Slike strani
PDF
ePub

5. ELEMETARY ENTOMOLOGY.-(See Entomology 1.)

6.

GENERAL ENTOMOLOGY.-(See Entomology 2, 3.)

7. PRACTICAL ENTOMOLOGY.-(See Entomology 4.)

8. THESIS INVESTIGATION.-Candidates for graduation in the College of Science who select a zoological subject as a thesis are required to spend three hours a day during their senior year in making an investigation of some selected zoological subject. While this work is done under the general supervision of an instructor, it is in its methods and responsibilities essentially original work. I., II.; daily; arrange time; (5). Professor FORBES and Assistant Professor SMITH.

Required: Two years in zoological courses, including one semester of Zoology 4.

9. TEACHERS' COURSE IN ZOOLOGY.-This course is offered especially to prospective teachers of zoölogy in high schools or colleges. It will include a review of such parts of their earlier work as are most closely related to their prospective teaching, the subject being studied now from the standpoint of the teacher rather than that of the student merely. Additional work in the field, laboratory, and library will be given to enlarge the scope of the student's knowledge and to give practice in methods most likely to be useful to him. The management of excursions, the collection and preparation of material, the selection, assignment, and management of subjects for individual study, and the determination and study of the animal forms of a restricted locality, are examples of this work. High school courses of zoological study will be collected, compared, and criticised, and methods of management and instruction in secondary schools will be compared and discussed with reference to general pedagogical theory and to the special ends of the teacher of zoology. The work will be arranged in consultation with the educational department of the University, and the professors of that department will share in it as may seem necessary. Those taking this course will be given the preference, other things being equal, in selecting student assistants in zoology and in recommending teachers for secondary schools. Those taking the lectures only will receive a three-hour credit; those taking the field and laboratory work without the lectures will receive a two-hour credit. II.; daily; 6, 7; (5). Professor FORbes.

Required: Zoology 1; also Zoology 2, or Entomology 2, or Entomology 3.

10. ELEMENTARY ZOOLOGY-This is a field, laboratory, and lecture course, mainly on the morphology, physiology, and oecology of

type forms, and on the more obvious features of cytology and development. The work is so directed as to lead to an acquaintance with the simpler generalizations of zoological theory, and is intended especially as a preparation for the more extensive and thorough work of courses 1 and 2. It is also adapted to the needs of those who wish to give no more than a semester to a zoölogical course. Students who present an entrance credit in zoölogy or biology may take as a fractional course those parts of this work not covered in their previous study. I.; daily; 1, 2; (5). Assistant Professor SMITH and Mr. MCCLELLAN.

COURSES FOR GRADUATES

ΙΟΙ. PLANKTON ZOOLOGY.-Under this head instruction and practice will be given in modern methods of studying minute forms of aquatic life with the aid of a plankton apparatus and laboratory equipment. This work will include both a qualitative and a quantitative investigation of the minute zoölogical contents of a selected body of water, carried on systematically through a considerable period, and the generalization of the results of such study by the metho is peculiar to the planktologist.

102. FRESH-WATER ICHTHYOLOGY.-The large collections of fishes belonging to the University and the State Laboratory of Natural History, together with the ichthyological library of the latter, will be open to students who wish to become acquainted with the ichthyology of a fresh-water situation. Both qualitative and quantitative studies of the fishes of a selected body of water will be made, and papers will be written presenting the results of personal studies in this field.

103. FRESH-WATER AND TERRESTRIAL ANNALIDS.-This is an application of the methods of the zoölogical laboratory to the study of the annelid worms of the land and of the inland waters of North America. The description of genera and species, practice in drawing for publication, and experimental work on the physiology and oecology of selected forms will be included in this course.

DEGREES

BACHELORS' DEGREES

The usual bachelors' degrees are conferred upon those who satisfactorily complete the courses of study described under the different colleges and schools. A candidate for a bachelor's degree must pass in the subjects marked prescribed in his chosen course, and must conform to the directions given in connection with that course in regard to electives. In the College of Literature and Arts, of Science, and of Agriculture, credit for 130 hours is required for graduation. In the College of Engineering, in the College of Law, and in the Schools of Music and Library Science the candidate must complete the course of study as laid down. The number of hours required includes five in military science, and two and one-half in physical training for men, and three in physical training for women. Men excused from the military requirements, and women who do not take courses in physical training, must elect in lieu thereof an equivalent number of hours in other subjects.

In all cases in which a thesis is required,* the subject must be announced not later than the first Monday in November, and the completed thesis must be submitted to the dean of the proper college by June 1st. The work must be done under the direction of the professor in whose department the subject naturally belongs, and must be in the line of the course of study for which a degree is expected. The thesis must be presented upon regulation paper, and will be deposited in the library of the University.

*See requirements for graduation in the different colleges.

I. The degree of Bachelor of Arts is conferred on those who complete a course in the College of Literature and Arts.

2. The degree of Bachelor of Science is conferred on those who complete a course in the College of Engineering, of Science, or of Agriculture. The name of the course will be inserted in the diploma.

3. The degree of Bachelor of Laws is conferred on those who complete the course in the College of Law.

4. The degree of Doctor of Medicine is conferred on those who complete the course in the College of Medicine.

5. The degree of Bachelor of Library Science is conferred on those who complete the course in the School of Library Science.

6. The degree of Bachelor of Music is conferred on those who complete one of the courses in the School of Music.

7. The degree of Graduate in Pharmacy is conferred on those who have satisfied the requirements therefor in the School of Pharmacy.

ADVANCED DEGREES

No degrees are given for study in absentia, except that graduates of this University, who become members of the Graduate School and reside elsewhere, may receive a second, or master's, degree, upon the completion of their courses of study within not less than three years of the date of registration. For a graduate of this University, who has won' recognized distinction in a special line of investigation, and who otherwise fulfills the conditions for a doctor's degree, the requirement of residence for that degree will be such as may be imposed by the General Faculty of the University, on presentation of the case by the Council of Administration. Advanced degrees are conferred by the Trustees of the University only upon recommendation of the General Faculty, based upon information furnished by the Council of Administration.

SECOND DEGREES

The second degrees conferred by this University are as follows:

Master of Arts, after Bachelor of Arts.

Master of Science, after Bachelor of Science in courses of the colleges of Agriculture and Science.

Master of Architecture, after Bachelor of Science in courses in Architecture and Architectural Engineering.

Civil Engineer, after Bachelor of Science in the course in Civil Engineering.

Electrical Engineer, after Bachelor of Science in the course in Electrical Engineering.

Mechanical Engineer, after Bachelor of Science in the course in Mechanical Engineering.

Pharmaceutical Chemist, after Graduate in Pharmacy.

Graduates of other colleges and universities which have. equivalent requirements for baccalaureate degrees may be given second degrees determined in kind by comparison with the usage described above.

All candidates for second degrees are required to register in the Graduate School; to conform to the conditions outlined under "Admission," "Registration," and "Examinations" (pp. 42 and 58); to pursue an approved course of study for one academic year in residence, or, in the case of graduates of this University, for three years in absentia; and to pass satisfactory examinations upon all the studies. of the approved course.

Each candidate for a second degree must present an acceptable thesis in the line of his major subject of study. The subject of this thesis must be announced to the Dean of the General Faculty not later than the first Monday in November of the academic year in which the course is to be completed. The completed thesis, upon regulation paper, must be presented, with the certified approval of the professor in charge, to the Council of Administration not later than June 1st.

« PrejšnjaNaprej »