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ENTRANCE REQUIREMENTS.
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
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ENTRANCE REQUIREMENTS.

For admission to any department of the University the general conditions
are the following:

1. Sufficient Age:—The minimum legal age is sixteen years; seventeen
or more are advised by the Faculty. Eighteen years is the minimum
for admission to the Department of Law.

2. Good Character:—This must be attested by a certificate of honorable
dismissal from the school last attended, or by other valid proof.

3. Adequate Preparation:—This must be such as will enable the candidate
to meet the requirements for admission to the several departments
of the University, as detailed below.

For admission to the Department of Graduate Studies, see page 185.

For admission to the Department of Medicine, see page 213.

For admission to the College, the Department of Law, or the Department
of Engineering,
the candidate must present a certificate or pass an
equivalent examination. In either case the amount of preparation required
is measured in terms of units.

A unit represents a year's study in any subject in a secondary school,
constituting approximately a quarter of a full year's work.

This definition of a unit takes the four-year high-school course as a
basis, and assumes that the length of the school year is from thirty-six
to forty weeks, that a period is from forty to sixty minutes in length,
and that the study is pursued for four or five periods a week; but under
ordinary circumstances a satisfactory year's work in any subject can not
be accomplished in less than one hundred and twenty hours, or their
equivalent. Schools organized on any other than a four-year basis can,
nevertheless, estimate their work in terms of this unit.

For the requirements as to the number and selection of units for
entrance to the three departments mentioned above, see, for the
College, p. 175; for the Department of Law, p. 193: for the Department
of Engineering,
p. 233.


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SUBJECTS ACCEPTED FOR ADMISSION.

The subjects accepted for admission and their values in units are given
below in tabulated form. Fuller definitions of the units follow on page 85.

                                                                   
Subject  Topics  Units 
English A  Grammar and Grammatical Analysis 
English B  Composition and Rhetoric 
English C  Critical Study of Specimens of English Literature 
English D  History of English and American Literature 
Mathematics A  Algebra to Quadratic Equations 
Mathematics B  Quadratics, Progressions and the Binomial Formula  ½ 
Mathematics C  Plane Geometry 
Mathematics D1  Solid Geometry  ½ 
Mathematics D2  Plane Trigonometry  ½ 
History A  Greek and Roman History 
History B  Mediæval and Modern European History 
History C  English History 
History D  American History and Civil Government 
Latin A  Grammar, Composition, and Translation 
Latin B  Cæsar's Gallic War, I-IV; Grammar; Composition 
Latin C  Cicero's Orations (6); Grammar; Composition 
Latin D  Virgil's Æneid, I-VI; Grammar; Composition 
Greek A  Elementary Grammar, Composition, and Translation 
Greek B  Xenophon's Anabasis, I-IV; Grammar; Composition 
German A  Elementary Grammar, Composition, and Translation 
German B  Intermediate Grammar, Composition, and Translation 
French A  Elementary Grammar, Composition, and Translation 
French B  Intermediate Grammar, Composition, and Translation 
Spanish A  Elementary Grammar, Composition, and Translation 
Spanish B  Intermediate Grammar, Composition, and Translation 
Science A  Physical Geography 
Science B  Inorganic Chemistry 
Science C  Experimental Physics 
Science D  Botany  ½ 
Science E  Zoölogy  ½ 
Science F  Agriculture (special schools) 
Drawing  Mechanical and Projection Drawing 
Shop-Work  Wood-Work, Forging, and Machine-Work 

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ADMISSION BY CERTIFICATE.

For admission by certificate the applicant should file with the Dean
of the University not later than the first of September a Certificate of
Preparation, made out on the blank form furnished by the University.
This certificate must come from a recognized institution of collegiate rank,
from an accredited public high school, or from an accredited private secondary
school.

The candidate for admission from a public high school must be a
graduate of an accredited four-year high school.

The candidate for admission from a private secondary school must
show the equivalent of four years of satisfactory high-school work.

In every case the candidate for admission must have the recommendation
of the principal of the certifying school.

Schools in Virginia are accredited by the Faculty of this university
after inspection and report by a committee of the Faculty (see pages 96-99).
The Dean of the University is further authorized to accept certificates
from schools outside Virginia, accredited by their own State Universities
or institutions of equal rank, provided the courses of study offered
in such schools meet the requirements demanded of accredited schools in
this State.

If in any accredited school the number of periods given to a study, or
the length of the period, is below the specified standard, the credit for such
subject is reduced pro rata. In the science subjects only half-credit is
allowed unless individual laboratory notebooks, properly attested by the
teacher in charge, are filed with the certificate.

Certificates of preparation from private tutors will in no case be
accepted; students thus prepared must in all cases take the entrance
examinations.

