iJ NxUIT THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEE UDIES IN THREE SUBJECTS: Ann Arbor High School Offers Accelerated Courses )NESDAY, 1 By PETER DAWSON T Some fifty Ann Arbor High, School seniors are this year study- ng analytic geometry and courses quivalent to college-freshman ,nglish and third-year college Tench. During the last two-and-a-half! ears the high school has beef in- tituting a program of accelerated ourses in French, English, and nathematics, one of the first such rograms in the state. The program is intended for the. nore able students who get A's with relatively little effort," ac-' ording to Nicholas Schreiber, Ann1 arbor High principal. Has Two GoalsI The program has two goals, Schreiber explained in an October 958 report. Its primary goal s "acceleration and enrichment f -subject matter" for the students rho can benefit by the program. ts secondary goal is "acquisition f advance credit in college." Yet for the sake of these stu- ents' non-academic needs, they ,re prohibited from taking more han two accelerated courses at nee, the report notes. So far the program has concen- rated on skill subjects. In these subjects, Schreiber said, much lesst eeds to be relearned in a differentI ray in college. Offers Mathematicst When the program is fully insti-' uted according to the presentr lan, the accelerated students will *o three semesters of algebra in inth grade, explains a Septembers 958 report by Dorothy Noyes, hairman of the High School's iathematics department. 5 In tenth, they will do both planer nd solid geometry. In eleventh,e hey will complete second-year al-I ebra, trigonometry, and some an-s lytic geometry. In twelfth, they will do more nalytic geometry and some cal- iulus. SUMMATION SIGMAS-Ann Arbor High School junior Ted Burrows proves a theorem for his advanced-placement mathematics class. Taught by Dorothy Noyes, chairman of the high school's mathematics department, the class is tllis year studying trigonometry and some analytic geometry and is completing second-year algebra. The class is part of the high school's program of accelerated courses in French, English and mathematics. A good deal of enrichment ma- terial is included all along, her re- port adds. Further, she told The Daily, teachers constantly try to use the ideas of so-called "modern mathe- matics." Gives Special Classes "I think it's swell," one junior said of his course, largely because "you're not held back." Each junior high school now has two sections of special mathe- matics in both grades seven and eight, according to Russell West," Assistant Superintendent for In- struction in the city schools. "In addition to the content used in regular classes, these special classes extend into topics and in- vestigations which range rather MEAT SPECIALS"I widely in the field of mathemat- ics," he added. The high school also offers a weekly no-credit seminar in math- ematics with a University profes- sor, Miss Noyes said. This year six to a dozen students attend it. Accelerates French Course The program in French includes an accelerate second-year course and an accelerated third- and fourth-year course, explained Bruce Henry, who teaches these courses. They use many readings from the literary college's French 91 ("Modern and Contemporary Readings"), he said, and a gram- mar book equivalent to that used in French 61 ("Composition"). The English program was de- scribed by Robert Granville, chair- man of the High School's English department and Advanced Place- ment Committee. Accelerated students will do five semesters' work in the second half of tenth grade and in eleventh graderhe said. In twelfth, they will do the equivalent of college-fresh- man composition. They do "lots of writing," he added, "and that means lots of consultation." They also study dif- ficult literature-for example "The Bridge of San Luis Rey" and "Death of a Salesman." Limits Classes In all subjects, accelerated classes, are limited to about twenty stu- dents, Granville remarked. Teachers of accelerated courses have only four classes a day in- stead of five. This is to enable them to devote more time to their accelerated classes, he added. Teachers of accelerated courses "really have to keep on their toes," Henry said. He said he enjoyed teaching them, especially because they are at "a much more adult level." Students receive 'a dual grade, for example A-/B+, Granville' said. The second part is the stu- dent's actual grade in his ac- celerated course.The first is his teacher's estimate of what he would have gotten in a regular course. It is used in computing, his average.f The purposes of this system are to keep accelerated classes com- petitive, he continued, and to avoid penalizing students for tak- ing them. Prepares for College Some 65 per cent of the school's 1,950-2,000 students are preparing for college, Schreiber's report notes. This year, it continues, about seven per cent of the school, or some 140 students, is in accelerated courses. Accelerated students are chosen with great care, Granville said. The Advanced Placement Commit- tee, which chooses them, considers several factors: academic record, health record, recommendations from classroom and homeroom teachers, and scores on reading and intelligence tests. The College Entrance Examina- tion Board advises and encourages schools in introducing accelerated courses, the Board says in its present guide to its advanced- placement program. It also puts out a syllabus of suggestions for accelerated courses. Each spring it offers advanced- placement exams based on this syllabus to students who have taken accelerated courses, College Decides Placement Each college decides about ad- vanced credit and placement for its own incoming freshmen, the guide continues. "Almost all" colleges, it goes on, have given advanced placement to those students who have done satisfactorily in accelerated high school courses and advanced- placement exams. "The majority" have also given advanced credit, the guide adds. Last year 3,715 students from some 330 schools took 6,800 advanced- placement exams. Last year, Henry said, eight Ann Arbor High students took the French advanced-placement exam. They were the only studentsin Michigan to do so, he pointed out. Two of them got six hours' ad- vanced credit, and three got three hours' advanced credit, in their respective colleges, he added. Board Pays Fee The Ann Arbor Board of Edu- cation now pays the $13 exam fee for its advanced - placement students, Granville noted. In re- turn for its extra investment in their education, he added, it re- quires them all to take the exams. The College Entrance Examina- tion Board (CEEB) sponsors con- ferences in the summer for teach- ers of accelerated high school courses. Last June it put on nine such conferences in various sub- jects, the guide adds. A hundred or more high school and college teachers and adminis- trators came to each, Schreiber estimated, and stayed for several days. Next summer the University will host a language conference, Schreiber remarked. Fund Supports The CEEB's program grew out of two experiments supported by the Fund for the Advancement of Education in the early fifties, the guide says. "In the fall of 1955," notes a report by West, study began in Ann Arbor of the possibility of an accelerated mathematics program. The next year, the report says, the plan was implemented in eighth and ninth grades and the second half of tenth. Those ninth-graders are now juniors. They will graduate next year after the full mathematics( program except for the seventh- and eighth-grade courses, West went on. Similarly, next year's seniors will be the first to have had the full accelerated English program, Granville said. 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Enter the program in September only and com- plete degree requirements for MS de- gree in early August of the following year. The school offers substantial fi- nancial aid. Loan funds and tuition scholarships also available. Household Finance Corporation, Chi- cago, Ill. Location of work: Home Of- fice, Chicago, Ill. Division offices: New York City; Philadelphia, Pa.; Detroit, Mich.; Chicago, Ill.; Los Angeles, Calif.; Toronto, Ontario; Montreal, Quebec; 725 branch offices located in the U.S. and Canada. Graduates: Feb., June. Men with any degree in Liberal Arts or Bus. Admin. for Management Train- ing. Men enrolled in the program quick- ly learn the fundamentals of consum- er finance business, making credit in- vestigations, and helping people solve their financial problems. Engineering Interviews: Wed., Feb. 11: Aied Chemical Corp., all divisions, interested in B.S.: Ch.E., Elec., & Mech., M.S.: Ch.E. and Mech. and Ph.D.: Ch.E. Must be male U.S. citizen. 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