College Freshman English Curriculum Development Institute : a 7 college cooperative program, 1968.

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College Freshman English Curriculum Development Institute : a 7 college cooperative program, 1968.

An experiential curriculum for teaching English to black college freshman developed by participants of the College Freshman English Curriculum Development Institute, financed by the Ford Foundation and held 1 July-10 Aug. 1968. The institute included representatives from Allen University, Benedict College, Claflin College, Friendship Junior College, Morris College, South Carolina State College, and Voorhees College.

142 p.

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College Freshman English Curriculum Development Institute

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Allen University

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Founded 1870 as Payne Institute; 1880 under the auspices of the African Methodist Episcopal Church it was renamed in honor of Bishop Richard Allen, founder of this branch of the Methodist Church. From the description of Self-Study Steering Committee records, 1970-1972. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 70962831 Historically black university founded 1870 by the African Methodist Episcopal Church; located in Columbia, S.C. From the description of Lucy Lipsey diploma,...

Friendship Junior College (Rock Hill, S.C.)

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Voorhees College

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Denmark Industrial School, a school for blacks, founded 1897 by Elizabeth Evelyn Wright, a Tuskegee Institute graduate, with one teacher, Jessie Dorsey, and fourteen students in a rent free, old store in Denmark, S.C.; M. Ralph Voorhees, a white philanthropist from Clinton, N.J., donated $4500 to buy a plot of land and $500 to erect the first building; in 1902 the school was renamed Voorhees Industrial School in his honor; school became affiliated with the Episcopal Church in 1924; became junior...

Claflin College (Orangeburg, S.C.)

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Founded as Claflin University on Dec. 18, 1869 in Orangeburg, S.C. by the Freedmen's Aid Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church; est. largely through the generosity of Boston philanthropist, the Hon. Lee Claflin and his son, Massachusetts Governor William Claflin; occupies the former site of the Orangeburg Female Seminary; in 1871 merged with Baker Biblical Institute, founded in 1866 in Charleston, S.C., and recently moved to Orangeburg, and with a training school in Camden, S.C.; from 1872 t...

Ford foundation

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Philanthropic organization established in 1936 by Henry and Edsel Ford from profits of the Ford Motor Company. From the description of Grant files, [ca. 1936-1986]. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 155532303 ...

Morris College (Sumter, S.C.)

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Benedict College

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Benedict College founded in 1870 under the auspices of the American Home Missionary Society of the Baptist Church as Benedict Institute when Mrs. Bathsheba A. Benedict of Pawtucket, R.I., gave the society $5,000, a small bequest from her husband; originally designed to educate ministers and teachers the institution is now independent. From the description of College brochures, [196-]-[199-]. (Benedict College). WorldCat record id: 70967548 From the description of Federal pro...

South Carolina State College

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