from 10:30 to 11:30 and 12:15 to 1:15. Professor Magee
and Professor Houchens. Manual Training Room, Basement Education
Building.

2. Constructive Design.—This course will take up the study of the
principles of design as related to projects in industrial arts. The
study of space relations and proportions, forms, and decoration will
be given consideration in the problems attempted.

See Drawing 4, daily, from 4:30 to 5:30.

3. Upper Grade Work.—This course is intended primarily for the
teachers of the fifth to the eighth grades. The problems will be
practical and especially adapted to these grades but may be used
elsewhere if it is deemed wise. The problems will be in wood and
light metal. The study of economical equipment and problems
adapted to varying conditions will form a great part of the work.
Drawing both freehand and mechanical as related to these projects
will receive some attention. Some previous training in mechanical or
freehand drawing will be of value to those taking this course.

Daily, from 2:30 to 4:30. Professor Magee and Professor Houchens.
Manual Training Room, Basement Education Building.

4. Industrial Manual Training.—The aim of this course is not so
much to develop a high degree of skill or manual dexterity as it is
to teach the principles, characteristics and uses of various materials
suitable for handwork in all grades, for both rural and city schools.
The handwork in this course will be supplemented by lectures on
materials and methods, and the place of industrial work in education.

Daily, from 8:30 to 10:30. Miss Brainerd. Manual Training
Room, Basement Education Building.

5. Industrial Art for Primary Grades.—This course consists of
practical work, related subject matter, and discussion of processes.
The work of the first four grades will be covered as far as practicable,
with suggestions for continuing the fifth and sixth grades.
The materials used will be paper, cardboard, wood, clay, and wearing
materials; the aim of the work being to bring the child into conscious
relationship with his environments and leading out into contact
with larger society.

Section I, daily, from 8:30 to 10:30; Section II, daily from 10:30
to 11:30 and 12:15 to 1:15. Miss Schuyler. S. West Room, Basement
Education Building.

6. Advanced Course for Elementary Grade Teachers.—Individual
instruction, as far as possible, will be given in the following work:
Tooled leather; mats, card cases, book covers, etc. Copper work;
simple jewelry, etching, pierced work, raised bowls, etc. Woodwork;
simple joinery and design of furniture.

This course should be elected by students who possess a fair degree
of skill in handwork and who desire more advanced work in
one or more of the above subjects.

Daily, from 2:30 to 4:30. Miss Brainerd. Manual Training Room,
Basement Education Building.

Note.—An additional fee of one dollar will be charged for materials
used.


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7. Mechanical Drawing.—This course is designed for those who
wish to teach mechanical drawing in secondary schools and for those
who feel a need of this subject in teaching shop work. Some of the
topics taken up are use of the instruments, lettering, projection, working
drawings, blue-printing, tracing, etc. Lectures are also given on
modern drafting room methods.

This course will be given if as many as eight apply for it, the time
and place to be announced later.

Professors McGee and Houchens.

Certificate Credit.—Summer School Professional Certificate—Advanced
Grade, Manual Training 1, 2, 3, 4 and 7; Summer School Professional
Certificate—College Grade Manual Training 1, 2, 3, 4 and 7;
Professional Grammar Grades Certificate—Manual Training 3 and 6;
Professional Primary Grades Certificate—Manual Training 5 and 6.

MATHEMATICS

1. Advanced Algebra.—The work will begin with Quadratics and
proceed with the progressions, the study of the binomial formula,
convergence and divergence of series, with special study of the
binomial, exponential and logarithmic series. The study of inequalities
and determinants prepares for the theory of equations with which
the course is closed. A sufficient review will be given in the first of
the term to cover all the topics needed by the high school teacher
and to make the course intelligible to those who have some acquaintance
with algebra.

Text-Book.—Rietz and Crathorne's Treaties on Algebra.

Daily, from 8:30 to 9:30. Professor Page. Cabell Hall, Room 6.

2. Plane Geometry.—This course is designed for students wishing
to review this subject or to repair deficiencies, for teachers and those
who are preparing for college examinations. It is presumed that
students attending the course have had a previous knowledge of the
subject as a whole or in part. The lectures and quizzes will be
framed therefore with the view of strengthening and harmonizing
the knowledge of plane geometry. There will be discussed for historical
development the logical connection of the theorems and processes
of elementary geometry; the definitions of the fundamental
geometrical concepts; the axioms of geometry and the nature of
geometrical proof; the systematic study of the original solution and
methods of attack of geometrical problems; the theory of geometric
graphical solution, and the problems of quadrature of the circle.

Daily, from 10:30 to 11:30. Professor Echols. Cabell Hall, Room 6.

3. Solid Geometry.—The course presupposes a knowledge of plane
geometry as given in the previous course and in the current textbooks.
Especial attention will be given to the logical development
of the subject and to the dependent relationship between the propositions.
The scientific and pedagogic aspects of the theory of limits
will be treated in detail. The problems of geometrical mensuration
for space will be carefully worked out to conclusions.

