The Making of Princeton University Quotes
The Making of Princeton University: From Woodrow Wilson to the Present
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James L. Axtell12 ratings, 3.75 average rating, 2 reviews
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The Making of Princeton University Quotes
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“Compared to most of its peers, Princeton is still by choice quite small, a face-to-face community located on a beautiful, tree-filled campus in an exurban colonial town. Its fewer than seven thousand students are taught and mentored by a faculty of over eleven hundred, giving it a 5:1 student-faculty ratio (in full-time equivalents), one of the lowest in the nation. This low ratio stems directly from Princeton’s philosophy of maintaining close personal contact between teachers and learners, and not only in innumerable Wilson-inspired precepts and seminars. The four-course plan, with its demanding (of both students and faculty) junior papers and senior theses, and comprehensive exams were, as Professor of English Charles G. Osgood emphasized on the eve of World War II, 'natural results' of the preceptorial system, Wilson’s reorganization of the curriculum, and 'the personal efforts of men whom Wilson brought to Princeton or advanced.”
― The Making of Princeton University: From Woodrow Wilson to the Present
― The Making of Princeton University: From Woodrow Wilson to the Present
