DEPARTMENT REPORTS. 



105 



Teacher. 



Mr. Stevens . 

 Mr. Stevens . 

 Mr. Stevens . 

 Mr. Stevens . 

 Mr. Stevens . 



Mr. Stevens . 

 Mr. Stevens . 

 Mr. Stevens . 

 Mr. Stevens . 

 Mr. Stevens . 



Mr. Stevens. 

 Miss Emen,' . 

 Miss Emery . 

 Miss Emery. 

 Miss Emery. 



Miss Emery . 

 Miss Emery . 

 Miss Emery . 

 Miss Emery . 

 Miss Emery . 



Miss Emery . 

 Miss Emery . 

 Mr. Gillespie 

 Mr. Gillespie 

 Mr. Gillespie 



Mr. McLean . 

 Mr. McLean . 

 Mr. McLean . 

 Mr. McLean . 



Term. 



FalL... 

 FaU... 



FaU... 

 FaU... 

 AV inter 



Winter 

 Winter 

 Spring. 

 Spring. 

 Spring. 



Spring. 

 FaU... 

 FaU.... 

 FaU..., 

 Winter 



Winter 

 Winter 

 Winter 

 Spring. 

 Spring. 



Spring. 

 Spring. 

 Winter 

 Winter 

 Winter 



Spring. 

 Spring . 

 Spring . 

 Spring . 



Subject. 



History 1 



History 1 . . . . 



History 1 



Ecooomics 1 

 Economics 5a 



Economics 4b 

 Economics 4b 

 Economics 5b 

 Economics 5b 

 Economics 2b 



Economics 2b 

 History- 2b... 

 History 2b . . . 

 History 2b . . . 

 History 3 



History 3.... 

 History 3.... 



History 3 



History 3.... 

 History 2. . . . 



History 3 



History 2.... 

 History 1 . . . . 



History 1 



Economics 4b 



Economics 5b 

 Economics 5b 

 Economics lb 

 Economics 2. 



Hours 



per 

 week. 



Students. 



Number 

 of 



students. 



Fresh., Agr 



Fresh., .^r 



Fresh. Agr 



Sub.-Fresh., H. E 



Junior and Senior, Ags., H. E., Forestry 



Soph. Engineer 



Soph., Engineer 



Soph., Engineer 



Soph., Engineer 



Soph., H. E 



Soph., H. E 



Fresh., Agr. and H. E 



Fresh., Agr. and H. E 



Fresh., Agr. and H. E 



Fresh., Agr. and H. E 



Fresh., Agr. and H. E 



Fresh., .^gr. and H. E 



Fresh., Agr. and H. E 



Fresh., Engineer 



Fresh., H.E 



Fresh., Engineer 



Fresh., Engineer 



Fresh., Engineer 



Fresh., Engineer 



Soph., Engineer 



Soph., Engineer 



Soph., Engineer 



Sub.-Fresh., ,\gr 



Soph., Agr 



23 

 26 

 26 

 17 



30 



44 

 19 

 23 

 18 

 24 



21 

 19 

 17 

 20 

 42 



31 

 19 

 29 

 26 

 32 



19 

 18 

 38 

 35 

 33 



18 

 20 

 27 

 34 



The curriciiliini cliauges which have taken place in this department as 

 a result of the faculty action of last winter in reducing the required 

 number of credits wiiich a student must have in order to graduate are 

 entitled to our first consideration. The reduction referred to entailed 

 an almovst uniform diminution of the students class attendance from five 

 recitation hours per day to four and it is the hope of the authorities 

 that more thorough preparation of lessons may now be made by stu- 

 dents, on account of the less number of subjects that are required. The 

 curtailment of the college curriculum naturally could not take place 

 without a reduction of the number of credits in the subjects presented 

 by the different departments and the offerings of history, economics 

 and political science in various college courses were altered as follows : 

 In the agricultural and forestry courses the work offered by this de- 

 partment was reduced from 43 possible credits to 42. In the engineer- 

 ing course a reduction from 25 possible credits to 14 possible credits 

 was made, while in the home economics course the number of possible 

 credits was increased from 46 to 48. 



In the elimination of credits which has been described, history was 

 cut most severely with the result that English history has been dropped 

 entirely from all the courses of study. There was much justification for 

 this aside from the mere matter of curriculum expedience, since Eng- 

 lish history is now being taught so widely in the different high schools 

 of the state that its abandonment here does not leave the student un- 

 prepared for the advanced courses for which it was in former times 

 a logical prerequisite. Commercial geography was also droppel from 



