Undergraduate Gram For Teachers: GRADUATE SCHOOL, an institution offering education beyond the undergraduate level, typically courses leading to the master's or doctor's degree. Universities include graduate schools or divisions to train research scholars and teachers. Study for a professional degree, as in law, medicine, or theology, also follows undergraduate work, but professional schools are usually distinguished From graduate schools.
Professional opportunities provided by the college include experience at Henry Barnard School, the college laboratory school, which ranges from nursery classes to the ninth grade. In addition, every student spends a term as a public school teacher. Since 1934 the c has also had a graduate and undergraduate gram for teachers in service. The college credited by the New England Association oi leges and Secondary Schools and the Na Council for Accreditation of Teacher Educ In 1958 it moved from a midcity location to ; 50-acre campus on the northern boundai Providence. The new site with its six buil and sports facilities is expected to allow the c> to expand its enrollment substantially. As ol 1959 the college was empowered to grant art science degrees.
SRAM, a unit of mass or weight in the metric ystem. A gram mass is defined as 1/1000 of he International Prototype Kilogram, a cylinder f iridium-platinum alloy kept at the International tureau of Weights and Measures in Sevres, Vance. The gram weight is defined as the /eight of a gram mass under standard gravity, 'he gram equals about 1/28.35 avoirdupois unce. A U. S. silver dime weighs about 2 grams. In the original metric system the gram was efined as the mass of 1 cubic centimeter of 'ater at its maximum density. Its name was erived from the Latin word gramma meaning little weight."
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