Recollections of Waterloo College
When Flora Roy accepted a teaching position at Waterloo College in 1948, she imagined it would be a temporary posting until she finished her dissertation and returned to Toronto or another large Canadian university. Little did she know that, as head of the English department, she would stay on and find herself involved in local controversies.

This memoir recalls Roy’s early days at Waterloo College (when its standards were still supervised by the University of Western Ontario) and traces the gradual pressures to merge with the new University of Waterloo. As history shows, Waterloo College resisted what was seen then as corporate pressure and became instead an independent and much-loved institution called Waterloo Lutheran University(which later became Wilfrid Laurier University). The story of the transformation of Waterloo College into Waterloo Lutheran Universityis told through anecdotes and shows that, despite its size, the small campus was very connected to the larger world.

The royalties from the sale of this book will be directed towards funding scholarships.

All photographs were used with the kind permission of Wilfrid Laurier UniversityArchives and Special Collections.

Please note that in future printings, the third last paragraph of Recollections of Waterloo College will be corrected to read as follows:

I have been circuitous about this, but I should now admit that I feel that a concession to candidates for academic employment, that indicates that they have not the time, or the endurance or may we say the ability to go further, throws a shadow over those who take advantage of it. In addition, it suggests that they are not especially fitted for the rigours of life as university faculty members.

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Recollections of Waterloo College
When Flora Roy accepted a teaching position at Waterloo College in 1948, she imagined it would be a temporary posting until she finished her dissertation and returned to Toronto or another large Canadian university. Little did she know that, as head of the English department, she would stay on and find herself involved in local controversies.

This memoir recalls Roy’s early days at Waterloo College (when its standards were still supervised by the University of Western Ontario) and traces the gradual pressures to merge with the new University of Waterloo. As history shows, Waterloo College resisted what was seen then as corporate pressure and became instead an independent and much-loved institution called Waterloo Lutheran University(which later became Wilfrid Laurier University). The story of the transformation of Waterloo College into Waterloo Lutheran Universityis told through anecdotes and shows that, despite its size, the small campus was very connected to the larger world.

The royalties from the sale of this book will be directed towards funding scholarships.

All photographs were used with the kind permission of Wilfrid Laurier UniversityArchives and Special Collections.

Please note that in future printings, the third last paragraph of Recollections of Waterloo College will be corrected to read as follows:

I have been circuitous about this, but I should now admit that I feel that a concession to candidates for academic employment, that indicates that they have not the time, or the endurance or may we say the ability to go further, throws a shadow over those who take advantage of it. In addition, it suggests that they are not especially fitted for the rigours of life as university faculty members.

29.99 In Stock
Recollections of Waterloo College

Recollections of Waterloo College

by Flora Roy
Recollections of Waterloo College

Recollections of Waterloo College

by Flora Roy

Paperback

$29.99 
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Overview

When Flora Roy accepted a teaching position at Waterloo College in 1948, she imagined it would be a temporary posting until she finished her dissertation and returned to Toronto or another large Canadian university. Little did she know that, as head of the English department, she would stay on and find herself involved in local controversies.

This memoir recalls Roy’s early days at Waterloo College (when its standards were still supervised by the University of Western Ontario) and traces the gradual pressures to merge with the new University of Waterloo. As history shows, Waterloo College resisted what was seen then as corporate pressure and became instead an independent and much-loved institution called Waterloo Lutheran University(which later became Wilfrid Laurier University). The story of the transformation of Waterloo College into Waterloo Lutheran Universityis told through anecdotes and shows that, despite its size, the small campus was very connected to the larger world.

The royalties from the sale of this book will be directed towards funding scholarships.

All photographs were used with the kind permission of Wilfrid Laurier UniversityArchives and Special Collections.

Please note that in future printings, the third last paragraph of Recollections of Waterloo College will be corrected to read as follows:

I have been circuitous about this, but I should now admit that I feel that a concession to candidates for academic employment, that indicates that they have not the time, or the endurance or may we say the ability to go further, throws a shadow over those who take advantage of it. In addition, it suggests that they are not especially fitted for the rigours of life as university faculty members.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780889204737
Publisher: Wilfrid Laurier University Press
Publication date: 09/16/2004
Pages: 160
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.50(d)

About the Author

From 1948 until her retirement in 1978, Flora Roy taught courses in almost every period of English literature, including Old and Middle English and 18th century (her own specialization). She established English 348 (world literature) in 1963 and taught it until 1978. After retirement, she developed and taught courses in Irish and children’s literature.
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