National Education
Transcription
National Education
N.Z. COUNCIL FOR E D U C A T I O N A L RE8EARCH jj SOU i HERN CROSS BLDGP i|BRA.\GON ST., WELLINGTO National Education PUBLISHED EXCEPT MONTHLY JANUARY THE JOURNAL OF THE NEW ZEALAND EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTE February 1, 1938 Volume X X , Number 2 0 9 List of Contents Too Well Behaved 1 A Layman Looks On 17 Comment on the Month's Events 2 To Mr. Scott (verse) 19 Editorial 3 An Interview with the Man-in-the-Street 20 Constitutional Remits, and Reminders 4 Education Under Difficulties 22 Conference of Branch Secretaries 5 Mystery in the Common Room 24 Education Here and There 8 After the N.E.F. Conference 27 11 Power in Politics ("Vindex") 29 History was Dull at School Centralism—Localism (a review) 13 News From Branches 33 Our Collaborators in Education 14 Increase of Position Salary 36 Too Well-behaved ' p H A T diminutive, caustic and charming Scotsman, Dr. W. Boyd, made some very good points in his lecture at the Town Hall, Wellington, in July of last year. Following is a bright fragment from that speech: "I have heard discussions since I have been here about the badness of your big classes, and I haven't one single word to say bad enough for the big class. You have far too many of them, but speaking as a practical teacher myself, I would rather teach fifty New Zealand children than fifty Scots any day. I would say that judged by our standards your discipline is too easy, that the children are, on the whole, too well-behaved. I know some of you will not complain about that, but that was the feeling I had in looking around. Then I proceeded to get my mind clear about the sort of work that was done in the schools. You don't judge that by the actual performance of the teacher under show conditions. I had a good look at the blackboards, and the blackboards were damnable. The writing of the teachers was horribly good—horribly. It was the writing of people who were always thinking of the taskmaster. The examples of spelling and counting and grammar told the same tale. "It was the tale of an educational system obsessed with the petty, empty things of education rather than the essence. A n d every now and again I saw walls adorned wih pictures, posters— the children's work—and that kind of thing. I guessed right away and confirmed my guess afterwards—they were the goods put in the shop window for the inspector. I asked one teacher about it and he confirmed my judgment. I said, 'Well, if it is so simple and obvious, what does the inspector think about it?' The teacher replied, 'Some inspectors like it!' I don't know what inspectors like, but they must be a funny lot if they like yon." * * * * "What happened was that you let yourselves in for the English separation between primary and secondary education. Your high schools, rather of the English sort, are meant for an aristocracy, a selected people, and the old primary schools for the common or ordinary people. That is the English principle as opposed to the Scotch method of getting a primary system which grows into a secondary system and forms a satisfactory unity." C O M M E N T O N THE M O N T H ' S — B Y THE EDITOR A Little Prophecy p R O P H E C Y is a chancy art, especially when applied to politics. Accepting the risk, and carefully reading our best crystal, we foresee an Education Bill which will be placed before the House at some time during the Parliamentary Session that resumes on March 1. Measures for unification of control, for raising the school leaving age to 15 and for consolidating the Education Act are possibilities, but our prediction is that the latter two items will be amongst those that "also ran." Of the three, unification is of outstanding importance. Its effect will be to co-ordinate the work of all schools, primary, secondary and technical, in each board area, and not, as some seem to think, to centralise control in the Education Department. For a wearisome, stultifying length of time the three types of school have run along parallel lines which, as everybody knows " i f produced to infinity will never meet." Unification would make it possible for the controlling authorities to ensure an end-on progress through the schools, and would bring one stage nearer to reality our much lauded but largely fanciful "smooth passage from kindergarten to the University." Even this measure, far-sierhted as it is, will not, we take it, be finalized in the cominor session, for it is almost certain that it will be referred to the Education Committee of the House, and that the Committee will hear evidence from all interested parties. And hearing evidence on a question that will be so hotly debated as this will take time— perhaps a long time. Commonsense suggests more Education Boards than at present, and some pretty emphatic expressions of opinion bv delegates at the N . E . F . Conference connled with the obvious reouirements of the "New Education," give a hint that local Directors of Education—whatever they may be called —are to be a part of the scheme. As for the school leaving age, it is no secret that M r . Fraser is keen to have it raised to 15. Provision to do so already exists in the 1920 Act, but the stars are against its immediate enforcePage 2 EVENTS ment. Shortage of teachers and lack of accommodation might