Text-Book.—Venable's Elements of Geometry.

Daily, from 12:15 to 1:15. Professor Echols. Cabell Hall, Room 6.

Note.—The method of presentation in the courses of Plane and
Solid Geometry will be by lectures and text references, with frequent
quizzing and blackboard exercises by the student. Students are requested
to bring with them such texts as they have studied and have


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used for teaching. A collection of modern texts in English and foreign
languages will be used for purposes of comparison and in illustration
of the different methods of presenting the subject in this and
other countries. More elementary courses in these two subjects will
be if there is sufficient demand for them.

4. Plane and Spherical Trigonometry.—The course in plane trigonometry
will begin with the definitions of the six trigonometric
functions as ratios, and embrace all topics usually covered in the
standard text-books, including the use of logarithms. In spherical
trigonometry, the course will end with the solution of oblique spherical
triangles.

Text-Books.—Loney's Trigonometry, Part I; Murray's Spherical
Trigonometry;
Murray's Five-Place Tables.

Daily, from 9:30 to 10:30. Professor Page. Cabell Hall, Room 6.

5. Analytic Geometry.—This course will be helpful to students
wishing to review the subject and to those just beginning it. Especial
attention will be given to the study of the locus of an equation
and to the Cartesian method of representing loci. The several conic
sections will be separately considered and the course will close with
a study of the general equation of the second degree.

Text-Book.—Taner and Allen's Analytic Geometry.

Daily, from 3:30 to 4:30. Professor Michie. Cabell Hall, Room 7.

6. Differential Calculus.—The differentiation of the elementary
functions will be carefully studied and the methods of the calculus
will be applied to problems of geometry and mechanics.

Text-Book.—Echols' Differential and Integral Calculus.

Daily, from 4:30 to 5:30. Professor Michie. Cabell Hall, Room 7.

7. Integral Calculus.—The fundamental principles of integration
will be studied, with the usual applications to areas, lengths, surfaces,
and volumes.

Text-Book.—Echols' Differential and Integral Calculus.

Daily, from 5:30 to 6:30. Professor Michie. Cabell Hall, Room 7.

8. Review of High School Algebra.—The general purpose of this
course is to give to the teachers and students of high school algebra
a thorough review of the work beginning with simple equations. The
ground covered in six weeks is that of a full year's work in the high
school, so that a fair knowledge of algebraic principles and methods
is pre-supposed. The topics studied will be the following: simple
equations, involution, evolution, exponents, radicals, quadratic equations,
and simultaneous equations of the first or second degree involving
two or three unknowns of the first or second degree. Emphasis
will be laid upon the solution of numerous problems illustrating
the principles.

Text-Book.—Students should bring any text-book now in use in
the high schools.

Daily, from 3:30 to 4:30. Professor Johnson. Cabell Hall,
Room 8.

9. Beginners' Algebra.—This course is intended for those who have
never studied algebra and who desire to take the examination for
first grade certificate. It will require two or three hours of study
out of class. Section III will be conducted for those who have a
slight acquaintance with the subject and who may be able to proceed
more rapidly than those in the first two sections.

Section I, daily, from 12:15 to 1:15. For those who have never
studied algebra. Professor Ware. Cabell Hall, Room 8.


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Section II, daily, from 9:30 to 10:30. For those desiring more
rapid review.

Section III, daily, from 2:30 to 3:30, for those preparing for State
Examination. Professor Ware. Cabell Hall, Room 8.

10. Review of Arithmetic.—This course will be systematic and
thorough, preparing students for the State examination for first
grade certificate. It will include daily recitation in the essentials of
arithmetic. Special attention will be given to vocational problems,
commercial arithmetic and all the applications of percentage. The
lessons assigned will be of such a nature that they will not only be
an excellent review drill for the examination but will serve as supplementary
work in the teachers' own schoolrooms.

Section I, daily, from 9:30 to 10:30; Section II, daily, from 3:30 to
4:30. Mrs. Moffett. Cabell Hall, Room 5.

11. Methods in Arithmetic.—The following phases of the teaching
of this subject will be discussed: outlines for the work of each month
in each grade; lessons embodying the practical application of the
principles of arithmetic; methods and devices for interesting pupils
in primary and grammar grades; the utility and culture values of
arithmetic; correlation of arithmetic with other subjects.

Section I, daily, from 8:30 to 9:30. Methods in Primary Arithmetic;
Section II, daily, from 2:30 to 3:30. Methods in Grammar
Grade Arithmetic. Mrs. Moffett. Cabell Hall, Room 5.

University Credit.—Those students completing Courses 1, 3, and
4 will be credited with Course A1 as outlined in University of Virginia
catalogue, provided the conditions on page 17 are fulfilled.
Appropriate credit for actual work accomplished in Courses 5, 6
and 7 will be given for the corresponding courses outlined in the
University of Virginia catalogue.

