Word: classroom
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...individual work that in many of the honors courses counting for two and three hours, the instructor will meet the students but once or twice a week. It would, however, be a serious mistake to infer from this that the honors courses, with their small number of required classroom hours, demand less from the student than the regular courses. The very opposite is the case. The nature of the work will make greater demands upon the student's industry and ability, for to a certain extent he will be his own taskmaster. Moreover, at the end of each year, every...
...dean could more effectively attack athletics by praising them, by plainly recognizing that the natural interest of undergraduates in their bodies is fostered by a system superior to that of the classroom in its attempts to train their minds. Surely athletics must be reduced to a position of less importance in our colleges; there is no end which we desire more. But this end will not be accomplished by mere regulative and hostile legislation on the part of our faculties. Such regulation usually serves only to widen the gap between students and teachers and to give the undergraduates the sense...
...free discussion there will be. The cosmopolitans will be at the meeting, with their respective cases to advance; the pacifists and the militarists should have a set-to. And past masters of the White papers will be there. In fact, all those who carry outside of the classroom an interest in history, international relations, ethics, -- in short in civilization,--all will be there...
...enlightening that by entering into some branch of the various activities to be found here; and pursuing the work until something has been achieved for yourselves, your class and for Harvard. This community lays stress upon work well done, whether it is on the football field on in the classroom. The men who become-dissatisfied with their College careers in their Senior year are generally those who cannot look back upon tasks well performed...
...that they were tacitly pledged to do such written work honorably. Another equally strong reason is their failure to realize the entire similarity of the two kinds of cheating. Many men, who would consider it beneath their dignity and their honor to ask help from a neighbor in the classroom, are not above copying a report or a mathematics paper. Both these actions are equally forms of intellectual robbery, for, in both, the offenders are passing off as their own something that is not their own. The only difference between the two is that the unfairness of cheating in examinations...