easily trip up the most ardent reformer, at least until the present herculean efforts to overcome arrears have been brought to a conclusion. Then again, the big stick of employment problems will certainly be shaken over the head of progress; but M r . Fraser is quite capable of devising an education system that will coalesce with industry and commerce and the other multifarious community activities, instead of dumbly butting its head against the doors of unemployment. Consolidation of the A c t is out of the question for at least a year—no prediction this, but a plain inference to be drawn from the number of new bills that the law-draughtsmen will have to prepare in the coming year. Teachers' Salaries J N Q U I R I E S as to what is being done about teachers' salaries have been rife ever since the Minister set up last year a committee comprising representatives of the Institute, the Department and Education Board Secretaries. In spite, however, of considerable reportorial ingenuity, "National Education" is not yet able to make any definite announcement on the subject. It is known that the Salaries Committee has presented its report to the Minister, and that the Executive of the N.Z.E.I, is to meet in order to consider the report. A n y so-called information beyond that bald statement lies in the realm of fancy and guesswork, but there are indications that, although the negotiations might conceivably take longer than was at first expected, teachers will lose nothing by the exercise of a little patience. South Island Conference ' J ' H E Conference of South Island Branch S e c retaries was quite as successful as that for the North Island. It was held too late in the month, however, to permit of a report appearing in this issue, and publication has been postponed until next month. N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1933 A CONTRIBUTOR on another page of this issue, drawing a biological analogy, refers to the "sapless limbs of the system," dead wood that has the outward form of life, but no inner vitality. It is an analogy that may be aptly applied to most human institutions for where there is much outward show, there usually the sap of human endeavour has ceased to flow. fruit in more efficiently conducted Institute machinery. There were not a few, however, who felt that business and machinery were not the most important aspect of the discussions. Above that was the spirit that grew as the meetings progressed—a feeling of camaraderie, of group solidarity, and a knowledge that what came out of the meeting was a far greater achievement than any individual member had put into it. This is a danger against which any body such as the N.Z.E.I. must stand constant guard. Last year the staff was increased by two: routine work, the multifarious details of office management, of correspondence, of conveying to members those personal benefits, that personal assistance to which they are entitled was increasing rapidly, and more hands were needed to deal expeditiously with innumerable administrative and clerical problems. But the real Educational Institute is none of these things; nor is it the Executive, or even the Branch Secretaries. It is these plus the ordinary members, those five-thousand-odd teachers banded together for a common purpose; and its effectiveness in gaining that common goal is in direct proportion to the effectiveness of those individual members. If the sap is to continue to run in the Branches of the N.Z.E.I., that feeling of group solidarity must be continuously and progressively fostered amongst members. In the words of the circular which first mooted the conference of secretaries, "Wherever people meet on an equal footing for frank and critical discussion there is formed a progressive nucleus, a microcosm of real democracy It is dangerously easy for the humanity and vitality of any association such as ours to slip down the skids of routine machinery. To this, personal negotiation and consultation is a powerful brake, perhaps difficult to apply, certainly complicated and often tedious, but necessary if the Institute is to retain the vim and liveliness of organic unity." During the past month an outstandingly successful experiment in democracy was conducted: conferences of the Branch Secretaries were held in both Islands, attended by the Acting-Secretary and in each case presided over by an Executive member. The secretaries, ordinarily cut off from direct contact with their secretarial colleagues, were able to meet and to discuss their common problems, with results that will bear N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1. 1938 Of all methods of conducting human affairs that of consultation and discussion, with its inevitable conflicts of personality and opinion, is the most difficult to apply. But it is the only method that will retain in an institution the human qualities, the organic vitality to which the dead wood of bureaucracy is the only alternative. The Institute is and will be what the members make it; the sap will begin to run in the farthest limbs just as soon as every individual member takes upon himself the part of an active section of the total organisation. Page 3 Constitutional Remits NOTICE is hereby given, in accordance with the Institute's Constitution, that at the Annual Meeting to be held in May, 1938, the following remits will be considered. (Signed) D. C. P R Y O R , Acting-Secretary. (1) That Clause 14 of the Constitution of the Institute be amended by substituting the following for Sub-Clause (a) thereof:— (a) The election of the President, one of the Vice-Presidents, the Treasurer, and the other members shall be the first order of the day on which the last session of the Annual Meeting of the Institute is expected to take place, and the persons elected shall take office immediately after the conclusion of the Annual Meeting.