Certificate Credit.—Summer School Professional Certificate Advanced
Grade—Mathematics 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8; Summer School
Professional Certificate—College Grade—Mathematics 1, 2, 3, 4, 5,
6, 7, and 8; Professional Grammar Grades Certificate—Mathematics
10 and 11 (Sec. II); Professional Primary Grades Certificate—Mathematics
11 (Sec. I).

SCHOOL MUSIC

Courses for Supervisors of Music.—These courses are primarily
intended for the training of supervisors of music and special teachers
of music in the public schools. In order to complete the work
and receive a supervisor's certificate, it is required to attend three
summer sessions. Detailed information in regard to home study
during the academic year may be had on application to Professor
—.

Courses for Grade Teachers.—The probability is that the near future
will witness a requirement made by school boards and state
boards of education, demanding that the grade teacher shall qualify
in music as she must qualify in every other subject in the elementary
curriculum. Such a requirment is already in force in several
states. This makes a special course of music for grade teachers an
actual necessity.

A teacher who takes the first-year and second-year courses and
completes the work satisfactorily, will have received thorough training
in sight reading, in ear training and dictation, will have taken


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an elementary course in melody, and will have received instruction
in the methods of presenting public school music. It gives the
teacher as much freedom in knowledge of methods and materials in
music as in the subjects of geography, spelling, arithmetic, and the
like.

Courses for First Year Students.

1. Sight Reading—A. This is an elementary course. The requirements
for the completion of this course include the ability to read
at sight simple music, such as is taught in the first four grades of
the public schools, using Latin syllables.

Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays, from 8:30 to 9:30. Professor
—. Madison Hall.

2. Dictation—A. (Study of tone and rhythm). This course covers
the first four grades of public school music. The subject matter
of music is presented first to the sense of hearing. In this course
the student gains power to think tones and to sense rhythms, and
at the same time acquires a practical knowledge of scale relations
and the application of the Latin syllables used in sight reading.

Daily, from 9:30 to 10:30. Mrs. Waterman. Madison Hall.

3. Material—A. This course is devoted to the material for the
kindergarten and the first four grades in music. It also includes the
presentation of material, and the methods of teaching rote songs.
This course provides intimate acquaintance with the best presentation
of the subject of public school music in charts and books, taking
up for detailed study each fundamental principle as it occurs.
Some practice in reading and interpretation is included in this course.

Daily, from 10:30 to 11:30. Mrs. Waterman. Madison Hall.

4. Methods—A. This course is devoted to the pedagogy of music
from the kindergarten to the fourth grade, inclusive. The work
of each year is taken up in detail, and all the problems which confront
the grade teacher and supervisor are thoroughly discussed.
Plans and methods of schoolroom work, and general supervision
are carefully presented.

Daily, from 12:15 to 1:15. Mrs. Waterman. Madison Hall.

5. Rudiments of Music—A. This course provides instruction in
the elements of music. The following are taken up for study: clefs,
signification and origin; names of pitches as established by the
G-clef and F-clef; construction of major scale (without key-signature),
note-values, and rhythm (different rhythms with the same
meter), normal, harmonic, and melodic minor scales (without key-signatures);
key-signatures; notation of chromatic scale with each
key-signature; intervals; definitions of terms most frequently used
in music.

Thursdays and Fridays, from 8:30 to 9:30. Professor —.
Madison Hall.

Courses for Second Year Students.

6. Sight Reading—B. This course requires the reading at sight of
music taught in the fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth grades of the
public schools, using Latin syllables.

Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays, from 9:30 to 10:30. Professor
—. Madison Hall.

7. Melody—B. This course in constructive music is valuable as a
basis of form analysis. Facility in melody writing is also a distinct


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aid in rapid sight reading. Topics included under the course
are diatonic melodies, simple intervals, the chromatic inflection,
simple modulations and rhythmic development. Written work is required
daily.

Thursday and Fridays, from 9:30 to 10:30. Professor —.
Madison Hall.

8. Dictation—B. This course deals with the problems of tone and
rhythm included in the fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth grades of
public school music.

The purpose of this course in ear training and dictation is to
make the student familiar with scale relations, simple chromatic inflections,
and the simpler rhythms. It thus becomes of direct value,
both in sight reading and in listening to music. Special lessons are
provided in showing how to prepare and present dictation lessons,
both oral and written, in the classroom.

Daily, from 8:30 to 9:30. Mrs. Waterman. Madison Hall.

9. Material—B. This course requires the study of charts and
books employed in the fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth grammar
grades. The development of the subject and the interrelation of
songs and studies are emphasized. Sight reading of words and music
simultaneously, supplements the singing with the syllable names.

The courses in Material A and B are given by experienced supervisors.
The methods employed are those used in the schoolroom.
These courses, therefore, become a laboratory demonstration of the
material and methods used in teaching music in the public schools
from the kindergarten to the high school.

Daily, from 12:15 to 1:15. Mrs. Waterman. Madison Hall.

