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SUMMER SCHOOL.
  
  
  
  
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SUMMER SCHOOL.

OFFICERS.

Edwin Anderson Alderman, Ph.B., D.C.L., LL.D.,
President.

Charles Gilmore Maphis,
Director.

GOVERNING BOARD.

Charles William Kent, M.A., Ph.D., LL.D., Litt.D.,
Professor of English Literature.

William Holding Echols, B.S., C.E.,
Professor of Mathematics.

Thomas Fitz-Hugh, M. A.,
Professor of Latin.

William Harry Heck, M.A., Ph.D.,
Professor of Education.

Harris Hart, A.B.,
Superintendent of Schools, Roanoke, Va.,
Registrar.

Mrs. S. S. Matthews,
Assistant Registrar.

Everett E. Worrell,
State School Inspector, Department of Public Instruction, Richmond, Va.,
Registrar for the Department of Public Instruction.

Fred M. Alexander,
Principal Cape Charles High School, Virginia,
Local Manager, Rooms and Boarding.

C. B. Givens, Jr.,
Principal Bellevue Grammar School, Danville, Va.
Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds.


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FACULTY.

                                                               

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Ella Agnew  Demonstration Work 
(Director Girls' Demonstration Work for Virginia). 
Ruth Floyd Anderson  Kindergarten Education 
Albert Balz  Psychology and Philosophy 
(Adjunct Professor of Philosophy, University of Virginia). 
James Cook Bardin  Spanish 
(Adjunct Professor of Romanic Languages, University of Virginia). 
Mary R. Barnette  Penmanship 
(Instructor in Writing, Normal Training Department, and Head of Department
of Writing, Intermediate School, Roanoke, Va.). 
Anna Barringer  Drawing 
(Director of Manual Arts, Industrial Institute and College, Columbus, Miss.). 
John Edward Barsby  Manual Training 
Alon Bement  Drawing 
(Assistant Professor of Fine Arts, Teachers College, Columbia University). 
Robert Montgomery Bird  Chemistry 
(Professor of Chemistry, University of Virginia). 
Arthur V. Bishop  Latin 
(Professor of Latin and Greek, Hollins College). 
John Blair  Drawing 
(Superintendent of Schools, Wilmington, N. C.). 
Winifred Brainerd  Manual Arts 
(Supervisor Manual Training in Grades, Indianapolis, Indiana). 
Sarah C. Brooks  Primary Methods 
(Teacher in Richmond Normal School). 
Gardner L. Carter  Chemistry 
(Instructor in Chemistry, University of Virginia). 
Isobel Davidson  Primary School Methods 
(Supervisor of Primary Grades, Baltimore County, Maryland). 
J. W. Davis  Manual Training 
(Principal High School, Shellman, Ga.). 
Mary Louise Dinwiddie  Library Methods 
(Assistant Librarian of the University of Virginia). 
William Holding Echols  Mathematics 
(Professor of Mathematics, University of Virginia). 
Mary Eisenbise  Manual Training 
(Assistant Supervisor of Drawing and Manual Arts, Columbus, Ohio). 
William Harrison Faulkner  German 
(Professor of Germanic Languages, University of Virginia). 
Aden L. Fillmore  Music 
(Director of Music and Supervisor of Music in Pittsburgh Public
Schools). 
Thomas Fitz-Hugh  Latin and Greek 
(Professor of Latin, University of Virginia). 
Florence C. Fox  Reading 
(Specialist in Educational Systems, U. S. Bureau of Education, Washington,
D. C.). 
Margaret E. Fraser  Music 
(Director of Music, State Normal School, Fredericksburg, Virginia;
Supervisor of Music in Fredericksburg Public Schools). 
Malcolm Woodson Gannaway  High-School Work 
(Assistant in English Literature, University of Virginia.) 
Charles De Geer  French 
(Professor of French, Westhampton College, Richmond, Va.; Head of
French Department of Virginia Randolph Ellett School). 
C. B. Givens, Jr.  Algebra 
(Principal Bellevue Grammar School, Danville, Virginia). 
Robert Kent Gooch  High-School Work 
(Assistant in Philosophy and Mathematics, University of Virginia). 
Ludlow Griscom  Bird Study 
(Secretary The Linnaean Society of New York). 
Elizabeth M. Grubb  Games 
(Instructor in Norfolk Primary Schools). 
Irene Haislip  Pipe Organ 
Alfred Lawrence Hall-Quest  Education 
(Associate Professor of Education, University of Virginia). 
William Harry Heck  Education 
(Professor of Education, University of Virginia). 
Clifton Fremont Hodge  Nature Study 
(Professor of Biology, Clark University). 
W. J. B. Housman  Education 
(Scout Executive, Richmond, Virginia) 
Walter Huffington  History 
(Superintendent of Schools, Greensboro, N. C.). 
Edwin Leon Hughes  Geography and Illustration 
(Superintendent of City Schools, Greenville, S. C.). 
Karl Jansen  Swedish Corrective Gymnastics 
(Swedish Lecturer and Instructor in Swedish Gymnastics). 
Frederick Juchhoff  Commercial Subjects 
(Public Accountant and Auditor, Chicago). 
Loulie C. Kelley  Geography 
(Instructor in Physical Geography, John Marshall High School, Richmond, Va.). 
William Allison Kepner  Biology 
(Associate Professor of Biology, University of Virginia). 