— Executive. (2) That Clause 17 of the Constitution of the Institute be repealed, and that the following be substituted therefor:— 17. (1) The persons entitled to attend, speak, and vote at a meeting of the Institute shall consist of the following:— (a) The members of the Executive; (b) Representatives elected by the Branches in the month of A p r i l in each year (or appointed by their Managing Committees pursuant to the Branch Constitution) on the basis that each Branch shall be entitled to one representative for each complete 75 members of such Branch provided that any Branch with a membership of fewer than 76 shall be entitled to one representative. (2) For the purpose of this Clause the number of members of a Branch shall be taken to be the number on the 7th day of March next preceding the Annual Meeting of the Institute, provided that if a Special Meeting of the Institute shall be held in any year in addition to the Annual Meeting the number of representatives of each Branch shall be the same as the number to which such Branch was entitled for the purposes of the preceding Annual Meeting, and each person, elected by a Branch for the purposes of such preceding Annual Meeting shall, if able and willing to attend at such Special Meeting, be deemed to be the representative of such Branch at such Special Meeting but otherwise the Managing Committee of such Branch may appoint another member of such Branch to act as such representative in his place. (3) It shall be the duty of the Secretary of each Branch to make a return in writing to the SecrePage 4 tary of the Institute of the number of members of such Branch on the 7th day of March in each year, as soon as possible after that date. If such return shall not have been made by the date on which the notices of the Annual Meeting are posted, the number of representatives which such Branch is entitled to send to such Annual Meeting, and to any Special Meeting or Meetings until the next succeeding Annual Meeting, shall be determined by the Executive.—Executive. (3) That Clause 27 be deleted and the following substituted: "The Institute may associate itself with or affiliate to any other body whose purposes may be calculated lawfully to advance the interests of the teaching profession and are not purposes of gain." —Executive. (4) That in Clause 14 (f) the words "resident in the Wellington Metropolitan area" be deleted and the following substituted: "To be chosen from among members of the Wellington and Hutt Valley Branches."—Executive. (5) That Clause 4 (b) of the Constitution be deleted.—Northern Wairoa Branch. Representatives—Important g Y decision of the Executive, March 7, 1938 is the date upon which the roll shall be counted in order to decide upon the number of representatives each Branch shall be entitled to send to the 1938 Annual Meeting. Classroom Supplements A L A S T - M I N U T E decision to change the form of the new supplements to make them more useful in the classroom will result in a slight delay in the publication date. B y the time completed order forms come to hand however, supplies of the booklets will probably be available. A n order form, which members are requested to use in order to simplify sorting in the office, is printed on page 38 of this issue. The Geography Teaching Notes have been printed as formerly advertised, but the . other subjects have been separated into six six booklets, one for each class. That is to say, there will be a booklet for each class, and each booklet will contain tests and lessons in English, Comprehension and Arithmetic for that one class only. N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1938 Conference of Branch Secretaries Enthusiastic Meeting at Palmerston North r , J W E N T Y - F I V E Branch Secretaries, each resident in his own district, each as a rule cut off from direct contact with his fellows undertaking the same work, are but twenty-five units of the total organization of the New Zealand Educational Institute, as effective as time, opportunity and personal inclination permit them to be. But bring them together in conference, as was done in Palmerston North on January 25 and 26, and a coherent group is created whose pooled knowledge, experience and enthusiasm is many times greater than that of any individual member. A t the very beginning of the Conference there became evident strong desire to get on with a job of collaboration in the work of the Institute in which everyone of those present was taking an especially active part. The Mayor of Palmerston North (Mr. Mansford) introduced by the chairman, Mr. T. Kane (Executive) extended a warm welcome to the representatives at the meeting. Mr. Mansford thought that no investment would pay such a divi- Back Row: Mr. Riske (Wellington Committee of