Am. Soc. Anim. Prod.
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Am. Soc. Anim. Prod. 1937:182-188
© 1937 American Society of Animal Science

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A Study of the Types of Problems Investigated by Graduate Students in Animal Husbandry and the Occupations in which the Recipients of Advanced Degrees Engage1

Ralph W. Phillips2 and Frederick N. Andrews3

Massachusetts State College

Abstract

Conclusion: The data presented in this paper show the types of problems upon which theses submitted for advanced degrees in animal husbandry have been based, and the occupations in which the recipients of advanced degrees during the years 1920 to 1934 are engaged. Forty of the Animal Husbandry Departments in Land-Grant Colleges supplied information and 31 of these granted advanced degrees during this period. Totals of 508 Master's and 58 Doctor's degrees are included. This information is presented in the belief that it will be useful to the members of Animal Husbandry departments responsible for the planning and supervision of graduate work and to the students who plan to take work in this field. No detailed interpretations have been made. It is felt that these data will have their greatest value when interpreted by individual workers, departments, or students in relation to their specific conditions.


Footnotes

1 Contribution No. 283 of the Massachusetts Agricultural Experiment Station, Amherst, Massachusetts.

2 Now at the U. S. Animal Husbandry Experiment Station, Beltsville, Maryland.

3 Now with the Animal Husbandry Department, University of Missouri. Columbia, Missouri.







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Copyright © 1937 by the American Society of Animal Science.