Joseph Wm. Kinghorne  Poultry Clubs and Organizations 
William Alexander Lambeth  Field Botany and Hygiene 
(Professor of Hygiene, University of Virginia). 
Dabney Stewart Lancaster  Agriculture 
(Assistant in Animal Husbandry, State Agricultural and Mechanical College,
Virginia). 
Albert Lefevre  Philosophy and Logic 
(Professor of Philosophy, University of Virginia). 
Willie London  English 
(Instructor in English, Roanoke High School). 
J. Moore McConnell  History 
(Professor of History and Economics, Davidson College). 
Raymond McFarland  Education 
(Professor of Secondary Education, Middleburg College, Vermont). 
James Sugars McLemore  Latin 
(Adjunct Professor of Latin, University of Virginia). 
Colin Mackenzie Mackall  Chemistry 
(Professor of Chemistry, University of the South). 
Arthur W. MacMahon  Political Economy 
(Instructor in Politics, Department of Public Law and Jurisprudence, Columbia
University). 
Wallace Hopkins Magee  Manual Training 
(Director of Industrial Education, John Marshall High School, Richmond, Va.) 
Max L. Margolis  Education 
(Professor of Biblical Philosophy, Dropsie College, Philadelphia). 
Sarah Rosetter Marshall  Aesthetic Gymnastics 
(Director of Physical Training, Fredericksburg Normal School). 
Melvin Albert Martin  Education and Psychology 
(Assistant in Philosophy, Columbia University). 
M. T. Meade  Commercial Course 
(Instructor in Mathematics, John Marshall High School, Richmond, Va.). 
John Calvin Metcalf  English 
(Professor of English, Richmond College). 
James Newton Michie  Mathematics 
(Assistant Professor of Mathematics, Agricultural and Mechanical College of
Texas). 
Grace Eldridge Mix  Kindergarten Education 
(Supervisor of Kindergarten Education, State Normal School, Farmville, Va.). 
Mary S. Moffett  Arithmetic 
(Supervising Principal of Herndon High Schools, Virginia). 
Walter Alexander Montgomery  Latin and Greek 
(Professor of Latin, Richmond College). 
J. K. Morrison  Poultry 
(Demonstrator with the Missouri Poultry Experiment Station). 
Eda Lord Murphy  Domestic Science 
(Director of Domestic Science, Georgia Normal and Industrial College). 
Weldon Thomas Myers  English 
(Professor of English, Converse College). 
Harold Hopkins Neff  High-School Work and German 
(Instructor in Romanic Languages, University of Virginia). 
Georgia O'Keefe  Drawing 
Ida O'Neal  Domestic Economy 
(Supervisor Domestic Service, Washington, D. C.). 
James Morris Page  Mathematics 
(Dean of the University of Virginia). 
Thomas Walker Page  History and Civil Government 
(Professor of Economics, University of Virginia). 
John Shelton Patton  Library Methods 
(Librarian of the University of Virginia). 
Annie Peebles  Assistant in Physical Culture 
(Teacher in Petersburg Schools). 
Elizabeth Trippe Pickett  Games 
(Primary Teacher, Public Schools, Norfolk, Virginia). 
Willoughby Reade  English and Elocution 
(Head of Department of English and Elocution in the Episcopal High School,
Virginia; Instructor in Church Music and Public Speaking in the
Theological Seminary of Virginia). 
Rena Rossman  Domestic Economy 
(Head of Department of Domestic Science, Miller Manual Training School, Va.). 
Erwin Schneider  Piano and Violin 
Edwin H. Scott  Agriculture 
(Professor of Agriculture and Biology, Georgia Normal and Industrial College). 
Katherine K. Scott  Games 
(Instructor in Richmond Public Schools). 
Edwin Francis Shewmake, Jr.  English 
(Principal and Head of English Department, Staunton High School, Virginia). 
Thomas McNider Simpson, Jr.  Astronomy 
(Professor of Mathematics, Converse College). 
Charles Alphonso Smith  English 
(Professor of English, University of Virginia). 
Duncan Smith  Art 
(Instructor Art Students' League, New York). 
Carroll Mason Sparrow  Physics 
(Adjunct Professor of Physics, University of Virginia). 
Marietta Stockard  Story Telling and Kindergarten 
(Assistant Kindergarten Training Teacher, Washington, D. C., Normal
School, and Lecturer on Children's Literature in George Washington
University). 
William Hay Taliaferro  Biology 
(Assistant in Biology, University of Virginia). 
Marian Thompson  Domestic Science 
Miles Franklin Trummell  Physics 
(Assistant in Mechanical Engineering, University of Virginia). 
George Armstrong Wauchope  English 
(Professor of English, University of South Carolina). 
Robert Franklin Webb  Commercial Course 
(Principal Commercial Department of Charlottesville High School). 
Orie S. Whitaker  Domestic Economy 
(Instructor in Brunswick, Ga., High School). 
Daisy Wingfield  Music 
(Supervisor of Music, Roanoke Public Schools). 
Oscar I. Woodley  Education 
(President of State Normal School, Fairmont, West Virginia). 
Hugh Skipworth Worthington  French 
(Instructor in Romanic Languages, Johns Hopkins University). 
Richard Thomas Wyche  Story Telling 
(Story Specialist). 

