isua-isnscatalog-1887-1888-036

Description: COURSE OF INSTRUCTION.There are three classes of students for whom instruction should
be provided.The first and largest class includes those who wish to prepare
for teaching in the common schools in country, town or city, and
who enter the Normal School having the minimum amount of
scholarship and but little of that mental discipline which results
from a full and efficient course of school instruction. These
must learn both the matter they are to teach, and the method of
teaching it, in the Normal School. The school must afford them
both academic and professional instruction.Another class of students for whom provision is made is com¬
posed of those who have completed the course of study in our
high schools and academies, and of those who may not possess
the scholarship of the high school graduate, but who are teachers
of age and experience, and, because of their greater maturity,
are able to keep pace with these graduates.The third class includes those who have graduated from the
colleges and universities of the State, and who seek that pro¬
fessional training which shall fit them to assume the duties of
superintendents and principals of high schools.The Normal School aims to give all of these instruction which
shall secure the following results:First. A thorough and scientific knowledge of the common
school branches.Second. A knowledge of mind as the subject of the educating
process.Third. A knowledge of methods of teaching the common
school branches, determined (a) by the nature of the subject
taught and the purpose for which it is taught, and (b) by the
Source: http://indstate.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/isuarchive/id/32953
Collection: Indiana State University Archives

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