Publications of the Association of Collegiate AlumnaeAssociation of Collegiate Alumnae, 1898 - Women |
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Page 24
... leaving college she will find the world her field of study and not a dreary waste . MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY ELLEN H. RICHARDS II . We should look upon the collegiate course more 24 The Association of Collegiate Alumnæ.
... leaving college she will find the world her field of study and not a dreary waste . MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY ELLEN H. RICHARDS II . We should look upon the collegiate course more 24 The Association of Collegiate Alumnæ.
Page 43
... Massachusetts Legislature could not have been effected by single individuals . The reasons I have thus far mentioned for associated action have had reference , in the main , to the protection of educational interests ; but the positive ...
... Massachusetts Legislature could not have been effected by single individuals . The reasons I have thus far mentioned for associated action have had reference , in the main , to the protection of educational interests ; but the positive ...
Page 47
... Massachusetts , as in other colonies , the establishment of educa- tional institutions proceeded from above downward - first the col- lege , and then the fitting schools . By the first two Massachusetts laws of 1642 and 1647 was ...
... Massachusetts , as in other colonies , the establishment of educa- tional institutions proceeded from above downward - first the col- lege , and then the fitting schools . By the first two Massachusetts laws of 1642 and 1647 was ...
Page 48
... Massachusetts , in 1680 , it adopted educational statutes practically the same as those of Massachusetts . Maine had no existence separate from that of Massachusetts for two hundred years , and at the time of the Revolution Rhode Island ...
... Massachusetts , in 1680 , it adopted educational statutes practically the same as those of Massachusetts . Maine had no existence separate from that of Massachusetts for two hundred years , and at the time of the Revolution Rhode Island ...
Page 52
... Massachusetts State Board of Education , had an intimate knowledge of the Boston schools and their needs . She recognized the need of better sanitary conditions , better educational methods , and , espe- cially , of a higher grade of ...
... Massachusetts State Board of Education , had an intimate knowledge of the Boston schools and their needs . She recognized the need of better sanitary conditions , better educational methods , and , espe- cially , of a higher grade of ...
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Common terms and phrases
Alice Freeman Palmer American annual meeting appointed Asso Association of Collegiate Barnard Barnard College better Board Boston Branch President Bryn Mawr College Carey Thomas cent Chairman Chicago clubs college graduates college women Collegiate Alumnæ Committee curriculum degree discussion Education Association elective Elizabeth Lawrence English Federation fees Fellowship Fund German girls give given grades Greek Harvard held high school higher education Illinois institutions intellectual interest investigation knowledge Latin Mary Massachusetts mathematics membership ment Michigan mind Miss National Educational Association organization possible practical present President Eliot Professor public schools pupils question Radcliffe College salaries scholarship secondary schools Secretary Secretary-Treasurer social teachers teaching things tion to-day tuition University Vassar Vassar College voted Wellesley Wellesley College Western Reserve University woman York Branch
Popular passages
Page 5 - My native country! thee, Land of the noble free, Thy name I love; I love thy rocks and rills, Thy woods and templed hills; My heart with rapture thrills, .Like that above.
Page 22 - ... whose mind is stored with a knowledge of the great and fundamental truths of nature and of the laws of her operations; one who, no stunted ascetic, is full of life and fire, but whose passions are trained to come to heel by a vigorous will, the servant of a tender conscience; who has learned to love all beauty, whether of nature or of art, to hate all vileness, and to respect others as himself.
Page 96 - Station, through the kindness of the " Association for Maintaining the American Women's Table at the Zoological Station at Naples and for Promoting Scientific Research by Women.
Page 71 - Each memoir must be accompanied by a sealed envelope enclosing the author's name and superscribed with a motto corresponding to one borne by the manuscript...
Page 71 - THE Association for Maintaining the American Women's Table at the Zoological Station at Naples and for Promoting Scientific Research by Women announces the offer of a third prize of 2ool.
Page 8 - I could not at all understand some of it, it delighted me beyond description ; and it produced what I have always considered a sort of birth of intellect. I read on till it was dark, without any thought about supper or bed.
Page 1 - They are a commercial people, whose point of view is primarily that of persons accustomed to reckon profit and loss. Their impulse is to apply a direct practical test to men and measures, to assume that the men who have got on fastest are the smartest men, and that a scheme which seems to pay well deserves to be supported.
Page 23 - That we recommend to the clubs a study of the science of education and of educational conditions existing in their home cities, to the end that the united influence of women's clubs may be exerted for the betterment of the state system of education from the kindergarten to the university.
Page 96 - ... papers or articles, or accounts of scientific investigations which she has carried out. The fellowship will not usually be granted to those who are intending to take up the practice of any of the three learned professions, though such are not formally excluded from the competition ; it will rather be bestowed upon those who are looking forward to positions as professors and teachers and to literary and scientific vocations. Preference will be given, other things being equal, to graduates of not...