Degrees

Displaying 51 - 100 of 137 in reverse chronological order
# Title Date Summary
51 Regentws Approve Degree Programs at UNI
Public Relations News Release 1972:12, p.1
Three new graduate majors and two new emphases within existing undergraduate majors were approved today by the Board of Regents.
52 Major constitutes fraud; sense of uneasiness
Northern Iowan 65:49, p.2
Professor Fox talks about the expansion of majors at the expense of general education; considers possibility of expanding undergraduate degree to five years.
53 Bachelor of music degree defended
Northern Iowan 65:47, p.4
Professor Michaelides believes that the new degree is strong and that the days of the large, structured general education program are numbered.
54 Fox opposes too much specialization
Northern Iowan 65:46, p.3
Professor Fox decries specialized undergraduate degrees.
55 New degree for UNI
Alumnus 53:3, p.5
Regents approve Bachelor of Technology.
56 Faculty Senate approves industrial arts degrees
Northern Iowan 64:33, p.11
Approve Bachelor of Technology degree.
57 'B.T. degree for trade-school;' Obiter Scripta
Northern Iowan 64:31, p.2
Professor Fox believes that the proposed Bachelor of Technology, with its abbreviated General Education requirement, is inappropriate for a university.
58 SCI to add master's programs
Alumnus 49:3, p.8
Will offer Master of Arts and Master of Arts in Education.
59 Board of Regents discuss master's degree program
College Eye 58:1, p.3
May reorganize master's degree in two degree: one in teaching and one in the arts.
60 Board of Regents sets $4,569,200 budget
College Eye 52:36, p.4
$1.5 million also set aside for new library building; new sound system will be installed in Men's Gymnasium; approve new B. A. degree.
61 Commencement exercises held at ISTC
Public Relations News Release 1960:451, p.1
President J. W. Maucker confers degrees upon three-hundred and ninety-one students. Dean William C. Lang presents the degrees, scholarships, and alumni honors to twenty-nine individuals.
62 New ISTC degree change explained
College Eye 52:33, p.2
A lengthy look at the curriculum for the Bachelor of Arts without teaching certification.
63 Correction made
College Eye 52:29, p.1
Corrects statements on curricular changes.
64 Teacher education still primary function of College
Alumnus 46:2, p.1
President Maucker addresses concerns about recent decision to offer a liberal arts degree; emphasizes importance of teacher education.
65 Tentative approval given for curriculum changes
College Eye 52:28, p.1
New non-teaching BA degree approved; does not include foreign language requirement
66 ISTC fall graduates listed
Public Relations News Release 1960:206, p.1
Registrar Marshall Beard announces the graduation of one-hundred and twenty-four students receiving their degrees following the fall semester. Graduates listed.
67 Name change, enlarged function approved by Regents
Alumnus 45:4, p.3
Changes await legislative approval; would allow students to receive B. A. without teacher certification courses; new name would be The State College of Iowa.
68 Greetings from the president
Alumnus 45:4, p.
President Maucker announces proposed institutional name change and liberal arts degree.
69 President Bowen lauds liberal arts
Public Relations News Release 1960:119, p.1
Howard R. Bowen, president of Grinnell College, visits an all-college convocation to speak on the importance of the availability of a non-teaching liberal arts degree program.
70 Should correct shortcomings
College Eye 52:9, p.8
Professor Fox believes that addition of a liberal arts degree program provides an opportunity to improve the general education program.
71 ISTC ranks high
Public Relations News Release 1960:53, p.1
Professor H. M. Silvey compiles statistics from national studies on the number of students receiving doctorates in education, the arts, social science, and humanities.
72 President speaks on efforts, hopes
College Eye 52:2, p.2
Excerpts from remarks at Matriculation Convocation; speaks about building programs, increased curricular requirements, potential liberal arts degree.
73 221 expected to receive I. S. T. C. degrees tonight
Public Relations News Release 1960:849, p.1
President J. W. Maucker confers masters of art in education degrees to eighty-three of the two-hundred and twenty-one students receiving degrees at summer commencement exercises. Candidates listed.
74 Faculty recommends degree sans education requirement
College Eye 50:28, p.1
Also recommend sixth year program and eventual doctoral program.
75 The fifth curriculum . . . For
College Eye 50:28, p.2
Discusses advantages of adding a non-teaching degree.
76 The fifth curriculum . . . Against
College Eye 50:28, p.2
Discusses disadvantages of adding a non-teaching degree.
77 Obiter Scripta
College Eye 50:22, p.2
Professor Fox discusses the possible addition of the school's first non-teaching curriculum.
