Unique Soph Honors Program At Oregon Nears Second Birthday by Joe Gardner Emerald New* Editor At the end of this term sopho more honors will be able to light two candles on its birthday cake. The program in general education for students of superior ability is now completing its second year at the University of Oregon. While honors programs are not new to American colleges and uni versities (nor even to Oregon), sophomore honors is a unique edu cational experiment, according to Hoyt Trowbridge, professor of English and chairman of the sophomore honors committee. Oth er honors programs are on the junior and senior level for study in a student’s major, while sopho more honors is a lower-division program in general education. Open only to the upper 20 per cent of each entering freshman class, the program is designed to provide a profitable and stimulat ing general education for the more able student. It fills that part of the student’s schedule normally devoted to the fulfill ment of group requirements—four courses in the first two years for a total of 39 term hours. High School Record Used Eligibility for honors courses is measured by high school records and scholastic aptitude tests taken ,at the time of admission to the University. The program is also open to students who have comple ted more than 15 but less than 3 term hours at the University with a minimum grade point average of 2.75. Honors are awarded on the j basis of comprehensive examina tions in four subjects. The exams, offered fall and spring, must be taken before the end of the stu dent’s second year. Students norm ally prepare for the exams through special honors courses, but may also do so through other lower di vision courses in the same field or by independent study. Full college credit in the correspond ing honors course is granted for each exam passed regardless of method of preparation. Sophomore honors courses are offered in five fields. To complete the program the student must take the courses in literature, his tory and social science, while a choice is allowed between biolog ical and physical science. The so cial science course, the study of society, is being offered this year for the first time. Courses Are Broad The courses are broad, interde partmental and planned as an in tegrated whole with many cross references and interconnections among them. Physical science, for instance, embraces elements of physics, chemistry, geology, astronomy and mathematics, while the study of society includes the fields of political science, sociol ogy and economics. The classes are purposely kept small, about 25 students to a sec tion. This allows for a “give-and take between teacher and student, and informal and intimate rela tionships,” as Trowbridge has put it. Some of Oregon’s best teachers are to be found in the sophomore honors program. E. G. Moll, pro fessor of English, and F. M. Com bellaek, associate professor of classical languages, teach two of the literature sections, while E. S. Wengert, head of the department of political science, teaches a so cial science section. Instruction an Innovation One of the major innovations in the program is the method of in struction. V. F. Snow, instructor in history, who teaches one of the history sections, finds the program more interesting for the teacher. “But it takes more work to pre pare for the course,” he added. Factual knowledge ir. the course can be gained from the text, but the student is also responsible for outsido reading of cultural and philosophical matter which can be fitted into their proper historical context, Snow said. Thus in study ing about capitalism, the students read Adam Smith, and in studying communism they read Karl Marx. Snow limits actual lecture in his classes, preferring to conduct the class in discussions interlaced with his own knowledge on a certain subject. Debates and panel discus sions are used in the class so that the pros and cons of a certain topic can be aired. Not Technical F. E. Dart, assistant professor of physics, who instructs the sec tion in physical science, does not teach his course on a technical level. “We are not trying to train students to be scientists in this section," he said, pointing out that the class is composed mainly of students from other than scientific fields who are interested in a gen eral knowledge of the subject. Physics majors will take the more complicated and technical upper division courses, he stated. “We aren't dealing with formu las and methods of scientific inves tigation in this course so much as Exams May 18 Comprehensive examinations fcr sophomore honors candidates will be given beginning May 18. All exams will be given in Fenton S. Reading lists for the exams have been distributed to students in sophomore honors courses. Others wishing to take the exams may pick up the lists in the office of the department of English in Friendly hall. Schedule of the exams is as fol lows: history. May 18; study of society. May 20; physical science and biological science, May 25, and literature. May 27. Each of the exams will last two hours with half an hour additional time being allowed if needed. the ideas behind these formulas and methods," Dart declared. "The emphasis is on ideas and how they came to be developed in the field of physical science.” Discussion Encouraged Dart uses both lecture and dis cussion in his sophomore honors class, often raising some provoca tive question to start an argument among the students. In these ar guments, Dart often supports the illogical side and lets