ADMISSION BY EXAMINATION.

For admission by examination the candidate must present himself at
the University in June or in September, according to the dates given in
the Programme of Entrance Examinations. The examinations are held
under the honor system, no paper being accepted unless accompanied by
the usual pledge (see page 15). All candidates who take their examinations
at the times appointed are tested free of charge. In case of delayed
entrance, where the grounds of postponement are good, the President of
the University may admit the candidate to a special examination, for which
an additional fee of five dollars is charged. The fee is payable in advance
and is in no case returned.


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PROGRAMME OF ENTRANCE EXAMINATIONS.

                   
June, 1915  9-11 A. M.  11-1 A. M.  3-5 P. M.  Sept., 1915 
Mon. 7  Bot. & Zoöl.  Phys. Geog.  Physics  Mon. 13 
French A  French B  History D 
Tues. 8  English A  English B  English C  Tues. 14 
Greek A  Greek B 
Wed. 9  History A  History B  History C  Wed. 15 
Spanish A  Spanish B  Chemistry 
Thur. 10  Math. A  Math. B  Math. C  Thurs. 16 
Fri. 11  German A  German B  Math. D  Fri. 17 
Sat. 12  Latin A & B  Latin C  Latin D  Sat. 18 

ADVANCED STANDING AND COLLEGE CREDIT.

For admission to the College with advanced standing on work done at
a secondary school, or with college credit for work done at another college
or university, see page 175.

For credit in the Department of Graduate Studies for graduate work
done in another university, see page 188.

For credit in the Department of Law, the Department of Medicine,
and the Department of Engineering, for work done in another professional
school, see, respectively, pages 196, 216, and 258.

CONDITIONED STUDENTS.

For admission with conditions to the College, see page 176; to the
Department of Law, page 195; to the Department of Engineering, page 233.

SPECIAL STUDENTS.

For admission to the College as a special student, see page 176; to the
Department of Law, page 195; to the Department of Engineering, page 233.


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DEFINITIONS OF THE UNITS.

The following definitions of the entrance units are designed on the one
hand to guide the student in his preparation for the entrance examinations,
and on the other to govern the high-school principal and teachers
in organizing their courses of instruction.

ENGLISH.

The courses outlined, in accordance with the programme of most high
schools, take into account English, (1) as a language, (2) as a means of
expression. (3) as a literature—all so intimately connected, however, that
the proper study of each will bear indirectly on the other two.

English A. Grammar and Grammatical Analysis:—The parts of
speech with inflections and uses of each; syntax, especially of nouns, verbs,
and conjunctions; detailed study of sentence-structure, including capitalization
and punctuation. Text-book recommended: Baskervill and Sewell's
English Grammar. Grammar and analysis might well be taught through
two years of the high school. (One unit.)

English B. Composition and Rhetoric:—The choice, arrangement,
and connection of words, with exercises on synonyms, antonyms, and degrees
and shades of meaning; fundamental qualities of style, with selected and
original examples; the sentence in detail as to unity, coherence, and proportion,
with ample exercises in constructing sentences of varied types and
emphasis; the paragraph with reference to the placing of the topic and to
the attainment of unity, continuity, and emphasis, with abundant exercises
in composing good paragraphs; much practice in planning and writing
simple compositions on familiar subjects under the heads of narration,
description, exposition, and argumentation. Text-book recommended:
Brooks and Hubbard's Composition-Rhetoric. Practice in composition
should continue through the entire high-school course, though formal
rhetoric may be studied but one year. (One unit.)

English C. Critical Study of Selected Specimens of English Literature:—The
specimens for reading and study designated for college entrance
requirements by the joint committee of colleges and secondary schools.
These required books or their equivalents should be studied throughout the
high-school course under the guidance of the instructor. Parallel reading
should be encouraged and intelligent conversation about books directed.
(One unit.)

The college entrance requirements in English for 1913-1919, inclusive,
are:


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A. Reading.

The aim of this part of the requirement is to foster in the student the
habit of intelligent reading and to develop a taste for good literature, by
giving him a first-hand knowledge of some of its best specimens. He should
read the books carefully, but his attention should not be so fixed upon
details that he fails to appreciate the main purpose and charm of what
he reads.

With a view to large freedom of choice, the books provided for reading
are arranged in the following groups, from each of which at least two
selections are to be made, except as otherwise provided under Group 1.

Classics in Translation.

Group 1: The Old Testament, comprising at least the chief narrative
episodes in Genesis, Exodus, Joshua, Judges, Samuel, Kings, and Daniel,
together with the books of Ruth and Esther; The Odyssey, with the omission,
if desired, of Books I, II, III, IV, V, XV, XVI, XVII; The Iliad,
with the omission, if desired, of Books XI, XIII, XIV, XV, XVII, XXI;
The Æneid. The Odyssey, Iliad, and Æneid should be read in English
translations of recognized literary excellence.

