Ohio University bulletinUndergraduate catalog, 1901-1902 . free indulgence in the useof money. Whatever is beyond a reasonable supply exposeshim to numerous temptations and endangers his success andrespectability. As persons frequently wish to know as nearly as maybe, the cost of a student for one year at the Ohio University,the following estimates are here given: LOWEST. HIGHEST. Registration fee |15 00 Registration fee S 15 00 Board in clubs 90 00 Board in private family 140 00 Room 30 00 Room 30 00 Books 10 00 Books 15 00 S135 00 $200 00 This estimate is for three terms or forty weeks, andi


Ohio University bulletinUndergraduate catalog, 1901-1902 . free indulgence in the useof money. Whatever is beyond a reasonable supply exposeshim to numerous temptations and endangers his success andrespectability. As persons frequently wish to know as nearly as maybe, the cost of a student for one year at the Ohio University,the following estimates are here given: LOWEST. HIGHEST. Registration fee |15 00 Registration fee S 15 00 Board in clubs 90 00 Board in private family 140 00 Room 30 00 Room 30 00 Books 10 00 Books 15 00 S135 00 $200 00 This estimate is for three terms or forty weeks, andincludes all necessary expenses except washing, and a smallfee for membership in the literary societies. The additionalcharges for students who take electives in Chemistry and forthe special class in Electricity are elsewhere noted. METHODS OF INSTRUCTION Instruction is given both by recitation and lecture. Theconstant aim in both is to awaken interest in study, to aid inthe acquisition of knowledge, and to develop the powers ofthought and OHIO UNIVERSITY. 17 Some subjects can be better treated in lectures thanothers. The knowledge the student has of a subject is like-wise a factor that is taken into account. The lecture methodis generally better adapted to advanced students than tothose who are still in the elements. After the elementary^principles have been thoroughly mastered from the text-book, supplemented with such elucidations as seem to becalled for, the student is generally prepared to profit by thelectures of the teacher, and to grasp the wider outlook thatis the result of a knowledge of a subject rather than of thecontents of any single book, or even of several books. Inthe observational studies the learner is, as far as possible,brought face to face with the objects themselves under con-sideration. The classes in Botany and Geology make excur-sions into the surrounding country for the purpose of collect-ing specimens and deriving scientific knowledge


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