10. Methods—B. This course includes methods for the fifth, sixth,
seventh and eighth grammar grades, and is open only to students
who have completed Methods A. It involves a study of the pedagogy
of the subject as required by the introduction of new principles
and their combination with elementary principles. Detailed outlines
for lesson preparation, and presentation are required.

Daily, from 10:30 to 11:30. Mrs. Waterman. Madison Hall.

Courses for Third Year Students.

11. Dictation—C. (Study of tone and rhythm.) This course will
open with a rapid review of elementary principles. It will then
proceed to develop the ability to recognize and read any melody of
moderate difficulty in both the major and minor keys. Additional
training, including the recognition and writing of music in parts is
also required.

Daily, from 12:15 to 1:15. Professor —. Madison Hall.

12. High and Normal School Music—C. This is an advanced
course to which only third year, and still more advanced students,
are admitted. Courses in theory, in musical appreciation, and in
chorus singing are outlined and presented in detail. The many difficult
problems which confront the music teacher in the high school
and the normal school are carefully studied: such as the arrangement
and distribution of voices, programs for the high school music recitations,
supplementary music, formation of school orchestras and
glee clubs, the relation of high school music to the grades and its
place as a credit study in the curriculum, and the means of cultivating
the musical taste and ideals of the school and community.

A prominent feature of the work in this class is a practical course


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in conducting. Each pupil will be required to prepare and conduct
choral selections under the supervision of the instructor.

Daily, from 8:30 to 9:30. Mrs. Waterman. Madison Hall.

13. Practice Teaching—C. Practical use of the material of all
grades, and application of methods of teaching, are required. The
students of this course demonstrate their understanding of the principles
of school music in lessons given to a class under the supervision
of the instructor. The presentation of the material, its relation
to what the pupil has already acquired, the text to be studied,
and the principles to be illustrated by original blackboard work,
form the basis of the lesson.

Daily, from 9:30 to 10:30. Mrs. Waterman. Madison Hall.

14. Harmony—C. This is a practical course in music writing and
analysis. The analysis of melodies, on scale and chord basis, and
the art of writing for four voices from the subject of daily lessons,
for which considerable written work is demanded. This course
takes up the analysis and construction of music to the Secondary
Seventh Chords. This course is indispensable to the proper reading
and interpretation of part music. Particular attention is given
to the leading of voices, sequences, cadences, and the simpler modulations.

Daily, from 3:30 to 4:30. Professor —. Madison Hall.

15. Chorus.—All students working for a grade teacher's certificate,
or a supervisor's certificate, will be required to take this course. The
time is devoted to chorus singing and to instruction in the technical
and interpretative elements of choral music. Cantatas and choruses
suitable for high and normal school will be studied and performed
by the chorus.

Daily, from 3:30 to 4:30. Professor —. Madison Hall.

16. Piano Playing.—This course is intended to meet the demand of
teachers who wish instruction in piano playing or coaching. The
work includes a concise method of acquiring Technique in the shortest
possible time and eliminates to a large extent the numerous books
of studies, etudes and techniques preparing teachers for their future
work.

Fee, $10—Not free to Virginia teachers. Two hours per week.
Hours to be arranged. Herr Schneider.

17. Violin Playing.—The purpose of this course is to prepare and
assist teachers in teaching singing in Public Schools, this method
saves the voice and facilitate the progress of the pupils, also gives
a good foundation for homework and self-improvement in violin.

Fee, $10—Not free to Virginia teachers. Two lessons per week.
Hours and place to be arranged. Herr Schneider.

Note.—Should there be a sufficient number of beginners, small
classes may be formed and lower rates will be given.

Certificate Credit.—A certificate for work accomplished is granted
to all those who pass successfully the required examinations at the
close of the session.

A grade teacher's certificate is granted to those who complete the
first-year and second-year courses and pass satisfactory examinations.

A supervisor's certificate is granted to those who complete the
course and satisfactorily pass the examinations.

Professional Summer School Certificate Advanced Grade—Music


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1 and 5, 6 and 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14; Professional Grammar Grade
Certificate—Music 6 and 7, 8, 9, 10; Professional Primary Grade Certificate—Music
2, 3, 4, and 5.

PHILOSOPHY

1. Deductive Logic.—After an introductory discussion of the
standpoint, problems, and methods of logic and a brief survey of the
historical development of the science, the class will be engaged with
a detailed study of deduction or the logic of proof. Special attention
will be directed to the analysis of logical arguments and to the
detection of fallacies in deductive reasoning.

Text-Book.—Creighton's Introductory Logic.

Daily, from 9:30 to 11:30 for the first three weeks. Professor
Lefevre and Mr. Balz. Education Building, N. E., Upstairs, Room 6.

2. Inductive Logic.—This course will be devoted to a study of
inductive methods of reasoning, and will be devoted to a study of
topics as: enumeration and statistical methods; determination of
causal relations; analogy; formation and use of hypotheses; and
the fallacies of inductive reasoning.

Text-Book.—Creighton's Introductory Logic.