For any selection from this group a selection from any other group
may be substituted.

Shakespeare.

Group 2: Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream, The Merchant
of Venice, As You Like It, Twelfth Night, The Tempest, Romeo and Juliet,
King John, Richard II, Richard III, Henry V, Coriolanus, Julius Cæsar,
Macbeth, Hamlet
(if not chosen for study under B).

Prose Fiction.

Group 3: Malory's Morte d'Arthur (about 100 pages); Bunyan's Pilgrim's
Progress, Part I;
Swift's Gulliver's Travels (voyages to Lilliput and
to Brobdingnag); Defoe's Robinson Crusoe, Part I; Goldsmith's Vicar of
Wakefield;
Frances Burney's Evelina; any one of Scott's Novels; any
one of Jane Austen's Novels; Maria Edgeworth's Castle Rackrent, or The
Absentee;
any one of Dickens' Novels; any one of Thackeray's Novels:
any one of George Eliot's Novels; Mrs. Gaskell's Cranford; Kingsley's
Westward Ho! or Hereward, the Wake; Reade's The Cloister and the
Hearth;
Blackmore's Lorna Doone; Hughes' Tom Brown's Schooldays;
Stevenson's Treasure Island, or Kidnapped, or Master of Ballantrae; any
one of Cooper's Novels; a selection of Poe's Tales; Hawthorne's The House
of the Seven Gables;
or Twice-Told Tales, or Mosses from an Old Manse; a
collection of Short Stories by various standard writers.


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Essays, Biography, Etc.

Group 4: Addison and Steele's The Sir Roger de Coverley Papers, or
selections from the Tatler and Spectator (about 200 pages); selections
from Boswell's Life of Johnson (about 200 pages); Franklin's Autobiography;
selections from Irving's Sketch Book (about 200 pages), or his Life
of Goldsmith;
Southey's Life of Nelson; selections from Lamb's Essays of
Elia
(about 100 pages); selections from Lockhart's Life of Scott (about
200 pages); Thackeray's lectures on Swift, Addison, and Steele in the English
Humorists;
any one of the following essays of Macaulay: Lord Clive,
Warren Hastings, Milton, Addison, Goldsmith, Frederick the Great, Madame
d'Arblay;
selections from Trevelyan's Life of Macaulay (about 200 pages);
Ruskin's Sesame and Lilies, or selections from Ruskin's works (about 150
pages); Dana's Two Years Before the Mast; selections from Lincoln's works,
including at least the two Inaugurals, the Speeches in Independence Hall
and at Gettysburg, the Last Public Address, the Letter to Horace Greeley,
together with a brief memoir or estimate of Lincoln; Parkman's The Oregon
Trail;
Thoreau's Walden; selections from Lowell's essays (about 150
pages); Holmes' The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table; Stevenson's An
Inland Voyage
and Travels with a Donkey; Huxley's Autobiography and
selections from Lay Sermons, including the addresses on Improving Natural
Knowledge, A Liberal Education,
and A Piece of Chalk; a collection of
Essays by Bacon, Lamb, DeQuincey, Hazlitt, Emerson and later writers;
a collection of Letters by various standard writers.

Poetry.

Group 5: Palgrave's Golden Treasury (First Series), Books II and
III,
with special attention to Dryden, Collins, Gray, Cowper, and Burns;
Palgrave's Golden Treasury (First Series), Book IV, with special attention
to Wordsworth, Keats, and Shelley (if not chosen for study under B);
Goldsmith's The Traveller and The Deserted Village; Pope's The Rape of
the Lock;
a collection of English and Scottish Ballads, as, for example,
some Robin Hood ballads, The Battle of Otterburn, King Estmere, Young
Beichan, Bewick, and Grahame, Sir Patrick Spens,
and a selection from
later ballads; Coleridge's The Ancient Mariner, Christabel, and Kubla
Khan;
Byron's Childe Harold, Canto III or IV, and The Prisoner of Chillon;
Scott's The Lady of the Lake, or Marmion; Macaulay's The Lays of
Ancient Rome, The Battle of Naseby, The Armada, Ivry;
Tennyson's The
Princess,
or Gareth and Lynette, Lancelot and Elaine, and Passing of
Arthur;
Browning's Cavalier Tunes, The Lost Leader, How They Brought
the Good News from Ghent to Aix, Home Thoughts from Abroad, Home
Thoughts from the Sea, Incident of the French Camp, Hervé Riel, Pheidippides,
My Last Duchess, Up at a Villa—Down in the City, The Italian in
England, The Patriot, The Pied Piper, "De Gustibus," Instans Tyrannus;


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Arnold's Sohrab and Rustum, and The Forsaken Merman; selections from
American poetry, with special attention to Poe, Lowell, Longfellow, and
Whittier.

