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Monday, May 23, 2011

UCLA History: Extension in 1930

About a block away from the scene on the left in downtown LA, UC ran an extension service. Extension operated at that location before the general campus moved from Vermont Avenue to Westwood and afterwards. The scene in the picture is 7th Street and Hill in the 1930s. Extension was at 815 South Hill, a block away. (Sorry, I can't find a picture closer than this one.) It is not clear if the Extension program reported to UCLA or connected directly to Berkeley. (Any historians out there who know?)

The catalog below indicates that people take extension courses aimed "at learning and self-help, individual improvement and intellectual progress." Teacher credentials could be earned. Among the 1930 courses was one on "Television, Telephotography and Picture Broadcasting." There was also a course in "Radio Telephony and Talking Moving Pictures." Finally, in those days long before PowerPoint, an education course is taught which is "illustrated with lantern slides."

If you have trouble clicking on the publication below, try clicking on "open publication" and experiment with enlargement. The image may vary depending on your computer.

3 comments:

Toby Higbie said...

Dan: my research on UC workers education classes suggests that the Extension reported to the President of UC. Worker education classes ran in Berkeley and Los Angeles and date back to the early 1920s. That said, it seems that the Southern Campus, may have had more developed extension activity because it was itself a kind of extension of the original university.

California Policy Issues said...
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California Policy Issues said...

Thanks Toby. Extension in LA seemed to be under a UC board which included the provost of UCLA.