Daily, from 9:30 to 11:30 for the last three weeks. Professor Lefevre
and Mr. Balz. Education Building, N. E. Upstairs, Room 6.

3. Philosophy.—This course is designed as an introduction to the
study of Philosophy to meet the needs of students who desire to
learn the historical development of the problems and systems of
modern philosophy. The lectures will follow the narrative of philosophical
speculation from the Renaissance to the present time. The
endeavor will be made to represent the various theories in their relation
to the science and general civilization of the ages to which
they belong, and to estimate their social, political and educational
significance.

Text-Books.—Roger's Students' History of Philosophy; Royce's
Spirit of Modern Philosophy. Collateral reading to be assigned.

Daily, from 12:15 to 1:15. Professor Lefevre and Mr. Balz. Education
Building, N. E. Upstairs, Room 6.

University Credit.—Any student who fulfills the conditions set
forth on page 17, and who successfully completes Course 1, Course
2 in logic and Course 3 in philosophy, will receive credit for philosophy
B1, as outlined in the University of Virginia catalogue. Any student
who completes successfully Course 3 and fulfills required conditions
will be given credit for one term's work in Philosophy 4C as
an elective at large for the B. A. degree, provided that this course
may not be credited at the same time towards the fulfillment of the
requirements in Philosophy B1.

Certificate Credit.—Summer School Professional Certificate College
Grade—Philosophy 1, 2, and 3.

PHYSICAL TRAINING

Aesthetic Gymnastics.—This course is conducted with two principal
aims which are of hygienic and educational value. First, to stimulate
the proper functioning of the bodily organs thus developing
proper carriage, grace, and strength. Second, to cultivate the faculties
of attention, self-control, judgment, etc. The work consists


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of free gymnastics, including marching, running, use of Indian clubs,
skipping-reeds, etc., and the art of Classic Dancing. It is so arranged
as to be adapted to public school work as well as to afford a
happy diversion, and a most healthful mental and bodily stimulant.

Note.—Students are required to have gymnasium suits consisting
of bloomers and white cotton blouses, and leather-soled gymnasium
shoes. The above may be procured from a local dealer.

Note.—Karl Jansen will give two daily lessons in corrective school
gymnastics, from July 6th to 20th.

Daily, from 3:30 to 4:30. 4:30 to 5:30. Miss Marshall. Fayerweather
Gymnasium.

Certificate Credit.—Professional Elementary Certificate—Grammar
Grades, Physical Training 1; Professional Elementary Certificate
Primary Grades, Physical Training 1.

PHYSICS

1. High School Physics for Teachers.—The topics treated in this
course will be mechanics, heat, and sound. It will be accompanied
by four hours laboratory work per week, the student performing
about twenty-five experiments in Millikan and Gale's Laboratory
Course in Physics.
Physics 3 (a), however, is more than the equivalent
of this laboratory work and may be substituted for it.

Text-Books.—Millikan and Gale's First Course in Physics and Laboratory
Course in Physics.

Daily, lectures, from 8:30 to 9:30. Mr. Diggs. Rouss Physical
Laboratory, Room 20.

Monday and Tuesday, laboratory, from 2:30 to 4:30. Mr. —.
Rouss Physical Laboratory, Room 21.

2. High School Physics for Teachers.—The topics treated in this
course will be magnetism, electricity, and light. It will be accompanied
by four hours laboratory work per week, the student performing
about twenty-five experiments in Millikin and Gale's Laboratory
Course in Physics.

Physics 3(b) however, is more than the equivalent of this laboratory
work and may be substituted for it.

Text-Books.—Millikan and Gale's First Course in Physics and Laboratory
Course in Physics.

Daily, lectures, from 9:30 to 10:30. Mr. Diggs. Rouss Physical
Laboratory, Room 20.

Wednesday and Thursday, laboratory, from 2:30 to 4:30. Mr.
—. Rouss Physical Laboratory, Room 21.

Note.—Courses 1 and 2 will consist of recitations based upon the
text, accompanied by suitable illustrations and experimental demonstrations
by the instructor. The apparatus used in every case will be
of the simplest type such as will most likely be found in the equipment
of the average high school. The laboratory work will give the
student ample opportunity to familiarize himself with laboratory
methods and apparatus; whenever necessary the experiments will
be abbreviated so as to allow the student to become acquainted with
all those belonging to the subjects treated without the expenditure
of any more time than indicated. The student is urged, however,
to substitute courses 3(a) and 3(b) for this laboratory work both
from the standpoint of credits and thoroughness.

A number of lecture-table experiments will be conducted in order
to clear up difficult points, but the usual method of recitation will


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be the discussion of assigned topics and such questions as may arise,
as it is desired that these courses be practical and helpful.

3. Laboratory Course in Physics.—This course is designed for students
and teachers who may have had the equivalent of Courses 1
and 2 without much laboratory work. The student will perform and
report fully all the experiments in the text used. It is divided into
two parts (a) and (b); the former covering the ground of Course 1,
the latter, of Course 2.

