CHAPTER ONE. A Brief History of the College Curriculum from 1636 to the Present

2020 ◽  
pp. 5-21
2001 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
pp. 344-364 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cally L. Waite

The community of Oberlin, Ohio, located in the northeast corner of the state, holds an important place in the history of the education of Black Americans. In 1834, one year after its founding, the trustees of Oberlin College agreed to admit students, “irrespective of color.” They were the only college, at that time, to adopt such a policy. Oberlin's history as the first college to admit Black students and its subsequent abolitionist activities are crucial to the discussion of Black educational history. Opportunities for education before the Civil War were not common for most of the American population, but for Blacks, these opportunities were close to nonexistent. In the South, it was illegal for Blacks to learn to read or write. In the North, there was limited access to public schooling for Black families. In addition, during the early nineteenth century there were no Black colleges for students to attend. Although Bowdoin College boasted the first Black graduate in 1827, few other colleges before the Civil War opened their doors to Black students. Therefore, the opportunity that Oberlin offered to Black students was extraordinarily important. The decision to admit Black students to the college, and offer them the same access to the college curriculum as their white classmates, challenged the commonly perceived notion of Blacks as childlike, inferior, and incapable of learning.


1927 ◽  
Vol 20 (6) ◽  
pp. 321-327
Author(s):  
Martin Nordgaard

The history of the mathematical curriculum is an interesting study. In colonial Harvard and Yale, algebra, geometry, and trigonometry were college disciplines; Latin and Greek were required for entrance; science had little place. At present, algebra and geometry are high school studies; Latin and Greek are often begun in college; the natural and social sciences are taken from high school freshman to college senior classes. A hundred years ago secondary school mathematics meant chiefly arithmetic, including such difficult topics as alligation, continued fractions, and circulating decimals. It was later realized that the student would gain more practical values and experience greater intellectual pleasure by omitting the more difficult portions of arithmetic, and in their place take the simpler parts of algebra and geometry; the new curriculum harmonized better with the student's capacity, adapted itself better to his experience, and formed a better basis for the courses in science that began to make their appearance in the college curriculum.


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