Do we say curriculum or syllabus

curriculum 459 occurrences

<Cur, course> (run): (1) current, currency, incur, concur, occurrence, cursory, excursion, course, discourse, intercourse, recourse; (2) curriculum, precursor, discursive, recurrent, concourse, courier, succor, corridor.

Qui breve hoc vitae curriculum cupiunt sani transigere, frigidis aquis saepe lavare debent, nulli aetati cum sit incongrua, calidis imprimis utilis. 2981.

It means that all phases of the process the relation of pupil and teacher, school and home, the government and discipline, the lessons taught in every subject, the environment, the proportioning of the curriculum, of physical, emotional and intellectual cultureall shall be focussed and organized upon the one significant aim of the wholecharacter.

But Jefferson terminated his collegiate course with a possession far more valuable than all the learning he could gather in the narrow curriculum of a colonial college; study had excited in him that eager thirst for knowledge which is an appetite of the mind almost as unconquerable as the appetites of the body.

This was the usual curriculum for growing boys, and doubtless its observance induced that admiration of tyrannicide which marked the character of so many young Florentines.

Lesbia despised him for that neglect of all his opportunities of culture which had left him, after the most orthodox and costly curriculum, almost as ignorant as a ploughboy.

In 1875, when he was admitted to practice in the Supreme Court of the United States, he delivered an address that same evening in Washington on the "Curriculum of the School of the Prophets in Ancient Israel.

Its most earnest champions were Rowland Hill and Mrs. Hannah More; but it is worthy of note that this excellent lady, justly honoured as a pioneer of elementary education, confined her curriculum to the Bible and the Catechism, and "such coarse works as may fit the children for servants.

Curriculum making in secondary schools.

Curriculum studies in arithmetic. SEE Sleeper, Mary O. SLEEPER, MARY O. Curriculum studies in arithmetic.

Curriculum studies in arithmetic. SEE Sleeper, Mary O. SLEEPER, MARY O. Curriculum studies in arithmetic.

Curriculum studies in arithmetic. Series 1.

An experience curriculum in English; a report of the Curriculum Commission of the National Council of Teachers of English.

An experience curriculum in English; a report of the Curriculum Commission of the National Council of Teachers of English.

SEE RADER, MELVIN M. The new curriculum arithmetic.

SEE BRUECKNER, LEO J. The new curriculum arithmetics.

SEE Brueckner, Leo J. The new curriculum workbooks in arithmetic.

New curriculum tests in arithmetic processes and individual progress chart.

New curriculum tests in problem solving and individual progress chart.

The new curriculum workbooks in arithmetic.

By Wilbur L. Beauchamp, Gertrude Crampton, Harriet M. Fogg & William S. Gray. (Curriculum Foundation Series) © 30Oct36; A100195.

BRUECKNER, LEO J. Teacher's manual and key to accompany New curriculum tests and new triangle tests in arithmetic processes for grades three to eight. NM: revisions & additions.

Holt, Rinehart & Winston, Inc. (PWH); 19Jun64; R339904. Teacher's manual for New curriculum arithmetic.

Curriculum study in a mountain district.

Curriculum, plural of, 21.

syllabus 287 occurrences

The geography syllabus, even more than the history one, depends for its beginnings at least on the surroundings of the schoolout of the mass of possible materials a very rich and comprehensive syllabus can be made, beginning with any one of the central points already suggested.

The geography syllabus, even more than the history one, depends for its beginnings at least on the surroundings of the schoolout of the mass of possible materials a very rich and comprehensive syllabus can be made, beginning with any one of the central points already suggested.

The following is a small part of a syllabus to show how geography and history material may grow naturally out of the children's experiences.

This grows naturally out of the geography syllabus and might be taken side by side or afterwards.

A syllabus in Fundamentals in secondary education.

<pb id='073.png' n='1966h1/A/1137' /> DIETRICH, E.B. Syllabus for world trade.

College course in English composition; syllabus and exercises.

SEE MCKEON, R. P. Introductory general course in the study of contemporary society; syllabus.

Syllabus for social sciences 1: Introduction to the study of contemporary society.

Social sciences 3 syllabus.

Introductory general course in the biological sciences syllabus.

The Scope and methods of the social sciences, syllabus.

Syllabus of general anthropology (Anthropology 220, 230, 240) Pt. 1. 2nd ed., Sept. 1946.

Syllabus of general anthropology 220, 230, 240.

Farm management crop manual (University of California syllabus)

(U.C. syllabus series UJ)

Introduction to contemporary civilization, a syllabus by R. C. Atkinson, H. J. Carman, J. J. Coss, and others, 4th ed.

Syllabus of American literature.

Syllabus for social sciences 1: Introduction to the study of contemporary society.

(University of California, Los Angeles, syllabus series, no. 293) © 16Mar45; AA102515.

(U.C. syllabus series UJ)

(University of California syllabus series, no. 314) NM: illus.

(University of California syllabus series, US) © 15Sep49; AA133341.

(University of California syllabus series, UV) NM: revisions & additions.

(University of California syllabus series, VA)

Do we say   curriculum   or  syllabus