Text.—Millikan and Gale's Laboratory Course in Physics.

Daily, from 8:30 to 11:30. Mr. —. Rouss Physical Laboratory,
Room 21.

4. Physics—Laboratory Arts.—This course aims to give teachers
instruction in devising simple apparatus, such as siphons, pipettes,
air thermometers, hydrometers, Boyle's law tubes, barometers, vacuum
tubes, electrolysis tubes, water hammers, silvered mirrors,
magnets, compass needles, dip needles, galvanoscopes, galvanometers,
resistance coils, etc. Where possible apparatus will be made to meet
the needs of the individual student. The materials needed will be
supplied by the Summer School and the apparatus made will belong
to the student making it.

Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, 8:30 to 10:30. Professor
Sparrow. Rouss Laboratory, Room 21. Courses 1, 2, and 3
prerequisite.

Note.—A laboratory fee of two dollars will be charged for each of
Courses 4, 6, and 8. In each of courses 1, 2, 3, and 4 there must be
an enrollment of at least four students in order that the course be
given. Small fees will also be charged for other laboratory courses.

5. General Physics.—This course is designed for those desiring the
equivalent of college work, and will cover the topics of mechanics,
heat and sound, which will be considered by lectures, experimental
demonstrations, and problems.

6. Laboratory Course.—This course is parallel to Course 5 and
should accompany it.

Text-Book.—Ames and Bliss' Manual of Experiments in Physics.

Daily, from 8:30 to 11:30. Professor Sparrow. Rouss Physical
Laboratory, Room 20.

7. General Physics.—This course is designed for those desiring the
equivalent of regular college work, and the lectures, experimental
demonstrations and problems will cover the topics of light, electricity
and magnetism.

Text-Book.—Kimball's College Physics.

Daily, from 12:15 to 1:15. Professor Sparrow. Rouss Physical
Laboratory, Room 20.

8. Laboratory Course.—This course is designed to accompany
Course 7.

Text-Book.—Ames and Bliss' Manual of Experiments in Physics.

Note.—Courses 6, 7 and 8 will be given in 1914. Courses 5, 6 and
8 in 1915. A knowledge of logarithms and of plane trigonometry
through right triangles is essential.

University Credit.—Courses 5, 6, 7, and 8, outlined above, will,
when successfully completed in the aggregate, entitle the student
who has fulfilled conditions stated on page 17 to a credit for the
college year's course in physics given in the University during the
regular session, namely, Course B1.

Certificate Credit.—Professional Summer School Certificate Advanced
Grade—Physics 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6; Summer School Professional
Certificate—College Grade—Physics 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6.


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PSYCHOLOGY

1. General Psychology.—This course will be concerned with some
of the fundamental psychological processes, such as attention, sensation,
perception, imagination, memory, emotion, reasoning, and
similar topics. There will be introductory lectures on neural action
and habit. The study and discussions of the text will be supplemented
by references to standard works on the subject.

Text-Book.—Angell's Psychology.

Daily, from 8:30 to 9:30. Professor Balz. Education Building,
N. E. Upstairs, Room 6.

2. Physiological Psychology.—This course will consist of a study
of the development of the nervous system, its structure and functions;
especial attention will be given to the organs of sense, with
reference to experimental results, and to the interpretation of certain
psychological processes in the light of the structure and functions
of the nervous system.

Text-Book.—To be announced.

Daily, 12:15 to 1:15. Professor Balz. Education Building, N. E.
Upstairs, Room 10.

3. Child Psychology—Infancy and Childhood.—This course presents
the successive stages of physical and mental development from
conception to puberty. Attention is directed to the problem of
heredity as determining future individual and racial characteristics;
and to the modifications caused by the environment. Consideration
will be given to the psychology of the various forms of behavior
such as play, curiosity, instinctive activity, and their significance for
the educative process.

Daily, 9 to 10. First three weeks. Professor Martin, Education
Building, Room 3.

4. Child Psychology—Adolescence.—The problems of the adolescent
period as related to childhood and maturity. The rise of new
instincts and emotions, the development of self-consciousness and
social traits, as determining the growth of interests and an outlook
upon life. These discussions will include consideration of the content
and method of pedagogical procedure for children of the adolescent
age.

Daily, 9 to 10. Second three weeks. Professor Martin, Education
Building, Room 3.

University Credit.—Any student who fulfills the conditions set
forth on page 17 and completes successfully Courses 1 and 2 and
Course 5 (see p. 38) on the Psychology of Education will be given
credit for one session hour in Philosophy B3.

Certificate Credit.—Professional Summer School Certificate—College
Grade—Psychology 1 and 2; Professional Summer School Certificate—Grammar
Grade and Primary Grade—Psychology 3 and 4.

SPANISH

1. Beginners's Spanish.—This course is intended for beginners in
Spanish. The subjects treated will be pronunciation, grammar, oral
and written exercises, dictation, and translation. Especial attention


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will be given to oral exercises as Mr. Gaither has been a resident
of Mexico City for eight years and speaks the language fluently.