78 Forty-four bachelor of arts degrees and 15 elementary teacher diplomas were granted at the end of the winter academic quarter
Public Relations News Release 1952:514, p.1
Registrar Marshall R. Beard said, the graduates are invited to participate in the spring quarter commencement this June. Registration for students not previously registered for the spring quarter will be held Wednesday, March 19. Graduates listed.
79 Two hundred eighty-six students received degrees and diplomas at the commencement exercises held under the lights of O. R. Latham Stadium
Public Relations News Release 1951:14, p.1
A teacher's basic loyalty to the teaching profession does not go far enough unless that loyalty includes the concepts and values which have led to the establishment of the free public school system, President J. W. Maucker declared Thursday night.
80 The four-year college curriculum, 1904
First 75 Years 0:0, p.16
Normal School curriculum officially includes a four-year bachelor's degree.
81 Preparation for all fields of public school work
First 75 Years 0:0, p.87
Survey of ways in which the College curriculum changed to meet changing needs; description of degree, diploma, and certificate programs.
82 Students
Public Relations News Release 1950:402, p.1
Pre-war enrollments averaged 1,800; post-war peak was 3,055 in the fall of 1948. A year later it had dropped slightly to 2,950. Quarterly registrations this past year were 2,457 in the winter and 2,288 this spring. This summer's registration was 1,260.
83 1950 Leaves Mark on ISTC Campus
Public Relations News Release 1950:165, p.1
A presidential inauguration, the fifth in 74 years, was one of several major changes during 1950. Starting last June a minor in journalism was offered. Plans were approved for granting a major in library science starting next June.
84 43 Receive Degrees, Diplomas at ISTC
Public Relations News Release 1950:157, p.1
Thirty bachelor of arts degrees and 13 elementary teacher diplomas were granted Friday announced Registrar Marshall R. Beard. No formal commencement exercises were held, a custom followed in fall and winter quarter graduations. Students listed.
85 "Who is really educated?" was the question Malcolm Price, attempted to answer for 276 graduates at the summer commencement
Public Relations News Release 1950:9, p.1
Malcom Price took a quotation from Isocrates in the fourth century before Christ as the "ageless" definition of an educated person. Price stated that "success can only be achieved in terms of the human factor."
86 This was also accomplished
Alumnus 22:1, p.5
1937 changes include: abolition of Bachelor of Science degree, course consolidation, freshman orientation, addition of mandatory "Contemporary Affairs", and social usage course for men.
87 Faculty decides to abandon degree of Bachelor of Science
College Eye 28:23, p.1
Bachelor of Science had been granted to students who studied agriculture, commercial education, elementary education, home economics, industrial arts, opportunity room education, and physical education; only Bachelor of Arts will be granted.
88 Office records show more men on B. A.
College Eye 27:20, p.4
Quick look at enrollment in some of the degree programs.
89 Four-year grads on increase; study by Dr. M. R. Thompson shows distribution of graduates in last ten years
College Eye 25:25, p.4
Professor Thompson assembled a chart showing numbers of four year graduates broken down by major course of study.
90 Significant changes made in curriculums
Alumnus 17:1, p.9
Drop two year programs in art, home economics, manual arts, and commercial education and three year program in music in favor of four year programs; programs in kindergarten and elementary teaching are only remaining two year programs.
91 4-year courses show larger enrollment
College Eye 24:1, p.7
Enrollment increases from 1968 to 2062.
92 Registration for 55 years totals 73,975; 64,313 have enrolled since 1901; yearly average since founding in 1875 is 1,369, Miss Wild's report shows
College Eye 23:6, p.1
Breakdown of student enrollment by degree and curriculum.
93 A. B. A. for muscle
College Eye 18:13, p.4
Disagrees with the idea of awarding a bachelor's degree in coaching athletics.
94 Great demand for teachers with B. A.; over supply of students with two year courses
College Eye 16:27, p.2
Due to an overabundance of would-be teachers with two-year degrees, students are urged to continue in the four-year program.
95 Bachelor of Science in Education offered
College Eye 16:12, p.1
For four year graduates who also include a year of language study.
96 What will make teaching a profession?
College Eye 14:47, p.1
Urges students to pursue a bachelor's degree.
97 Waldo F. Mitchell
Alumni News Letter 6:4, p.2
Waldo Mitchell received his Ph. D. at the close of the Summer Term, and is employed as the Head of the Department of Economics and Business Administration of Evansville College in Illinois.
98 George Horatio Hilliard
Alumni News Letter 6:4, p.5
George Horatio Hilliard serves as a Professor of Education at the Western State Normal School in Kalamazoo, Michigan after earning the Doctor of Philosophy Degree at the State University of Iowa.
99 The candidates for graduation
Alumni News Letter 6:4, p.1
Distribution of graduates among degree programs.
100 Registrar's report
Alumni News Letter 6:4, p.1
Statistics for student enrollment in degree courses.