Collections | Primary Sources | History | What's New | Services | Contact us |
|
![]() |
Penn in the 18th Century Curriculum of the College of Philadelphia Also see Penn in the Age of Franklin, a Web exhibit created jointly by the |
|
Penn in the
|
Once in the college, the course of study was designed to be completed in a minimum of three years. After completing the freshman, junior and senior years, students were again examined before receiving their bachelor's degrees at the commencement ceremony. Each school year was divided into three terms, each of which addressed a new unit. The three year course of study included Latin and Greek, mathematics and natural science, and ethics, along with English and oratory. More specifically, the course was designed to sharpen its pupils acumen such that at the end of the three years, students would be able to apply independent thought to whatever situations life might demand. When the school was rechartered in 1779, a new curriculum was put in place. There would still be a preparatory course offered in the Academy, but the college course was to change. The pattern of academic life at the College is described in a letter written by William Temple Franklin, Benjamin Franklin's grandson, to his father (Franklin Papers, Vol. 48, Part II, No. 145, A.P.S). As a member of the Junior Class of the Philosophy School (as the College was often called), Franklin explained that for three mornings a week, he studied Latin and Roman history under Francis Alison. The remaining three mornings, he attended classes in Geography, also conducted by Alison. Between eleven in the morning and three in the afternoon, Franklin learned Euclid's Elements, then taught by Provost William Smith. He was also instructed by the Provost in Mathematics from three until five. At five, after roll call and prayers, there was nothing more to do at the College, and students were free to go home to write an exercise specific to that day of the week. A number of student notebooks surviving from the eighteenth century provide more details on the curriculum of that time.
The 187 pages of this exhibit were researched, written and created by Mary D. McConaghy, Michael Silberman, and Irina Kalashnikova. This exhibit first appeared on the Web in 2004, as part of the celebration of Benjamin Franklin's 300th birthday.
Collections | Primary Sources | History | What's New | Services | Contact us
|