Word: professionalized
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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In the death of Dr. Arthur Tracy Cabot Harvard has lost a brilliant son and the community a faithful servant. Throughout his useful career he devoted untiring energy to the service of his profession and yet found time to accept various public duties. His service to the state for the...
Mr. Hamlin, Mr. Gustafson, and Mr. Seymour set forth clearly the claims of many avocations, and Mr. Gill's "Student Council Problems" calls the Freshman's attention to the very best way of serving his College. Mr. Fenn has delved humorously and effectively into history to show us the pit...
...educate clergymen, now gives to this profession barely two per cent. of her graduates; Yale, begun under similar impulses, now contributes a meagre three per cent. This and other interesting changes in the professions favored by college graduates are described in a bulletin by Bailey B. Burritt on "Professional Distribution of University and College Graduates," just issued by the United States Bureau of Education...
At Harvard the ministry yielded the leadership to law after the Revolutionary War, and law remained the dominant profession of Harvard graduates until 1880, when business took the lead. At Yale the ministry competed successfully with law until after the middle of the nineteenth century, when law took the ascendancy...
A final summary of thirty-seven representative colleges shows that teaching is now the dominant profession of college graduates, with twenty-five per cent; business takes twenty per cent.; law, which took one-third of all the graduates at the beginning of the ninetenth century, now claims but fifteen per...