B. Study.

This part of the requirement is intended as a natural and logical continuation
of the student's earlier reading, with greater stress laid upon
form and style, the exact meaning of words and phrases, and the understanding
of allusions. The books provided for study are arranged in four
groups, from each of which one selection is to be made.

Drama.

Group 1: Shakespeare's Julius Cæsar, Macbeth, Hamlet.

Poetry.

Group 2: Milton's L'Allegro, Il Penseroso, and either Comus or Lycidas;
Tennyson's The Coming of Arthur, The Holy Grail, and The Passing
of Arthur;
the selections from Wordsworth, Keats, and Shelley, in Book IV
of Palgrave's Golden Treasury (First Series).

Oratory.

Group 3: Burke's Speech on Conciliation with America; Macaulay's
Speech on Copyright and Lincoln's Speech at Cooper Union; Washington's
Farewell Address and Webster's First Bunker Hill Oration.

Essays.

Group 4: Carlyle's Essay on Burns, with a selection from Burns'
Poems; Macaulay's Life of Johnson; Emerson's Essay on Manners.

English D. History of English and American Literature. (One
unit.)

MATHEMATICS.

Mathematics A. Algebra to Quadratic Equations:—The four fundamental
operations for rational algebraic expressions; factoring, determination
of highest common factor and lowest common multiple by factoring;
fractions, including complex fractions; ratio and proportion; linear
equations, both numerical and literal, containing one or more unknown
quantities; problems depending on linear equations; radicals, including
the extraction of the square root of polynomials and numbers; exponents
including the fractional and negative. (One unit.)


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Mathematics B. Quadratic Equations, Progressions, and the Binomial
Formula:
—Quadratic equations, both numerical and literal; simple
cases of equations with one or more unknown quantities, that can be solved
by the methods of linear or quadratic equations; problems depending upon
quadratic equations; the binomial formula for positive integral exponents;
the formulas for the nth term and the sum of the terms of arithmetic and
geometric progressions, with applications. (Half unit.)

Mathematics C. Plane Geometry, with Original Exercises:—The
usual theorems and constructions of good text-books, including the general
properties of plane rectilinear figures; the circle and the measurement of
angles; similar polygons; areas; regular polygons and the measurement
of the circle. The solution of numerous original exercises, including loci
problems. Application to the mensuration of lines and plane surfaces.
(One unit.)

Mathematics D1. Solid Geometry, with Original Exercises:—The
usual theorems and constructions of good text-books, including the relations
of planes and lines in space; the properties and measurement of
prisms, pyramids, cylinders, and cones; the sphere and the spherical triangle.
The solution of numerous original exercises, including loci problems.
Applications to the mensuration of surfaces and solids. (Half unit.)

Mathematics D2. Plane Trigonometry:—Definitions and relations
of the six trigonometric functions as ratios: circular measurement of
angles; proofs of principal formulas; product formulas; trigonometric
transformations. Solution of simple trigonometric equations. Theory and
use of logarithms (without introducing infinite series). Solution of right
and oblique triangles with applications. (Half unit.)

HISTORY.

History A. Greek and Roman History:—The geography of Greece
and the early development of ancient Hellas; state and national development
to the period of the foreign wars; the foreign wars and the supremacy
of Athens; the wars between the Greek states; the Macedonian invasion
and the empire of Alexander the Great; the geography of Italy and
early Roman legend; the Roman republic and its supremacy in Italy;
the conquest of the Mediterranean; the transition from republic to monarchy;
the ancient world under the Roman empire: the transition from
ancient to mediæval history, down to the death of Charlemagne. (One
unit.)

History B. Mediæval and Modern European History:—The Carolingian
empire and feudalism; the papacy and the beginnings of the new
Germano-Roman empire; the formation of France; the East and the crusades;


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Christian and feudal civilization; the era of the Renaissance; the
Protestant revolution and the religious wars; the ascendancy of France
and the age of Louis Quatorze; the rise of Russia and Prussia and colonial
expansion; the French revolution; Napoleon and the Napoleonic wars;
the growth of nationality, democracy, and liberty in the nineteenth century.
(One unit.)

History C. English History:—The geography of England and early
Britain; Saxon England; Norman England; England under the Plantagenets;
Tudor England; Puritans and Royalists; the constitutional monarchy;
the modern British empire. (One unit.)

