Computer May Aid Registration . . . (Continued front page 1) cents per student. Washington State has improved their program during the past five years so as to not only provide balanced sections, good utilization of classroom space, free time requests, but also to satisfy 70 per cent of all section (time and professor) requests. The cost has been reduced to thirty cents per student. But Washington State was not without its problems. Clyde Simpson, Washington State registrar says “after four years of computer registration I can detect an undercurrent of anti-computer section ing.” Students feel they have the right to get into those lines and fight. The resistance, besides being in the minds of the students, shows up in the percentage of courses added or dropped after the computer registration. What does the computer do? Before registration ever begins it finds a place in its memory for every course, lab. and discussion session offered. After marking the course and perhaps the section they desire, the student returns the job to computers which must begin taking re quests and matching them with its mem ory of available space. The machine will backtrack to find non-conflicting sections until every pos sible solution is tried if necessary. Free time requests are honored and as a final touch, lunch hour conflicts are checked. The computer program can do what students have been fighting to do in a matter of one or two seconds. In that amount of time it has made up to 5,000 decisions for the student. For the entire student body this amounts to nearly fifty million course decisions. It helps solve the problems of 113 fresh men waiting four hours to get into a 9:30 English composition class of 35 spaces while the 4:30 class remains absolutely empty. The computer could satisfy 31 per cent of these people and the others would find themselves in sections throughout the day. When Purdue adopted class section ing, they found only eight per cent of their sections closed at the end of regis tration compared to a previous 30 per cent. Here, at the University, the two people registration are Carlson and Lliiiora most directly concerned with computer Consantce, registrar and past member of the Computer Registration Advisory Committee. Constance admits “as far as scheduling students into classes is concerned, there is nothing that can do it as fast—with certain reservations about desirability as the computer. And that really is the basic target we are shooting for now.' In part Constance sees the problem of registration to now exist in the depart ments. In his own words, “That’s where the lines are. This is partly no fault of the departments. Partly the kids who are scheduled, say, to sign up for a PE ac tivity at 11:30, if they haven’t any place else they have to go at 10:30, they are going to line up over there—wait an hour. This looks like an inefficient line, but actually it is just the students’ pref erence. The situation in the departments is not nearly as bad as it looks some times.” Many students would argue that this is the problem and quietly add that a three hour wait is necessary for many PE courses. Ironically the registrar states that “whenever we make comparisons be tween methods of registration, it will not be basically on the costs, it will be on efficiency.” There is, however, truth in this state ment. Poorly planned computer section ing programs can cause as many prob lems as they solve. Constance has been concerned with the fact that students have not been given the opportunity to choose sections under most programs, resulting in a large number of adds and drops which ,in effect, could negate the advantages gained. Programs are now being written which do give the student that opportunity. Even the add-drop problem has been adapted to the computer. The objection which cannot be over come is the increased costs incurred as the registration process is drawn out. Computers can only handle data econom ically in large runs. Getting students to make firm choices is the problem to which Constance does not see a solution. Your Grade Transcript? Someday someone is going to ask to see yours. How impressive it is could depend on how well you read. And how fast. Since all of ns at Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics are professional teachers, we’d he the first to admit that there’s a lot more to getting good grades than just reading. But if you’re serious about wanting an education— or getting a good pas ing job after school—we know that few things can help you more than being able to read quickly and being able to understand what you’ve read. Just think w hat it would mean, for example, if you could speed through routine two-hour outside reading as signments in 10-15 minutes. Or read an entire text in an evening . . . nearly as fast as you could turn the pages. 1 low much more time w'ould you have for other subjects, for special projects, or for leisure time? Rending Dynamics is not a trick or reading short-cut, hut a carefully developed professionally taught, State-ap proved course that can teach you how to read effectively at speeds you never thought possible The course has been taken by United States Sena tors, Congressmen, students, educators and professional men and women; more than 400,000 people coast-to-coast. Possibly b\ someone you know . Mam top national and local industries have enrolled groups of their ke\ employees for instruction. At the re quest of President Kennedy, Reading Dynamics was given to members of his staff. And yet, as generally accepted and based on years of research as it is. Reading Dynamics offers so much it is hard to believe. llow can vou be taught to read faster now, when vou’ve spent your whole life learning to read at the rate s oil do? The answer is rcall\ quite simple. Vou read at your present rare because when you first started to read, you learned by recognizing one w ord at a rime. This is the way it had to be . . . then. But not now . Now you know the words. \nd \ er, probably from force of habit, you still read the way you were taught to read—at a rate far below \our capabilities—by looking at one word at a time. Reading Dynamics unteaches your old reading habits, then shows you how to set your mind free to read faster by teaching you to see more quickly. 1 o see and absorb whole sentences and paragraphs the way you’d see and understand a photograph or a painting. All at once. What can you reasonably expect from Reading Dynamics if you decide to enroll? If you apply yourself as well as the average student attending all eight evening sessions and following the as signed home drills—you should be able to increase your reading speeds from four to ten times. Perhaps even more. You’ll also learn how to preview a book. How to review material. How to read technical material—journals, texts and reports. How to read classics and conceptual material. How to take lecture notes. How to make perman ent recall records. And how to remember w hat you read. What's more you will become a lifetiute member of Reading Dynamics, entitled to attend regularly scheduled workshop classes to refiine and extend your new skills, any time you wish, absolutely free. But why not see for yourself, at no obligation? I.et us show you exactly what Reading Dynamics is all about by attending one of our weekly presentations and letting us give you a free mini-lesson. Worth checking into? Then plan to attend the free Evelyn W ood Reading Dynamics demonstration listed below Thurs. 7:30 p.m. • Fri. 7:30 p.m. Sat. 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. CENTRAL LANE YMCA-2055 PATTERSON STREET Or, for further information, call or write Dynamics Educa tion Center, 868 E. 13th, Eugene. Oregon. Telephone ?44 3154. Over 400.000 Successful Graduates ACHIEVEMENT WARRANTY We guarantee to refund the entire tuition of any graduate who, after completing minimum class and study requirements, does not at least triple his reading efficiency as measured by our begin ning and ending tests Reading efficiency includes both speed and comprehension. CERTIFIED PRIVATE VOCATIONAL SCHOOL BOARD OF EDUCATION - STATE OF OREGON (ov'e/unH^cd READING DYNAMICS A DIVISION OP DYNAMIC EDUCATION CENTERS #68 E. 13th, Ph. 344-3154 EUCENE, OREGON 97401