SUMMARY OF ATTENDANCE.

1915.

         
From Virginia  967 
From twenty-three other States  255 
From two Foreign Countries 
Rural Life Conference  125 
Total  1,350 

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ANNOUNCEMENTS.

The session will begin Tuesday, June 20, and close Thursday, August 3,
1916. Tuesday, June 20, will be devoted to the registration of students. All
students should register on this day. The entire Faculty of the Summer School
will be in the auditorium of Peabody Hall near the Registrar's office during
June 20 for consultation. 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 Tuesday, June 27.

FEES.

For Non-Virginia Students.—A single registration fee of twelve dollars
will be charged each non-Virginia student. 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.

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

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. To meet local expenses the State Board of Education has
fixed a registration fee of $1.00 for a four weeks' term and $1.50 for a six
weeks' term for all the Summer Schools of the State, and these fees will be
charged here. There are a few special courses offered to meet certain demands
but not necessary for certificate credit, for which fees will be charged. The fee
for each is designated in the catalogue. Small fees in laboratory courses will
also be charged all students who register in them.

CREDIT.

Certificates will be granted in each course in the University Department to
those students who attain a grade of 75 per cent. This grade will be the
average of the recitation and examination marks. No student will be permitted
to take more than three courses for the Summer School Professional Certificates
—Advanced Grade, or for University credit, without the permission of the
Director.

University of Virginia College Credit.—College credit in the University
of Virginia may be obtained on the following courses: Astonomy 1 and 2;
Biology 1, 2 and 3; Chemistry 3 and 4; Latin 5, 6 and 7; Education, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5,
6, 7; English 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8; French 1, 2, 3 and 4; German 1, 2, 3, 4; History
1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6; Mathematics 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7; Philosophy 1, 2, 3; Physics 5, 6,
7, 8; Psychology 1, 2. The conditions upon which this credit is granted are as
follows:


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(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 Rules
and Courses, 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 are 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 session-hours.

Credit in Other Colleges.—The work of the Summer School is recognized
by standard colleges everywhere, so that students who satisfy the entrance
requirements have no difficulty in securing transfer of credits.

VIRGINIA STATE CERTIFICATES.

Teachers outside of Virginia are not bound in the choice of their courses
by 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 issued by a State Superintendent
or a State Board of Examiners, and approved in advance by the Department


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of Public Instruction of Virginia, 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 following general conditions must be fulfilled by all applicants berore
they can enter upon the work for the Summer School Professional Certificate,
Advanced Grade, or College Grade. 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, Literature, Library Methods,
Music, Mathematics, Hygiene and Sanitation, Physics, Psychology, Philosophy,
Manual Training, Spanish.

