College English

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November 1945

  1. Teaching the Heart of Literature
    doi:10.2307/371090

March 1945

  1. The College Teaching of English: Preliminary Statement of a Curriculum Study
    doi:10.2307/370399

January 1945

  1. The Teacher of Composition Looks at Speech
    doi:10.2307/370885

February 1944

  1. Teaching English in an Army Air Force College Training Program
    doi:10.2307/370935

May 1943

  1. A College English Teacher Looks at the Study of Latin
    doi:10.2307/371293

March 1943

  1. Teaching the Book Report
    doi:10.2307/371180

November 1942

  1. Teaching the English Language
    doi:10.2307/370351
  2. The Teacher with an Undergraduate Mind
    doi:10.2307/370339

October 1942

  1. Semantics and the Teaching of Prose Literature
    doi:10.2307/371027

April 1942

  1. On Teaching the Age of Johnson
    doi:10.2307/371163

February 1942

  1. Benjamin Franklin: Teacher of Composition
    doi:10.2307/370431
  2. English in Wartime: A Symposium by College Teachers
    Abstract

    After the declaration of war upon us by the Axis nations, it seemed the editors of College English that the members of the College should, as soon as possible, co-operate in determining how best to fulfil our special responsibility throughout World War II. As a first step, we invited twenty-five teachers of English in colleges and universities to suggest how we should meet this professional emergency. The Planning Commission of the N.C.T.E., at their meeting in Chicago during the Christmas holidays, and the College Section, at their meeting in Indianapolis with the M.L.A., considered general and basic wartime policies for the National Council. The result of these deliberations will be presented in the March College English. To assemble a preliminary survey of opinion on the teaching of English in World War II, we had to act quickly in order to meet the deadline for the February issue. Nine letters from college men and women came back in time to be included in the symposium. The weakness of the small number, however, is overcome by the strength of the unified and obviously representative character of the responses. Teachers of English believe in the permanent value of the work they are doing. In peace or in war the discipline of the humanities is a way to decency in human relations. Those who have written for the symposium agree that our time of emergency requires of us, as teachers of English, a more vigorous concentration than ever upon clear expression and broad, permanently vital reading. We will need to make curriculum changes, and individually we will perform special wartime duties; but the initial message from outstanding college teachers is that we must do the job for which we are trained: help others to realize the power which emanates from great literature to live humanely in the midst of conflict.

    doi:10.2307/370433

October 1941

  1. American Democracy and the Teaching of Literature
    doi:10.2307/371331
  2. A Solution for the Teaching of the Investigatory Paper
    doi:10.2307/371337

December 1940

  1. Ends and Means in Teaching English Literature
    doi:10.2307/370381
  2. Adapting the M. A. Thesis to the Needs of the High-School Teacher of English
    doi:10.2307/370377

November 1940

  1. Problems of Articulation in the Teaching of English
    doi:10.2307/370414

April 1940

  1. The Responsibility of the English Teacher
    doi:10.2307/371241

February 1940

  1. Teaching Composition as a Career
    doi:10.2307/370626
  2. Responsibilities of the English Teacher in the Urban University
    doi:10.2307/370623
  3. What Can Scholarship Do for the College Teacher?
    doi:10.2307/370622

December 1939

  1. Teaching Poetic Appreciation through Quantitative Analysis
    doi:10.2307/371270

November 1939

  1. An Open Letter to the Educational Experts on Teaching Composition
    doi:10.2307/370607
  2. The Importance of Time in the Teaching of Literature
    doi:10.2307/370610
  3. A Viewpoint on the Teaching of Masterpieces
    doi:10.2307/370611

October 1939

  1. The Use of Phonograph Recordings in Teaching Shakespeare
    doi:10.2307/370739