Text-Books.—Hill and Ford's Grammar; Valde's La Hermana San
Lulpicio.

Daily, from 3:30 to 4:30. Mr. Gaither. Rotunda, Room 2.

Note.—This course is not free to Virginia Teachers. Fees to be
arranged with Mr. Gaither.

STORY TELLING

Children's Literature.

1. Basis of selection.

(a) Brief study of short story, structure, style, essential requisites.

(b) Study of type stories, embodying essential characteristics of
all stories for children.

2. Story Method.

  • (a) Preparation.

  • (b) Presentation.

  • (c) Adaptation.

Lectures supplemented by class exercises in each.

3. Usable Groups of Stories.

(a) Animal stories, (b) folk and fairy tales, (c) hero stories,
(d) pure fun stories. Types and bibliographies of each group.

Daily, from 8:30 to 9:30. Cabell Hall, Room 8. Monday,
Wednesday and Friday, Miss Stockard. Tuesday and Thursday.
Law Building, Room 3. 4:30. Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday,
twilight meeting, 7:20.

Note.—An informal gathering for the purpose of singing and telling
stories will be held at twilight on Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday
evenings, on Rotunda or Cabell Hall steps.

Certificate Credit.—Professional Summer School Certificate—Primary
Grades.

WRITING

1. Muscular Movement Penmanship.—The teaching of rapid easy
business writing is dependent on the proper training of the large
tireless muscles of the forearm instead of the incapable little muscles
of the fingers. The Palmer Method of Business Writing, which
will be used in this course, provides explicit instructions in muscular
movement writing and its application to the actual writing of letters
and words. The work will be graded to meet the needs of teachers
of all grades.

Daily, 8:30 to 11:30. Sections I, II, and III. Mr. Locker. Law
Building, Room 5.

Certificate Credit.—Professional Grammar Grade Certificate—Professional
Primary Grade Certificate.


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SCHEDULE OF COURSES.

    8:30 to 9:30.

  • Agriculture 6, C. L.; 9, C. H. 8.

  • Art, from 8:30 to 4:30. E. B. 5.

  • Astronomy 1, R. L.

  • Biology 1, C. H. 12.

  • Bookkeeping, C. H. 4.

  • Chemistry 5, W. R. L.

  • Domestic Economy 1 (Cooking), Section I, E. B.

  • Domestic Economy 3 (Sewing), Section I, W. R. L.

  • Drawing 1, Section I, M. L. 2.

  • Drawing 3, Section I, M. L. 1.

  • Education 4, E. B. 4.

  • Education 11, Section I, E. B. 3.

  • Education 12, E. B. 2.

  • English 6, L. B. 2.

  • English 9, L. B. 1.

  • English 11, C. H. 3.

  • Games, Section I, F.

  • Geography 4, Section I, R. 4.

  • German 1, R. 2.

  • History 1, R. 3.

  • Latin 1, Section I, C. H. 1.

  • Manual Training 4, E. B.

  • Manual Training 5, Section I, E. B.

  • Mathematics 1, C. H. 6.

  • Mathematics 11, Section I, C. H. 5.

  • Music 1, 5, 8 and 12, M. H.

  • Physics 1 and 6, R. L. 20.

  • Physics 3, R. L. 21.

  • Physics 4, R. L. 21.

  • Physics 5, R. L. 21.

  • Psychology 1, E. B. 6.

  • Story Telling, R. 8.

  • Writing, R. 1.

    9:30 to 10:30.

  • Agriculture 1, Section I, C. L.

  • Astronomy 2, R. L.

  • Biology 1, C. H. 12.

  • Chemistry 2, W. R. L.

  • Commercial Arithmetic, C. H. 4.

  • Domestic Economy 6, Section I.

  • Drawing 1, Section II, M. L. 2.

  • Drawing 2, Section I, M. L. 1.

  • Education 1, E. B. 2.

  • Education 5, E. B. 4.

  • Education 10, Section I, E. B. 1.

  • Education 14, Wash. H.

  • English 2, L. B. 2.

  • French 2, R. 1.

  • Games, Section II, F.

  • Geography 1, R. 4.

  • German 2, R. 2.

  • History 2, R. 3.

  • History 8, C. H. 3.

  • Latin 4 (Vergil), C. H. 1.

  • Manual Training 5, Section I, E. B.

  • Manual Training 4, E. B.

  • Mathematics 4, C. H. 6.

  • Mathematics 9, Section II, C. H. 8.

  • Mathematics 10, Section I, C. H. 5.

  • Music 2, 6, 7 and 13, M. H.

  • Philosophy 1 (Logic), E. B. 6.

  • Psychology 1 and 2, E. B. 6.

  • Physics 2 and 6, R. L. 20.

  • Physics 3, R. L. 21.

  • Physics 6, R. L. 20.

  • Writing, R. 1.