Branches); Mr. Joblin (Rotorua); Mr. McMurray (Napier); Mr. Hawkes (Egmont); Mr. Clift (Horowhenua); Mr. McKenzie (N. Wairoa); Mr. Willett (Martinborough); Mr. Baker (Waikato); Mr. Grilling (Matamata). Middle Row: Mr. Kennedy (Masterton); Mr. Bestic (Nelson); Mr. Sims (Ruapehu); Mr. McKinley (Thames); Mr. Breward (Western Bay of Plenty); Mr. Neilsen (Hastings); Mr. Parker (Rangitikei); Mr. Percy (South Taranaki); Mr. Eaton (Opotiki); Mr. Smith (North Taranaki). Front Row: Miss FitzGerald (Office); Mr. Pryor (Acting Secretary); Miss Rains (Bay of Islands Sub-Branch); Mr. Kane (Vice-President); Miss Combs (Wellington); Mr. Dawkins (Manawatu); Mr. Bishop (Southern Hawke's Bay). N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1938 P a E e dent as would education, and he would like to see the public realise fully the contribution that was made to this service by the members of the teaching profession. In his portfolio as an unsuccessful candidate for Parliament he had always advocated a National Board of Education and he would like to see that eventuate. In opening the meeting Mr. Kane remarked that it was an occasion unique in the history of the Institute and he extended his congratulations to those responsible for calling the meeting together. The strength of the Institute as a whole depended upon the strength of its individual Branches and this in turn was to a great extent dependent upon the enthusiasm and activity of the Branch Secrearies, who for the first time were now gathered together in conference. In conclusion he congratulated M r . Pryor, who had filled the position of Acting Secretary of the Institute with remarkable success. He would like, said M r . Kane, to see every Branch Secretary throw such enthusiasm into their work as that displayed by M r . Pryor. (Applause.) In thanking the Chairman for his remarks, M r . Pryor endorsed M r . Kane's remarks concerning the value of the work of Branch Secretaries to the Institute as a whole and then asked for a full and frank discussion and expression of ideas regarding the work of the Institute, especially with regard to the work of Branch Secretaries. Lost Members Details of secretarial work were discussed at considerable length, and methods of simplifying the keeping of Branch rolls and of dealing with transfers and lost members were agreed upon. Miss Rains asked what subscription was payable by married women re-entering the service temporarily and M r . Pryor replied that a proportion of the subscription should be charged according to the time the married woman teacher was employed. In cases where the employment was of a somewhat indefinite nature and the teachers had formerly been members of the Institute, they could be elected honorary members by their respective Branches and pay a subscription of 7/6 per annum. With regard to the collection of subscriptions, Mr. Pryor said that he had every reason to be optimistic concerning the monthly deduction of subscriptions by Education Boards. In that case the deductions for 1938 would commence in March and a four-shilling deduction would have to be made. As soon as the final decision was received by the office from the Boards he would apprise Branch Secretaries of the situation. In the meantime he thought it wise to continue with the old system. Representations had been made to all Page 6 Boards and he was hopeful of a successful outcome. Regarding the formation of new branches, M r . Clift, Horowhenua, in moving "That the method by which a new branch of the N.Z.E.I. may be formed be published in 'National Education,'" stated that in his opinion small branche's were necessary. The strength of the Institute depended upon numbers of small active groups and he thought the publication of the necessary procedure regarding the formation of new branches would probably act as an incentive to those interested. The motion, which was seconded by M r . Bfeward, Western Bay of Plenty, was carried. Federation of Branches Mr. Riske (Secretary Wellington Committee of Branches) gave a resume of its aims and achievements. He recommended the formation of these Federations in other Board areas. The especial advantages were that the Federation had one voice for the whole of the Branches in the Board area and relationships with the Education Board had been aided by meetings of the Federation and officers of the Board. In many cases a tendency for dominance on the part of the Branch in the Board town disappeared in the friendly and cooperative relationship established during joint representations made to Board officers by the meeting of the Branch Secretaries represented on the Federation. M r . Clift (Horowhenua) and M r . W i l lett (Marlborough) both members of the same Federation, endorsed M r . Riske's remarks as to the value of the organization. It was suggested that during next Annual Meeting sub-committees should be formed to discuss the formation of Federations of Branch in those districts where they were at present not operating. The Central Office Mention was made of the value of the services rendered to Branch Secretaries at all times by the Central Office. Members expressed themselves as grateful for the help and encouraging advice received at all times. It was felt that the Acting Secretary's work was an inspiration to Branch Secretaries. A motion thanking M r . Pryor and his staff for their services was carried by acclamation. The Legal and Provident Funds were discussed. In reply to a question M r . Pryor outlined some cases as a guide to show on what basis loans were made. A suggestion that another heading — "Possible Source of Relief"—should be attached, was passed as a recommendation to the Executive. A discussion of Branch activities proved most valuable. Varied suggestions were made towards N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1938 stimulating active membership. M r . Clift said that the Wellington Federation of Branches had asked the Wellington Board to grant leave to Branch Secretaries for the purpose of visiting schools in their area. The difficulty of visiting in country districts was pointed out and it was suggested that a circular letter be drawn up suitable for sending to non-members. With regard to meetings, Miss Rains said that in her district (Bay of Islands) "field days" had proved very successful. "National Education" The Chairman introduced M r . E . S. Andrews (Editor of "National Education") to representatives and said that M r . Andrews would like to discuss the journal with them. He would welcome criticism and any suggestions representatives had to offer. M r . Andrews said that he would be very grateful for any suggestions representatives might be able to give for improving the paper. He himself has been a good deal concerned about the Branch News which in a paper such as "National Education" should be one of the most useful and important sections. In the past he said it had nearly always been the dullest section. Here M r . Andrews made comparisons with extracts from the Branch Notes of another association — and these notes he pointed out, dealt brightly with conditions of work and other matters of personal interest to the members. Instead of sending in only the formal resolutions of branches the correspondents had so written up affairs of their branches that it made, interesting reading even to outsiders not directly connected with that particular organization. More members would be interested and the Branch News would be more effective in forwarding Institute Policy i f news of the Institute were was written in a similar fashion. There were surely amongst the six thousand teachers a sufficient number who could be called upon and could be expected to collect and write up news of educational interest in their respective districts. After considerable discussion, in the course of which M r . Andrews remarked that a limited sum was available for payment for wellwritten news items from Branch areas, it was agreed that secretaries should suggest to their Branches that a correspondent be appointed for the purpose of supplying "National Education" with branch news. Mr. Andrews said that it would be helpful to him to know the topics that were of the greatest interest to members, and asked what the represenatives thought of the publication of controversial issues. He thought personally that unless all the articles were written boldly and incisively and from the standpoint of strong personal conviction N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1938 on the part of the authors, the Journal would scarcely be worth publishing—and most worthwhile articles could not help being controversial. None the less he had heard it expressed pretty strongly that controversial articles should be kept out of the paper, and he hoped that the Branch Secretaries could give him a lead on this matter. There was general agreement with the point of view expressed by the Editor, and when actual samples of paragraphs written controversially and non-controversially were read to the meeting, support for the controversial version—a plain statement based on and giving the known facts—received unanimous support. Make it Bigger and Better The December issue of "National Education" was then gone through page by page and the general feeling was that "National Education" should continue along the same lines, "only bigger and better." Other matters, such as the publication of "personal pars," teaching articles of an inspirational nature and the securing of articles of general interest from such sources as the Training Colleges were also the cue for lively debate. A t the conclusion a motion of appreciation of the work carried out by Mr. Andrews to bring "National Education" up to its present high standard was carried by acclamation. Questions relating to salaries, group grading and activities of the Executive were fully replied to by M r . Pryor. He asked for an expression of opinion from delegates as to whether the Conference should become an annual affair. Delegates were in complete accord as to the inestimable value of the Conference and a motion that the Conference be held annually was carried. Thanks and Conclusion The Acting Secretary extended his thanks to everybody attending the Conference, especially to Misses Combs and Shortall who had rendered a great service in keeping the Minutes of the Conference and to M r . Dawkins, Secretary of the local Branch for the very efficient manner in which local arrangements had been carried out. The meeting endorsed this statement in a motion which was carried by acclamation. The delegates also accorded a hearty vote of thanks to Miss FitzGerald, a member