defects of the letters written by undergraduates. on their faltering speeches, on their confused examination papers, as something significant, ominous, worthy even of comment in the press. And we are, I believe, perfectly right. Speech and writing, if... College Sons and College Fathers - Page 186by Henry Seidel Canby - 1915 - 232 pagesFull view - About this book
| Henry Mills Alden, Thomas Bucklin Wells, Lee Foster Hartman, Frederick Lewis Allen - American literature - 1914 - 1084 pages
...intellect, and measures, if not its profundity, at least the stage of its development. We fasten on the defects of the letters written by undergraduates,...college education far better than a degree. It is with the teachers, the administrators, the theorists on education, but most of all the teachers, that... | |
| Paul Klapper - College teaching - 1920 - 616 pages
...intellect, and measures, if not its profundity, at least the stage of its development. We fasten on the defects of the letters written by undergraduates,...education far better than a degree. It is this conviction which, pressing upon the schools and colleges, has caused such a flood of courses and textbooks, such... | |
| Paul Klapper - College teaching - 1920 - 616 pages
...intellect, and measures, if not its profundity, at least the stage of its development. We fasten on the defects of the letters written by undergraduates,...education far better than a degree. It is this conviction which, pressing upon the schools and colleges, has caused such a flood of courses and textbooks, such... | |
| Paul Klapper - College teaching - 1920 - 626 pages
...intellect, and measures, if not its profundity, at least the stage of its development. We fasten on the defects of the letters written by undergraduates,...education far better than a degree. It is this conviction which, pressing upon the schools and colleges, has caused such a flood of courses and textbooks, such... | |
| Henry Mills Alden, Thomas Bucklin Wells, Lee Foster Hartman, Frederick Lewis Allen - American literature - 1914 - 1392 pages
...intellect, and measures, if not its profundity, at least the stage of its development. We fasten on the defects of the letters written by undergraduates,...education far better than a degree. It is this conviction which, pressing upon the schools and colleges, has caused such a flood of courses and text-books, such... | |
| Students - 1917 - 644 pages
...life. And now, O ye reporters, that you might read the chapter on "Writing English," wherein is said: "Speech and writing, if you get them in fair samples,...of a college education far better than a degree." WHAT MEN LIVE BY. Richard C. Cabot, MD Houghton Mifflin Co. XXI and 840 pp. $1.50 net. Popular psyschological... | |
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