History D. American History and Civil Government:—(1) History:
The earliest discoveries to 1607; Virginia and the other Southern colonies;
Massachusetts and the other New England colonies; New York and the
other Middle colonies; the colonies in the eighteenth century; the causes
of the Revolution; the Revolution, the Confederation and the Constitution;
Federalist supremacy to 1801; Jeffersonian Republicanism to 1817; economic
and political reorganization to 1829; the National Democracy to
1844; slavery in the Territories to 1860; the War of Secession, Reconstruction
and the problems of peace to 1900. (2) Civil Government: The
early forms of government; the colonies and colonial government; colonial
union and the Revolution; the Confederation and the constitution; the
political parties and party machinery; the existing Federal Government;
the foreign relations of the United States. (One unit.)

LATIN.

The Latin units are construed in accordance with the following Report
of the Commission on College Entrance Requirements in Latin:

I. AMOUNT AND RANGE OF THE READING REQUIRED.

1. The Latin reading required of candidates for admission to college,
without regard to the prescription of particular authors and works, shall
be not less in amount than Cæsar, Gallic War, I-IV; Cicero, the orations
against Catiline, for the Manilian Law, and for Archias; Vergil, Æneid.
I-VI.

2. The amount of reading specified above shall be selected by the
schools from the following authors and works: Cæsar (Gallic War and
the Civil War) and Nepos (Lives); Cicero (Orations, Letters, and De
Senectute) and Sallust (Catiline and Jugurthine War); Vergil (Bucolies,
Georgics, and Æneid) and Ovid (Metamorphoses, Fasti, and Tristia).

II. SUBJECTS AND SCOPE OF THE EXAMINATIONS.

1. Translation at Sight. Candidates will be examined in translation
at sight of both prose and verse. The vocabulary, constructions, and range


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of ideas of the passages set will be suited to the preparation secured by
the reading indicated above.

2. Prescribed Reading. Candidates will be examined also upon the
following prescribed reading: Cicero, orations for the Manilian Law and
for Archias, and Vergil, Æneid, I, II, and either IV or VI at the option
of the candidate, with questions on subject-matter, literary and historical
allusions, and prosody. Every paper in which passages from the prescribed
reading are set for translation will contain also one or more passages for
translation at sight; and candidates must deal satisfactorily with both
these parts of the paper, or they will not be given credit for either part.

3. Grammar and Composition. The examinations in grammar and
composition will demand thorough knowledge of all regular inlections,
all common irregular forms, and the ordinary syntax and vocabulary of
the prose authors read in school, with ability to use this knowledge in
writing simple Latin prose. The words, constructions, and range of ideas
called for in the examinations in composition will be such as are common
in the reading of the year, or years, covered by the particular examination.

Note.—The examinations in grammar and composition may be either in
separate papers or combined with other parts of the Latin examination, at the
option of each individual institution; and nothing in any of the above definitions
of the requirements shall be taken to prevent any college from asking questions
on the grammar, prosody, or subject-matter of any of the passages set for translation,
if it so desires.

SUGGESTIONS CONCERNING PREPARATION.

Exercises in translation at sight should begin in school with the first
lessons in which Latin sentences of any length occur, and should continue
throughout the course with sufficient frequency to insure correct methods
of work on the part of the student. From the outset particular attention
should be given to developing the ability to take in the meaning of each
word—and so, gradually, of the whole sentence—just as it stands; the
sentence should be read and understood in the order of the original, with
full appreciation of the force of each word as it comes, so far as this can
be known or inferred from that which has preceded and from the form and
the position of the word itself. The habit of reading in this way should
be encouraged and cultivated as the best preparation for all the translating
that the student has to do. No translation, however, should be a mechanical
metaphrase. Nor should it be a mere loose paraphrase. The full
meaning of the passage to be translated, gathered in the way described
above, should finally be expressed in clear and natural English.

A written examination can not test the ear or tongue, but proper
instruction in any language will necessarily include the training of both.
The school work in Latin, therefore, should include much reading aloud,
writing from dictation, and translation from the teacher's reading. Learning
suitable passages by heart is also very useful, and should be more
practiced.

The work in composition should give the student a better understanding
of the Latin he is reading at the time, if it is prose, and greater facility
in reading. It is desirable, however, that there should be systematic and
regular work in composition during the time in which poetry is read as
well; for this work the prose authors already studied should be used as
models.


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In accordance with the above report, the following detailed description
of the four units of Latin is given:

Latin A. Grammar, Composition, and Translation:—The Roman pronunciation;
habitual observance of accent and quantity; thorough mastery
of the regular forms; the simple rules of word-formation and derivation;
syntax of the cases, tenses, and modes; accusative and infinitive, relative
and conditional sentences, indirect discourse, and the subjunctive. Translation
into Latin of easy detached sentences illustrating grammatical principles,
and of very easy continuous prose based upon the vocabulary of
Cæsar and Cicero. (One unit.)