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    10:30 to 11:30.

  • Agriculture 5, C. L.

  • Astronomy 3, R. L.

  • Biology 1, C. H. 12.

  • Chemistry 1, W. R. L.

  • Domestic Economy 1 (Cooking), Section II, and 4, E. B.

  • Drawing 5, M. L. 1.

  • Education 2, E. B. 5.

  • Education 3, E. B. 3.

  • Education 6, E. B. 4.

  • Education 10, Section III, E. B. 2.

  • English 3, L. B. 1.

  • English 10, Section I, L. B. 2.

  • French 1, R. 1.

  • German 3, R. 2.

  • Geography 4, Section 2, R. 4.

  • History 4, R. 3.

  • Latin 5 (Cicero), C. H. 1.

  • Latin 6 (Quintillian), C. H. 1.

  • Manual Training 1, E. B.

  • Manual Training 5, Section II, E. B.

  • Mathematics 2, C. H. 6.

  • Music 3, 10 and 14, M. H.

  • Philosophy, E. B. 6.

  • Physics 3, R. L. 21.

  • Physics 6, R. L. 20.

  • Writing, R. 1.

    11:30 to 12:15.

  • General Assembly.

    12:15 to 1:15.

  • Agriculture 3, W. R. L., 8 C. L.

  • Astronomy 4, R. L.

  • Chemistry (Laboratory) W. R. L.

  • Domestic Economy 1 (Cooking), Section II, W. R. L.

  • Domestic Economy 5, Section I.

  • Drawing 2, Section II, M. L. 1.

  • Education 8, E. B. 3.

  • Education 14, Wash. H.

  • English 1, L. B. 2.

  • English 4, L. B. 1.

  • English 10, Section II, L. B. 3.

  • French 3, R. 1.

  • Games, Section III, F.

  • Geography 2, R. 4.

  • History 3, R. 3.

  • Latin 7 (Lucretuis), C. H. 1.

  • Manual Training 1, E. B. 11.

  • Manual Training 5, Section II, E. B.

  • Mathematics 3, C. H. 6.

  • Mathematics 9, Section I, C. H. 8.

  • Music 4, 9, 11, M. H.

  • Psychology 2, E. B. 3.

  • Psychology 2, E. B. 10.

  • Physics 7, R. L. 20.

    1:15 to 2:30

  • Recess.

    2:30 to 3:30.

  • Agriculture 4, C. L.

  • Biology 2, C. H. 12.

  • Chemistry (Laboratory) W. R. L.

  • Domestic Economy 1, Section III, E. B.; 2 and 3, Section II, W. R. L.

  • Drawing 1, Section III, M. L. 2.

  • Education 9, E. B. 3.

  • Education 10, Section II, E. B. 1.

  • Education 13, E. B. 4.

  • English 11, C. H. 3.

  • History 5, R. 3.

  • Latin 1, Section II, C. H. 1.

  • Manual Training, 3 and 6, E. B.

  • Mathematics 9, Section III, C. H. 8.


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  • Mathematics 11, Section II, C. H. 5.

  • Physics 1 and 2, 2 and 3, Section II, R. L. 21.

  • Short Hand, C. H. 4.

    3:30 to 4:30.

  • Agriculture 7, E. B.

  • Biology 2, C. H. 12.

  • Domestic Economy 1 (Cooking), Section III, W. R. L.

  • Drawing 4, Section I, M. L. 2.

  • Education 10, Section IV, E. B. 4.

  • English 5, L. B. 2.

  • History 6, R. 3.

  • History 7, R. 4.

  • Latin 3 (Cicero), C. H. 1.

  • Manual Training, 3 and 6, E. B.

  • Mathematics 5, C. H. 7.

  • Mathematics 8, C. H. 8.

  • Mathematics 10, Section II, C. H. 5.

  • Music 14, 15, M. H.

  • Physical Training I, F.

  • Physics 1 and 2.

  • Spanish, R. 2.

    4:30 to 5:30.

  • Agriculture 1, Section II, C. L.

  • Agriculture 2, W. R. L.

  • Biology 2, C. H. 12.

  • Drawing 4, Section II, M. L. 2.

  • Education 7, E. B. 1.

  • Education 11, Section II, E. B. 3.

  • English 7, L. B. 2.

  • English 8, L. B. 1.

  • Geography 3, R. 4.

  • Hygiene 1, R. 3.

  • Mathematics 6, C. H. 7.

  • Physical Training II, F.

  • Story Telling 2, L. B. 3 (Tues. Thurs.).

    5:30 to 6:30.

  • Field Botany, R. 3.

  • Mathematics 7, C. H. 7.

C. H.—Cabell Hall; C. L.—Chemical Laboratory; F.—Fayerweather Gymnasium;
M. H.—Madison Hall; M. L.—Mechanical Laboratory; R.—Rotunda; R. L.—Rouss
Physical Laboratory; L. B.—Law Building; W. R. L.—West Range Laboratory;
E. B.—Education Building.