542 INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF EDUCATION.
The character of our technical schools remains as yet as unsettled and
various as their independent and far-separated points of origin permit.
I'he State universities usually offer a few fairly well-defined courses in
engineering and architecture and in the science and art of agriculture,
and a few of the independent colleges stand beside them. The larger and
older literary colleges usually do but little in this field, and do that only
ander pressure and rarely well. The independent schools have as many
standards of work as they have foundations. Some demand a good high-
school preparation; others only a few selected preparatory studies, and
hey, often, very elementary. Of the endowed schools, some, as the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, are able to offer numerous courses
in science and in the constructive work of applied science; others, as the
Rensselaer Polytechnic and the Stevens Institute of Technology, elect to
offer a single but strong course. Some approximate the technical uni-
versity in their magnitude, extent, and variety of work; the others, often
denominating themselves engineering colleges, give a nondescript trade-
school course. A few, like the Pratt Institute of Brooklyn, the Cooper
Institute of New York, aid thousands of artisans; others give costly
instruction to the wealthy few.
We need in every State a technical university, or a technical-school
side to a university, in which the highest possible grade of professional
school shall be maintained, and for all the professions based upon learn-
ing. Law and engineering, medicine and architecture, theology and agri-
culture—all have their scientific basis, and their highest provinces and
grandest fields lie where only the highest scientific training and widest
knowledge can make them satisfactorily productive of good. Their
courses should be precisely adapted to the presentation of all modern
science and the best of contemporary practice, to educated and well-pre-
pared disciples, by the great leaders of each. That only can be rightly
called a learned profession which demands of all its practitioners a thor-
ough familiarity with the science as well as with the art of that voca-
sion, The planning of the courses taught in professional schools should
se capable of being very exactly defined and adjusted to the needs of the
profession. The courses of the now more common mixed schools are
iess easily prescribed.
We need a trade school, or a technical college embracing trade schools,
in every large city in the country. We should have at least one in each of
-he smaller States, and from two to four in each of the larger and more
densely populated States. The East needs weaving schools and schools
of industrial art to serve as a foundation for her manufacturing system
and her decorative work ; the West is in especial need of similar schools to
stimulate the introduction of manufactures among her agricultural dis-
tricts. The South is in want of technical and trade schools to give her
material to introduce into her cotton mills and metallurgical works. All