The Creighton Chronicle . perfec-tion of such a hospital teaching system the advantages willbecome minimal and the advantages maximal. If one can read the signs aright the compulsory interne yearis almost here. Pennsylvania already insists on it as a pre-liminary qualification for taking the examination for a licenseto practice. This has brought a system of hospital inspection todetermine what hospitals are prepared to give, and do give, sat-isfactory interne year. The senior students work need not con- 442 THE EDUCATIONAL WORLD flict with the internes duties. Work there is in plenty for alLA


The Creighton Chronicle . perfec-tion of such a hospital teaching system the advantages willbecome minimal and the advantages maximal. If one can read the signs aright the compulsory interne yearis almost here. Pennsylvania already insists on it as a pre-liminary qualification for taking the examination for a licenseto practice. This has brought a system of hospital inspection todetermine what hospitals are prepared to give, and do give, sat-isfactory interne year. The senior students work need not con- 442 THE EDUCATIONAL WORLD flict with the internes duties. Work there is in plenty for alLA method of distribution is all that is necessary, The trend of modern education is toward learning by doing,and away from learning by speculation. The student must beactive, not passive, or fail in the acquisition of the trainingwhich the future will demand. Medical colleges that wish to re-main in the game must look to their hospital alliances and mustperfect a machinery by which the student may learn to act bydoing. JSK. irninnnnnnnrintivmmmminnm ^ith the Editors ?a The man who wrote For its always fairFELLOWSHIP weather, when good fellows get together,sounded the depths of fraternity and dida service by emphasizing the fact that whatever the outward cir-cumstances, fellowship spells happiness. What though the rai-ment be crude, the fare homely and the purse lean, if genuinefriendship prevail? What matters it that talent be meager,the countenance unattractive, or the form ill-shaped if the heart-beat finds warm response in him we call friend? The accidents ofcircumstance cannot break the spell conjured up by fellowshipand separation may dim, but it cannot wipe out the halo whichradiates about a genuine friendship. Some one has said that much of the best in education comesfrom rubbing shoulders with ones fellows. The student trainedin private, without chance to associate daily with other minds en-gaged in similar tasks may perhaps attain to a book knowledgewhich will entitle hi


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Keywords: ., bookauthorcreighto, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1914