Article

Summer School Announcement

May, 1911
Article
Summer School Announcement
May, 1911

Announcements of the Dartmouth Summer School for the present year are now printed and ready for distribution. Fifty courses are provided covering a wide variety of subjects. In addition to a teaching staff selected from the regular teaching faculty of the College, Director Worthen has secured the services of the following teachers from outside: Clarence E. Meleney, A.M., LL.D., Associate Superintendent, Department of Education, New York City, Cecil F. Lavell, Ph.D., lecturer on History of Education, Teachers College, Columbia University; Henry S. Canby, Ph.D., sistant professor of English, Yale University; Edward H. Cameron, Ph.D., assistant professor of Psychology, Yale University; Willard H. Durham, A.B., instructor in English, Yale University.

The Summer School gives certificates for examinations covering the courses offered, and, as these certificates are accepted by the Department of Education in New York' City in place of examinations in certain subjects; and in the New Hampshire State Department of Public Instruction, as well, the Dartmouth Summer School has been deservedly popular among teachers. A considerable number of undergraduates in the College likewise take advantage of the opportunities presented by the summer session either for making up lost hours, or for shortening the period required for gaining the bachelor's degree.

The session of the Summer School during the coming summer will open on July 5 and will continue for six weeks. Classes meet; in general, five times per week, Saturdays remaining open for recreation. Professor T. W. D. Worthen continues as director of the School and will answer any inquiries addressed to him.