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The
course of study designed for the College was William
Smith's crowning achievement. He envisioned a preparatory tract that
would be taught in the Latin School. Preparation
for college would include writing, Latin, and mathematics. Smith felt
these studies could begin for boys around age nine, and would last several
years. Admission to the College was determined after a demanding examination
of applicants by the Trustees.
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 Grammar School,
but the college course was to change. There were to be four courses of
learning from which the students could choose, which foreshadowed the
modern elective system. College students were required to engage as full-time
students for four full academic years, at the end of which period they
would be granted a Bachelors Degree. Although this was a new direction
for the school on paper, in practice there were only somewhat minor changes
to Smith's plan for a course of study. In fact, Smith's curriculum remained
basically intact well into the 19th century. In 1791 courses were offered
in Greek and Latin, mathematics, moral philosophy, as well as in German
and oratory and the English language. Beginning in 1790, Penn students
were also able to enroll in America's first law course, taught by James
Wilson.
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.
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