Latin B. Cæsar's Gallic War, Books I-IV, Grammar, Composition:
A reasonable acquaintance with the time and purpose of the author; intelligent
grasp of the thought; ability to summarize the narrative as a
whole; ready comprehension of the normal forms and constructions: a
reasonable facility in reading at sight passages of like vocabulary and
construction. As much as one book of Cæsar may be substituted by an
equivalent amount of Viri Romæ, or other Latin prose. In connection
with all of the reading there must be constant practice in prose composition,
as well as in sight translation. (One unit.)

Latin C. Cicero's Orations against Catiline, and Two Others, Grammar,
Composition:
—A reasonable acquaintance with the time and circumstances
of the Catilinarian conspiracy; intelligent appreciation of the
orator's thought and purpose; ability to summarize the oration as a whole:
readiness in explaining normal forms and constructions; reasonable facility
in reading at sight passages of like vocabulary and structure. As much
as two orations may be substituted by an equivalent amount of Nepos, or
other Latin prose. In connection with all of the reading there must be
constant practice in prose composition, as well as in sight translation.
(One unit.)

Latin D. Vergil's Æneid, Books I-VI, Grammar, Composition:—A
reasonable acquaintance with the time and purpose of the poet; intelligent
appreciation of the poet's thought and art; ability to summarize the story
as a whole; acquaintance with the typical forms and constructions of
poetry; practical mastery of the heroic hexameter; reasonable facility in
reading at sight passages of like vocabulary and difficulty. The third and
fifth book of the Æneid may be substituted by an equivalent amount of
Ovid, or other Latin epic poetry. In connection with all reading there
should be constant practice in prose composition, as well as in sight translation.
(One unit.)

GREEK.

Greek A. Elementary Grammar, Composition, and Translation:
Careful drill in the inflections of Attic prose, and the fundamental principles


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of syntax; translation of detached sentences from English into
Greek, and from Greek into English. (One unit.)

Greek B. Xenophon's Anabasis I-IV, Grammar and Composition:
Idiomatic translation, with constant attention to forms and syntax,
and to the subject-matter of the author; prose composition based on Xenophon.
(One unit.)

MODERN LANGUAGES.

German A. Elementary Grammar, Composition, and Translation:
Careful drill in pronunciation, dictation, and the rudiments of grammar;
abundant easy exercises in composition both oral and written; and the
reading of about 100 pages of elementary graduated texts. (One unit.)

German B. Intermediate Grammar, Composition, and Translation:
Three hundred pages of German of intermediate grade, with constant drill
in grammar, constant practice in dictation and conversation, daily oral
exercise in rendering English into German and weekly exercises in German
composition. (One unit.)

French A. Elementary Grammar, Composition, and Translation:
Careful drill in pronunciation, dictation, and the rudiments of grammar;
abundant easy exercises in composition, both oral and written; and the
translation of 150 pages of elementary graduated texts. (One unit.)

French B. Intermediate Grammar, Composition, and Translation:
Four hundred and fifty pages of modern French prose and poetry, with
continued drill in the grammar, constant practice in dictation and in conversation,
daily oral exercises in rendering English into French, and periodical
written exercises in French composition. (One unit.)

Spanish A. Elementary Grammar, Composition, and Translation:
Careful drill in pronunciation, dictation, and the rudiments of grammar;
abundant easy exercises in composition, both oral and written; and the
translation of 150 pages of graduated texts. (One unit.)

Spanish B. Intermediate Grammar, Composition, and Translation:
Four hundred and fifty pages of modern Spanish prose and poetry, with
continued drill in the grammar, constant practice in dictation and in conversation,
daily oral exercises in rendering English into Spanish, and
periodical written exercises in Spanish composition. (One unit.)

SCIENCE.

Science A. Physical Geography:—The earth as a planet; planetary
movements; magnetism of the earth; internal heat of the earth; volcanoes;
earthquakes; arrangement of land masses; forms of land; relief forms of


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continents; islands; properties of water; waters of the land; drainage;
continental drainage; the sea; the oceans; waves and tides; currents of
the sea; physical properties of the atmosphere; climate; winds and circulation
of the air; storms; moisture of the air; hail; snow and glaciers;
electrical and optical phenomena of the atmosphere; relations between
plants and animals; range of plants and animals; man, including range
of human habitation, division into races, conditions favorable to civilization,
and man's influence on physical geography; influence of physical geography
on the industries of countries. Text-books recommended: Maury's
Physical Geography, or Tarr's Elementary Physical Geography. (One
unit.)

