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Avoiding Bankruptcy: The Credit Rating of High School Sciences

Avoiding Bankruptcy: The Credit Rating of High School Sciences. Keith Sheppard. The Academic Credit System -. “Educational Coin of the Realm”. The Academic Credit System -. “Educational Coin of the Realm” Part of the “Grammar of Schooling”. The Academic Credit System -.

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Avoiding Bankruptcy: The Credit Rating of High School Sciences

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  1. Avoiding Bankruptcy: The Credit Rating of High School Sciences Keith Sheppard

  2. The Academic Credit System - • “Educational Coin of the Realm”

  3. The Academic Credit System - • “Educational Coin of the Realm” • Part of the “Grammar of Schooling”

  4. The Academic Credit System - • “Educational Coin of the Realm” • Part of the “Grammar of Schooling” • Ubiquitous

  5. The Academic Credit System-Uses • High School and College Graduation • Teacher certification • Faculty workloads and compensation • Departmental budgets • Transfer students • Etc.

  6. The Academic Credit System • Where did it come from? • Who invented it ? • Why? • Can it be changed?

  7. Before The Credit System - • All students followed the same courses • Classics dominated curriculum • Limited science offerings • “Chemistry, like virtue, must be its own reward” • Lecture/recitation/textbook dominated approach

  8. Before The Credit System -1870 Admission Requirements

  9. Enter Charles W. Eliot (1834-1926)

  10. Charles W. Eliot • Studied chemistry at Harvard • Became tutor in chemistry at Harvard • Promoted individual lab work • Was passed over for Chemistry Professorship • Co-authored first laboratory manual in English while at MIT • Became President of Harvard in 1869

  11. Charles W. Eliot • Introduced new subjects (science and modern languages) • Introduced the elective system • Educational accounting system needed

  12. The Elective System • Absolute prescription • Group Elective system • Free elective system

  13. The Committee of Ten • Chaired by Eliot • Hold a conference on each appropriate academic subject and make recommendations on a uniform education • Three science conferences

  14. The Committee of Ten • Introduced science to curriculum • Allocated time to each subject (The idea behind the credit system) • All science for all

  15. Committee on College Entrance Requirements CCER (1899) • Proposes ‘national unit’. • Recommends only ONE science credit for college admission. • (4 in languages, 2 English, 2 Math, 1 History, 6 Elective) .

  16. Enter Carnegie (1905)

  17. Enter Carnegie (1905) • Gives $10,000,000 to establish pension fund for college professors to be paid to institutions. • Set criteria for what was a college- • It had at least 6 professors • It had a course of at least 4 years of liberal arts • For admission not less than 4 years of high school

  18. Enter Carnegie (1905) • Defined four years of high school to mean a minimum of 14 units or credits earned -- The Carnegie Unit

  19. Enter Carnegie (1905) • Defined four years of high school to mean a minimum of 14 units or credits earned -- The Carnegie Unit A year’s work in any major subject= 120 sixty minute hours or its equivalent

  20. Enter Carnegie (1905) • The Educational Coin of the Realm

  21. Impact on Science Education • One year courses -fixed time • Fixed Order Biology-Chemistry-Physics • Limits innovation • Provides ability to transfer, easy scheduling

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