students prove him wrong. Once discussion is ended, he goes back over the argument to point out what types of evidence are valid in dealing with scientific facts. In the physical science labora tory sessions the student is al lowed to do his own exploring with no set lab manual to follow, Dart continued. Lab classes are as small as ten, and with two instructors— Dart and a graduate assistant— there is an even better opportun ity for an interplay of ideas than in the classroom, according to Dart. The entire sophomore honors program is designed for the excep tional student, often neglected in the classroom where the average student sets the pace of instruc tion. Student reaction to the plan is generally favorable. Students Comment Marcia Mauney,' freshman in liberal arts, said she felt the courses were “definitely more stimulating.” One advantage to the program, according to Miss Mauney, is that professors and students get to know one another better in the smaller classes. “Sophomore honors courses make the student think more and give him a chance to work on his own initiative,” I.es Bergeron, i .sophomore in pre-med, said. Bob Maier, sophomore In busi ness, saiii he thought thut the level of instruction was much higher in sophomore honors sections than in other University courses. "Dis cussion forces the student to make his own analysis of the subject matter and introduces a wealth of material the student would other wise be unaware of.” he added. Committee Supervises Each course in the program is supervised by a committee of rep resentatives from each depart ment included in that field. In ad dition to working out plans for the course, this group draws tip and grades the comprehensive exams and is responsible for the awarding of honors. The individual honors instructors prepare their own course tests, however, and de termine the term grade of stu dents in their courses. The general sophomore honors committee, which Trowbridge heads, is made up of the chairmen of these sub committees. The plan. Is promoted on the high school level by administra tion "figures such as Ray Hawk and Mrs. Golda Wickham, associ ate directors of student affairs, who speak to high school groups throughout the year. Trowbridge, however, would like to see this method supplemented by corres pondence with high school princi pals in the state. At the University, promotion is handled by dormitory counselors. living organization scholastic chairmen and faculty advisers, working under Trow bridge’s committee. The program is an outgrctwth of study by the committee on cur ricular revision, which presented its report to the faculty in No vember, 1950. Included in the re Supreme Court Ruling May Delay Building (Continued from Pane One) would bo started by July. Circuit Justice Walter L. Toose j upheld the contention of the don- ( tal association that the dental port was the proposed sophomore honors program. After faculty ap proval had been secured in the spring of 1951, the sophomores honors committee began working out details that would put the plan in action. The program was intro duced in the fall of 1952. i Only 50 Expected It was planned to make the pro gram available to the upper one fifth of the entering freshman class, which would have meant; some 200 to 250 students. Of this number, only 50 or 80 were ex pected to elect the program. Vet at the end of the 1952 fall term ; registration, nearly twice that number over 100 had signed up. for sophomore honors courses, and additional sections had to be pro vided in both history and litera ture. This yeur. with two classes par ticipating in the program, some' 200 Oregon freshmen and sopho mores are enrolled in sophomore honors courses. Of this number. 75 are sophomore holdovers from last year, and 125 are freshman new to the program this year. Three new instructors, whose as signments are partly In sophomore honors, were added to the Univer sity faculty this fall. A success? Trowbridge can't answer that question until the re •.ii! ns from the spring comprehen sive exams have been learned. He i will say. though, that he is pleased with the response to the program in its first two years, a response : evidenced by the high percentage j • >f eligible students who elect the ' honors courses. school Is a separate unci distinct department of the state's higher educational system Hnd should be administered directly by the state board arid not the University. Judge Toom, in his opinion, pointed out that "the only im portant part played by the Uni versity of Oregon in connection with the dental school is furnish ing a name, as it furnished a name to the medical school. Ex cept Indirectly, the University It self has nothing to do with the conferring of degrees, as that is left to the State Board of Higher Education, upon the recommenda tion of the dental school faculty. The State Board of Higher Edu cation and not the University of Oregon appoints the dean of the dental school and Its entire facul ty. "From the dear wording of the statute, it is apparent that the dental school is a separate and distinct department of the system of higher education and not a sub sidiary or subdivision of the Uni versity of Oregon," the opinion concluded. SEU IT THRU THE WANTADS Dun Wnul. CUMified Advrtmin* Mgr. FOB SALE Argus C-3 camera. Takes slide:), has flash attach ment and leather case. $70. new. Used twice. Will sell for $50. ('all 4-7020 after 5:00 p. m or 4-6032. 5-5 LOST Navy blue cardigan near Taylor’s Ph. Dorothy Carlson 4-7515. 5-7 JR. WEEKEND QUEEN CANDIDATE •