Science B. Inorganic Chemistry:—The ground covered by Remsen's
Introduction to the Study of Chemistry, with about one hundred hours
in the laboratory, or enough time to perform intelligently the usual experiments
given in a high-school laboratory course. (One unit.)

Science C. Experimental Physics:—Mechanics, Sound, Light, Heat.
Electricity, and Magnetism. The work should include (a) lecture-table
demonstrations by the teacher, with appropriate yet simple apparatus; (b)
text-book work, in which the pupil solves numerical problems; and (c)
laboratory exercises by the pupil—all three embodying fundamental
principles of the subject. In the laboratory work at least thirty exercises
should be performed; the following distribution is advised: In Mechanics,
14; in Sound, 1; in Light, 5; in Heat, 3; in Electricity and Magnetism,
7. (One unit.)

Science D. Botany:—Sound elementary instruction in the structure
and functions of plants, and their classification, based upon such a textbook
as Coulter's Plant Structure, and supplemented by laboratory work.
(Half unit.)

Science E. Zoölogy:—Sound elementary instruction in the structure
and functions of animals, and their classification, based upon such a textbook
as Jordan and Kellogg's Animal Forms, and supplemented by laboratory
work. (Half unit.)

DRAWING AND SHOP-WORK.

Drawing: Mechanical and Projection Drawing:—Projections of
cubes, prisms, and pyramids in simple positions; method of revolving the
solid into new positions; method of changing the planes of projection;
projections of the three round bodies in simple positions and in revolved
positions; sections by planes parallel to the planes of projections; sections
by inclined planes; developments of prisms, pyramids, cylinders, and cones;
intersections of polyedra and curved surfaces; distances from a point to a
point or a plane or a line; angles between planes and lines. (One unit.)


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Shop-Work: Wood-Work, Forging, and Machine-Work:—The candidate
must present valid certificates covering at least 240 hours of competent
instruction with adequate appliances in these topics. About 80 hours
should be devoted to wood-work, 40 to forging, and 120 to machine-work.
He should be familiar with the usual shop processes, the standard methods
of work, and the properties of the ordinary constructive materials. (One
unit.)

In these units a practical examination in drawing and in shop-work
is given to validate the certificate of training.


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ACCREDITED SCHOOLS.

Conditions for the Accrediting of Schools.—A school desiring to be
placed on the accredited list of the University should apply to the Chairman
of the Committee on Accredited Schools. In response to the application,
a blank form inquiring into the course of study, faculty, etc., of the
school will be sent to the principal. Upon the return of this blank, properly
filled out, a representative of the University will be sent to inspect
the school, and to report on such matters as the quality of instruction, the
general intellectual and moral tone of the school, and the efficiency of the
equipment, especially library and laboratory facilities. If his report is
favorable and the Committee concurs, the school will be accepted and the
principal duly notified. The name of the school will be entered upon the
list of accredited schools and published in the catalogue of the University.

Each school must meet the following requirements:

(1) A course of study covering not less than four years of high-school
work, based on at least seven years of competent elementary instruction,
and embracing at least sixteen units as defined on pages 85-95. These sixteen
units must include English A, B, C, Mathematics A, B, C, and one
unit of History. Those schools which wish to prepare students for the
study of Latin in the University must offer instruction in this subject to
the extent of four units.

(2) A teaching force of not less than three teachers, each of whom
devotes his entire time to high-school instruction, and conducts not more
than seven recitation periods a day. The University will scrutinize with
extreme care any school in which any instructor teaches more than six
periods a day. All teachers should possess college training, and preference
will be given to those schools in which the teachers are college graduates.

List of Accredited Schools.—The following is a list of the schools
within the State of Virginia at present accredited by the University. This
list is revised annually by the Committee, and any school which fails to
report to the Committee when requested to do so, or which fails to maintain
the standard above specified, may be removed therefrom.

             

