DocumentCode
1266065
Title
Abridgment of cooperative courses — Their development and operating principles
Author
Wildes, Karl L.
Author_Institution
Massachusetts Institute, of Technology, Cambridge, Mass.
Volume
49
Issue
6
fYear
1930
fDate
6/1/1930 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
470
Lastpage
474
Abstract
The Cooperative Idea has been the motivating spirit in the various attempts to bring together the educational and industrial elements in engineering. The outstanding milestones of progress in this undertaking are the “Sandwich System” of Scotland, the establishment of shops in schools, the rise of educational opportunities in industrial concerns, the report of Sir William White´s committee of practising engineers and educators in England, and finally, the conception and inception of the cooperative courses at the University of Cincinnati and at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. These courses are taken as examples of two types of cooperative course called respectively the “Cincinnati Plan” and the “M. I. T. Plan.” Each of these possesses a structure and a set of operating principles determined by the purpose for which it was instituted and the conditions under which it is carried out. The operating principles of the M. I. T. Plan are discussed in detail in this paper. The graduates of both these plans are demonstrating that the results sought are being accomplished.
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
A.I.E.E., Journal of the
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0095-9804
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JAIEE.1930.6535741
Filename
6535741
Link To Document