University Examination Regulations




MAY 23.] THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE. 745

faculty; the hedonist, intuitionalist, and utilitarian methods.
(b.) Logic.—Deductive and inductive logic.
II. No candidate shall be admitted to the degree of Bachelor
of Arts unless he shall have passed in at least five of the above
subjects of examination, of which two must be Latin and Mathe-
matics.
III. The examination may be passed in two sections. Either
two or three subjects of examination, one of which must be either
Latin or Mathematics, shall constitute the first section, which
may be taken at the end of the second or any subsequent year,
and the remaining subjects shall constitute the second section,
which may be taken at the end of the third or any subsequent
year; or, at the option of the candidate, all the subjects may be
taken together at the end of the third or any subsequent year.
IV. No student shall be admitted to the final examination for
the degree of Bachelor of Arts who has not kept three years'
terms at some institution affiliated to the University of New
Zealand, unless he shall have been admitted as an undergraduate
under the Statute of Admissions ad eundem, or unless he shall
be a teacher permitted to proceed to the degree under the pro-
visions hereinafter contained.
V. Every student intending to present himself for examina-
tion shall, not later than the first day of September preceding the
examination, signify to the Chancellor the subjects in which he
shall elect to be examined.
VI. The names of the students who pass the examination
shall be placed in alphabetical order, and shall be published by
the Chancellor as soon as is convenient after the receipt by him
of the reports of the Examiners.
VII. Teachers in Affiliated Institutions, and certificated
teachers of good repute in any school established or conducted
under the provisions of an Act of the General Assembly or of a
Provincial Council of this colony, having been in the practice of
their profession for at least five years, may be admitted on the
recommendation of the Chancellor or of the Vice-Chancellor to
the examination for the degree of Bachelor of Arts, to be
passed either in one or two sections, on payment of the ordinary
fees, without matriculation and the keeping of University terms ;
and on passing that examination shall be entitled to all the other
privileges of graduates of the University of the same standing,
anything in other regulations of the University notwithstanding :
Provided that under this clause no teacher shall be admitted
to the first section of his examination beyond the B.A. examina-
tion for the year 1883 : Provided also that every teacher
admitted to examination under this clause shall give three
months' notice to the Chancellor of the subjects in which he
shall elect to be examined.
VIII. The fee for the examination for the degree of Bachelor
of Arts shall be one guinea.

Of Honours.
I. An examination for Honours shall be held in the month of
November in each year.
II. No candidate shall be admitted to the examination for
Honours excepting at the examination of the year following that
in which he shall have passed for the degree of Bachelor of
Arts.
III. Candidates for Honours shall be examined in one or more
of the following groups of subjects :—Group 1 : Languages and
Literature : Any two of the following subdivisions, of which
Latin must be one—(A) Latin, (B) Greek, (C) English, (D)



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VUW Te Waharoa PDF NZ Gazette 1882, No 49





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🎓 Education, Culture & Science
23 May 1882
University, Examinations, Physics, Chemistry, Natural Science, Biology, Mental Science, Syllabus