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Abingdon High School  Abingdon 
Accomac High School  Accomac 
Alexandria City High School  Alexandria 
Amelia High School  Amelia 
Appomattox Agricultural High School  Appomattox 
Augusta Military Academy  Fort Defiance 
Barton Heights High School  Richmond 
Bedford City High School  Bedford 
Big Stone Gap High School  Big Stone Gap 
Blacksburg High School  Blacksburg 
Blackstone Academy  Blackstone 
Blackstone High School  Blackstone 
Bristol High School  Bristol 
Buchanan High School  Buchanan 
Buena Vista High School  Buena Vista 
Burkeville High School  Burkeville 
Cape Charles High School  Cape Charles 
Chamberlayne School  Richmond 
Charlotte High School  Charlotte 
Charlottesville High School  Charlottesville 
Chase City High School  Chase City 
Chatham Training School  Chatham 
Chester Agricultural High School  Chester 
Christiansburg High School  Christiansburg 
Churchland High School  Churchland 
Clifton Forge High School  Clifton Forge 
Cluster Springs Academy  Cluster Springs 
Covington High School  Covington 
Crewe High School  Crewe 
Danville High School  Danville 
Danville School  Danville 
Deep Creek High School  Portsmouth, R. F. D. No. 2 
Driver High School  Driver 
Dublin Institute  Dublin 
East Stone Gap High School  East Stone Gap 
Elk Creek High School  Elk Creek 
Emporia High School  Emporia 
Episcopal High School  Alexandria 
Farmville High School  Farmville 
Fincastle High School  Fincastle 
Fishburne Military Academy  Waynesboro 
Fork Union Academy  Fork Union 
Franklin High School  Franklin 
Franktown-Nassawadox High School  Franktown 
Fredericksburg High School  Fredericksburg 
Front Royal High School  Front Royal 
Galax High School  Galax 
Graham High School  Graham 
Hampton High School  Hampton 
Harrisonburg High School  Harrisonburg 
Highland Park High School  Richmond 
Highland Springs High School  Highland Springs 
Jefferson School  Charlottesville 
Lafayette High School  Norfolk 
Lawrenceville High School  Lawrenceville 
Lebanon High School  Lebanon 
Leesburg High School  Leesburg 
Lexington High School  Lexington 
Lincoln High School  Lincoln 
Louisa High School  Louisa 
Luray High School  Luray 
Lynchburg High School  Lynchburg 
Manassas Agricultural High School  Manassas 
Martinsville High School  Martinsville 
Massanutten Academy  Woodstock 
McGuire's University School  Richmond 
Middletown High School  Middletown 
Miller School  Miller School 
Monterey High School  Monterey 
Morrisville High School  Morrisville 
New London Academy  Forest Depot 
Newport News High School  Newport News 
Norfolk High School (Maury)  Norfolk 
Norfolk Academy  Norfolk 
Norton High School  Norton 
Oceana High School  Oceana 
Onancock High School  Onancock 
Orange High School  Orange 
Palmyra High School  Palmyra 
Pearisburg High School  Pearisburg 
Petersburg High School  Petersburg 
Pocahontas High School  Pocahontas 
Portsmouth High School  Portsmouth 
Pulaski High School  Pulaski 
Radford High School  Radford 
Randolph-Macon Academy  Bedford City 
Randolph-Macon Academy  Front Royal 
Reedville High School  Reedville 
Richlands High School  Richlands 
Richmond Academy  Richmond 
Richmond High School (John Marshall)  Richmond 
Roanoke High School  Roanoke 
Rural Retreat High School  Rural Retreat 
Salem High School  Salem 
Scottsville High School  Scottsville 
Shenandoah Collegiate Institute  Dayton 
Shenandoah Valley Academy  Winchester 
Shoemaker High School  Gate City 
Smithfield High School  Smithfield 
South Boston High School  South Boston 
South Hill High School  South Hill 
South Norfolk High School  South Norfolk 
Staunton High School  Staunton 
Staunton Military Academy  Staunton 
Strasburg High School  Strasburg 
Stuyvesant School  Warrenton 
Suffolk High School (Jefferson)  Suffolk 
Tazewell High School  Tazewell 
Toano High School  Toano 
Turbeville Agricultural High School  Turbeville 
Wakefield High School  Wakefield 
Warrenton High School  Warrenton 
Waverly High School  Waverly 
Western Branch High School  Portsmouth 
Whaleyville High School  Whaleyville 
White Stone High School  White Stone 
Wicomico High School  Wicomico 
Winchester High School  Winchester 
Woodberry Forest School  Woodberry Forest 
Woodlawn High School  Woodlawn 
Woodstock High School  Woodstock 
Wytheville High School  Wytheville 

Partial Accrediting of Schools.—High schools which can not fulfil all
the requirements for a fully accredited school, but which offer four years
of work, covering at least twelve units, may be partially accredited, upon
those subjects which have been approved by the Committee. Graduates of
such schools will be credited with the twelve approved units and will be
given examinations upon the other two units required for entrance.

List of Partially Accredited Schools:

                         
Botetourt High School  Botetourt 
Capeville High School  Capeville 
Cheriton High School  Cheriton 
Courtland High School  Courtland 
Culpeper High School  Culpeper 
Fairfield High School  Fairfield 
Grundy High School  Grundy 
Houston High School  Houston 
Jarratt High School  Jarratt 
Kinsale High School  Kinsale 
New Castle High School  New Castle 
Stony Creek High School  Stony Creek 
Sunnyside High School  Champe