The Summer School Professional Certificate—College Grade.—Minimum
Entrance Requirements.—The holder of a Virginia First Grade High School
Certificate or the holder of a Virginia First Grade Certificate who presents
satisfactory evidence of having completed the equivalent of a standard four-year
high school course, shall be granted a Summer School Professional Certificate—College
Grade, under the terms and conditions hereinafter stated.

The certificate and other credentials which entitle the applicant to enter
and pursue the course of study herein outlined must be presented to and
approved by the conductor of the Summer School before the applicant can be
registered and admitted to classes.


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The Summer School Professional Certificate—College Grade entitles the
holder to teach all the elementary branches, but only the high school branches
named in the certificate.

General Requirements.—The courses prescribed in any of the branches
hereinafter stated for the Summer School Professional Certificate—College
Grade, must embrace no work unless it be of College Grade, requiring minimum
recitation periods of sixty minutes each. These courses must be taken in a
summer school at a registered college or university and must be completed
within a period of three years from the date of beginning. In all cases a statement
of each professor under whom the course is pursued, to the effect that the
applicant is highly proficient in his branch must accompany the final report.

The following "Content Table" gives the number of hours or recitation
periods required in each branch, and in addition thereto the applicant must
complete a course of thirty hours in educational psychology and the principles
of teaching.

This certificate shall continue in force for seven years, and may be renewed
for a similar period from time to time.

N. B.—This course must not be given at any school in Virginia unless it is
specially mentioned and advertised in its literature; no supposedly equal course
at any other than a designated summer school will be recognized or accepted
by the Department of Public Instruction.

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

Agriculture, 90 hours.

Botany, 60 hours.

Chemistry, 120 hours, of which 60 hours must be laboratory work.

Drawing, 90 hours.

English, 120 hours, including 30 hours in English Grammer, 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, 120 hours, of which 60 hours shall be laboratory work.

Physical Geography, 60 hours.

Spanish, 90 hours.

Zoölogy, 60 hours.


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

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

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

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

TEACHERS' POSITIONS.

The University Bureau of Appointments receives demands for teachers
each year, and 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 Bureau.

EXPENSES.

Board and Rooms.—Board and room may be had at prices ranging from
$4 per week, where several stay in the same room, upward, 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 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.

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 to the local agent for reduced rates some time in
advance. In case the agent has received no instructions to sell reduced rate


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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.

ENTERTAINMENTS.

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. The Coburn Players last session presented three
plays: The Yellow Jacket, An Imaginary Sick Man, and Macbeth. The Clifford
B. Devereux Company gave three plays: She Stoops to Conquer, As You Like
It, and A Modern Drama; the Frank Lea Short Company, three plays, The
Ernest Gamble Concert Party, one recital; Jennie Dufau, one recital. Negotiations
are pending for a number of high-class attractions for the session of 1916.
The whole course includes about twenty numbers and the price of a season
ticket is $2.50, making the cost about the same as moving pictures. Besides
there will be moving pictures regularly in Peabody Hall.


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SUMMARY OF COURSES OFFERED.

The following courses were offered in the Summer School session of 1915
and will, with slight changes, be repeated in the session of 1916:

  • Agriculture (Ten Courses).

  • Astronomy (Two Courses)

  • Biology (Three Courses).

  • Field Botany.

  • Chemistry (Five Courses).

  • Civil Government.

  • Commercial Courses (Six Courses).

  • Domestic Economy (Seven Courses).

  • Drawing (Seven Courses).

  • Education (Twenty Courses).

  • English (Thirteen Courses).

  • French (Five Courses).

  • Games.

  • Geography (Five Courses).

  • German (Four Courses).

  • Greek (Three Courses).

  • History (Eight Courses).

  • High School with Supervised Study (Sixteen Courses).

  • Hygiene and Sanitation.

  • Latin (Seven Courses).

  • Library Economy (Two Courses).

  • Logic (Two Courses).

  • Manual Training (Seven Courses).

  • Mathematics (Eleven Courses).

  • Music (Nineteen Courses).

  • Nature Study.

  • Philosophy.

  • Physical Training.

  • Physics (Eight Courses).

  • Political Science (Two Courses).

  • Psychology (Two Courses).

  • Spanish (Three Courses).

  • Story Telling (Two Courses).

  • Writing (Three Courses).