An advertisement for the University of Western Ontario highlighting some of the programs offered, including the nursing program, that was featured in Farmer's Magazine.
Image of a branch of the Institute of Public Health building that open in 1912 before eventually being transferred to Western University and later becoming the Faculty of Public Health in 1917.
An invitation to a reception held at the Windermere Manor Grand Hall honouring Dr. Carroll Iwasiw for the completion of her term as Director of the School of Nursing.
A letter sent to Dr. Paul Stilwell McKibben, then Dean of the Medical Faculty, by Dr. Hibbert Winslow Hill about the resolutions passed by the university senate that affect the nursing program at Western University.
Image of the nine graduating nurses from 1922. From left to right: Edith (Allen) Bagshaw, Grace (Cruise) Hebb, Allie Ainslee Hiles, Rena L. (Selby) Moseley, Irene (Handford Little) Myers, Elizabeth Regan, Marjorie (White) Spenceley, Gladys (Wilson) Wallace, and Inez (Roach) White.
Image of ten newly graduated nurses sitting for a class picture. From left: Pearl A. (McKernan) Allison, Annabel (Hamilton) Frederick, Nellie M. Laycock, Susannah Elizabeth (Smyth Childerhose) Cole, Jennie G. Jeeves, Mary Euphemia Smith, Ada C. Brown, Mabel Hardie, Ethel V. Ward, and Dorothy (Taylor) Perry.
Image of the members of the 1945 Class Executive for the nursing program. From left to right: Margaret Drummond, Alice Macklin, Patricia Bourke, Vivian Grant, and Dorothy Rogers.
Image of the graduating members of the 1946 Executive for the public health nursing program. From left to right: Burma Morlock, Bernice Lewis, Marguerite Moloney, J. Kirkland, and Marjorie Hudson.
Image of fourth year nursing student Tamizan Vally presenting her project on community nursing to Dr. Brian Hennen, Chair of the Department of Family Medicine, and Judy Arnett, a public health nurse, at University Hospital.
Image of the members of the 1959 Council for the nursing program. From left to right: Marilyn Mason, Lorraine Baranowski, Ruth Crane, June Archibald, and Ruth Hillman.
Image of a group of people standing in the Institute of Public Health's exhibit, which was part of the Farmer's Advocate tent at the Provincial Ploughing Match.
The mid-year examination assigned by Prof. A. Stevenson to students in the psychology course for the Certificate of Public Health Nursing.
Transcript:
University of Western Ontario
Faculty of Public Health
Mid-year Examination
PSYCHOLOGY - C.P.H.N.
January 1924 - A. Stevenson - Lecturer and Examiner.
Answer any four.
1. (a) What sense organs function in giving us knowledge of the following properties or qualities of our own bodies or of external objects: equilibrium, weight, hardness, flavor, smoothness?
(b) briefly explain the following terms as applied to sensations: kinaesthetic, organic, static, cutaneous, gustatory
2. Explain the nature and the significance of the class demonstration and experience with (a) the Peruvian bark (b) the egg-shell, and (c) the non-sense syllables.
3. (a) Name the two factors in an act of perception.
(b) Show that if a percept is inaccurate the cause may lie in either of these two factors.
(c) Distinguish illusion, hallucination, delusion.
4. (a) Explain at some length the statement that the new born infant is a bundle of capacities, tendencies, and active and latent abilities, illustrating your answer throughout by definite reference to particular instances of these.
(b) Show the changes that take place in a general way in regard these as the child grows older, and state the causes to which these changes are due.
5. (a) What exactly do we mean by memory? By a good memory?
(b) What property or quality of nerve tissue makes recall possible?
(c) Name the factors that enter into an act of memory?
(d) State the conditions, physical and mental, that contribute to facility and accuracy of recall.
Image of Joanne Olson and the 1991 Bachelour of Science in Nursing class posing for a group portrait at the London Regional Art Gallery as part of the 1990 Sigma Theta Tau induction ceremony.
Image of Lillian Bramwell speaking at a reception thrown by the Iota Omichron Chapter of Sigma Theta Tau in honour of her appointment as Dean of the Faculty of Nursing at the University of Western Ontario.
Image of Florence P. F. Quigley, local officer for the London Emergency Nursing Reserve of the Red Cross, sitting at her desk. Quigley was an alumna of the University of Western Ontario, graduating with a BA in 1926 and a BScN in 1929.