Slike strani
PDF
ePub

INDEX.

[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]

Medicine, 207.

Military Science, 203.

Mineralogy, 151.

Mining and Metallurgy, 169.

Modern Languages, 69.
Music, 214.

Nutrition, 189.

Oriental Languages, 48.
Palaeontology, 144.

Parasitology, 199.

Pathology, 209.

Philosophy, 3.

Physical Culture, 204.
Physics, 107.
Physiology, 137.

Plant Pathology, 200.
Polish, 98.

Political Science, 27.

Poultry Husbandry, 193.
Romanic Languages, 90.
Russian, 98.

Sanskrit, 52.

Semitic Languages, 45.
Slavic Languages, 98.
Sociology, 39.

Soils, 187.

Spanish, 93.

Syriac, 45.

Theses, 214.

Veterinary Science, 193.

Zoology, 131.

CLASSIFICATION AND NUMBERING OF COURSES.

CLASSIFICATION.

I. UNDERGRADUATE COURSES.

1. Lower Division Courses.

(a) A prescribed course is one that is required specifically or as an alternative for graduation in any particular college.

(b) A free-elective course in the Lower Division is any course that is not prescribed. A free-elective course may be taken as a prerequisite for a more advanced elective in the same field.

2. Upper Division Courses.

(a) A major course is an Upper Division course of advanced work in a department of study that has been pursued in the Lower Division, or of elementary work in a subject of_such difficulty as to require the maturity of Upper Division students. All major courses are definitely announced as such, and are given the numbers 100-199, as is explained below. Concerning Honor courses, see p. 213.

(b) A free-elective course in the Upper Division is a course for which the Junior Certificate or junior standing is normally prerequisite, but which does not demand necessarily any preliminary knowledge of the subject. Lower Division courses may be taken as free electives in the Upper Division, but Upper Division courses, whether free-elective or otherwise, are not open to students of the Lower Division without the special permission of the department concerned.

II. GRADUATE COURSES.

NUMBERING.

Excepting only the major courses, all undergraduate courses, whether in the Lower or Upper Division, are numbered from 1 to 99, inclusive. Honor courses, see p. 213, are designated by the letter H, following

the course number.

Undergraduate major courses are numbered from 100 to 199, inclusive.
Graduate courses are numbered from 200 to 299, inclusive.

Year Courses; Double Numbers. A course designated by a double number (for example, History 1A-1B) is continued through two successive half-years, that is, from August to May, or from January to December. The student will use the first number in registering for during its first half-year, and the second number during its second half-vear. A final report will be made by the instructor at the have been discontinued. The student may discontinue the course at end of each half-year; "provisional mid-year reports" in year courses the end of the first half-year, with final credit for the first half of the

the course

course.

THE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY.

The new University Library building, which was made possible by the bequest of the late Charles F. Doe, was first occupied in June, 1911, at the opening of the Summer Session. The accommodations for students are much greater than in the past. The library at present contains about 250,000 volumes. A collection of between 15,000 and 20,000 volumes will be gradually accumulated on open shelves in the large reading room, where they will be free of access to all students; and, in addition, the seminar rooms, in which special collections on various subjects will be installed, will provide accommodations for more advanced workers.

Among the more important special collections may be mentioned the Bancroft Library of western American history, which is unique in its field, and the Weinhold collection on Germanic philology and folklore. The law library of something over 9,000 volumes is separately housed in the new Boalt Hall of Law.

The current periodicals, amounting to considerably over 3,000 titles, will be housed in a special room on the ground floor of the University Library. Much unusual material, especially in the field of foreign scientific publications, is received in exchange for the publications of the University and will be included here.

The resources of the library are supplemented by an inter-library loan system, and information as to the resources of certain other large libraries, which can be drawn upon when necessary, will be provided by the depository catalogue which will be installed in the course of the year. This will contain in a single alphabet the printed cards of the Library of Congress, the John Crerar Library in Chicago, and the Harvard University Library, as well as cards on special subjects published by the Royal Library in Berlin.

COURSES OF INSTRUCTION OFFERED IN THE

COLLEGES AT BERKELEY FOR THE

ACADEMIC YEAR, 1911-12.

PHILOSOPHY.

GEORGE H. HOWISON, M.A., LL.D., Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus.
GEORGE M. STRATTON, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology on the Mills Founda-

tion.

CHARLES H. RIEBER, Ph.D., Professor of Logic.

ARTHUR U. POPE, M.A., Assistant Professor of Philosophy.
*GEORGE P. ADAMS, M.A., Assistant Professor of Philosophy.
WARNER BROWN, Ph.D., Instructor in Psychology.
FRANCIS C. BECKER, A.B., Instructor in Philosophy.
CLARENCE I. LEWIS, Ph.D., Instructor in Philosophy.

LOWER DIVISION COURSES.

Although these courses properly fall within the first two years of undergraduate work, and are prerequisite, as specified below, to the major courses in the Upper Division, they are all open as free electives to any student in the University, unless restrictions are explicitly stated.

1. Formal Logic.

Professor RIEBER, Mr. BECKER, and Dr. LEWIS.

Division; definition; the forms and transformations of judgments; the syllogism, deductive and inductive; and fallacies. 3 hrs., either half-year. M W F. In three sections.

section II, 10; section III, 1.

24. General Psychology.

Section I, 9;

Professor STRATTON.

The facts of consciousness, their relation to one another and to their physical correlates; with demonstrations, lectures and reading. 3 hrs., first half-year. M W F, 3.

+ Absent on

leave, 1911-12.

2B. Applied Psychology.

Professor STRATTON. Lectures and reading on the bearing of certain results of modern psychology upon the work of the lawyer, the physician, the teacher, and the minister.

3 hrs., second half-year. M W F, 3. Courses 2A and 2B are planned to supplement each other; but while it is recommended that 2A or some equivalent study of psychology precede, yet students without such preliminary work may be admitted to 2в by special permission of the instructor.

2c. Laboratory Exercises.

Dr. BROWN.

A series of disconnected experiments supplementing courses 2A and 2B, and illustrating some of the methods of psychological experimentation.

2 hrs., 1 unit, either half-year. Open only to students taking course 2A or 2B. Hours to be arranged.

UPPER DIVISION COURSES.

Normally, free elective courses in the Upper Division are restricted to students holding the Junior Certificate. But other students whose record gives evidence of proper qualification may be admitted, provided they have been in residence not less than a year. Such students must make application in person to the officer in charge of the course sought, prior to its opening.

103A-103B. History of Philosophy.

Professor RIEBER.

Critical account, in outline, of the course of Occidental thought, with references to the thought of the Orient.

3 hrs., throughout the year. M W F, 2. 104A-104B. Ethics, Theoretical and Practical.

Assistant Professor POPE. History and criticism of the chief ethical theories, with an application of the results to the main problems of conduct, individual and social. Lectures and conferences.

3 hrs., throughout the year. Tu Th, 9, with an additional hour for conference, in sections.

105. The Philosophy of Kant.

Assistant Professor POPE. The cardinal distinctions and doctrines of the system expounded and criticized.

3 hrs., first half-year. M W F, 8. Prerequisites: courses 103A-103B; and the course should, if possible, be supplemented by course 123. (Course 116 should also accompany this course, if not previously taken.)

105H. The Philosophy of Kant.

Assistant Professor POPE.

An honor course in connection with the preceding. 5 units. Students in this course should register for 105H, not for 105.

« PrejšnjaNaprej »