of the office staff, who had been present, for her most efficient and able work during the Conference. A motion of thanks to the Chairman for the manner in which he had conducted the Conference was carried by acclamation, thus ending on a note of enthusiasm and goodwill, a meeting which all present were agreed had been one of the most helpful and inspiring that they had ever attended. . , , Page 7 Education Here and There Notes and Comments By the Editor The "All-Standard" School The Secretary in London T H E English educational papers have recently contained a good deal of criticism of the socalled Hadow Re-organization Scheme. The following story filched from "Pedagogue" of the Teachers' World is typical of a growing trend of thought. "Last Saturday I spent the day in the country with a friend of mine who happens to be a manager of the village school,—the said village is very much in the country, the nearest town being ten miles away. In the course of casual conversation he said 'The County Education Committee are beginning to talk about reorganization round here.' 'How are they going to do it' I asked. 'They propose to build a senior school,' was his reply. 'But by the time they have talked about it for a few years and then spent a couple of years in building it another generation of children will have left the school.' ' A n d in the towns,' I said, 'by that time we may have gone back to the "all-standard" schools. "Of course he did not believe me but as a matter of fact more unlikely things have happened." T H E Secretary of the Institute, M r . G. R. A s h bridge, received a very warm welcome at the headquarters of the National Union of Teachers in London, as the following extract from a presidential letter published in a recent issue of the "Schoolmaster" will show. "During recent weeks we have had the privilege of a specially prolonged visit from the Secretary of the New Zealand Educational Institute," said M r . Patten. "For a long time we have had pleasant connexions with our professional colleagues in those distant lands, functioning on occasion in their behalf in the councils of T.F.T.A.' but the visit of M r . A s h bridge has served to deepen the sense of intimacy in this relationship and the realization of a common cause operating under different circumstances. He is visiting Britain and certain European countries for the purpose of studying teachers' organizations, and at Hamilton House he was quickly recognised as one of that order to whom it is a delight to extend very special and unusual facilities. On his return he will take with him the cordial good wishes of the N.U.T. to our colleagues in New Zealand." Physical Education in New South Wales T H E importance that is placed on physical education in New South Wales is indicated by the amount of salary that the State Government has offered for the newly created position of D i rector of Physical Education, namely £950. The duties of the position, which is being advertised in New Zealand will be "to formulate and carry into effect a comprehensive scheme of physical education of children including those of pre-school age, and generally to adolescent age." It is especially interesting in view of the trend here and in Great Britain to note that the work will be carried out mainly under the direction of the Education Department, although it will be linked up with the general State scheme. Page § Deduction of Subscriptions y ^ L T H O U G H great progress has been made with the negotiations in regard to the monthly deductions of Institute subscriptions by the Education Boards, the business has not yet been completed. In the circumstances it has been decided that the new scheme shall not be brought into operation this year, and that for 1938 subscriptions will be deducted in the way that has been customary in the past. Initiative and Independence J ^ A N A G E R , to office boy: "You should have been here at nine o'clock!" Office B o y : "Why? What happened? N A T I O N A L , E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1938 H. G. Wells on Education "Littledene" T H E weighty brick that M r . H . G. Wells cast into the pool of professional complacency in the course of his presidential address to the British Association last year, still causes ripples in the teachers' journals and in the daily press. " N a tional Education" so far as we can see is the only teachers' paper which has not assailed M r . Wells for his hob-nailed excursion across the sacred precincts. Now, having read the full text of M r . Wells's speech as published, having weighed and considered and agreed with most of what he has to say, we bow to the weight of numbers and join with the attacking cohorts to salute the paragon of professions, the legion of perfect pedagogues— if any. ^ More Carnegie Grants N E W S that Miss K . Turner of the N.Z.E.I. Executive has received a Carnegie Visitors Grant in order to enable her to further her education studies overseas, will make pleasant reading for Institute members. Her interests have not been confined to classroom work but have ranged—to some purpose— over the whole field from problems of teacher organization to vocational guidance, visual education and especially the education of very small children. Mr. H. J. Thornion Others to receive these Carnegie Grants, which are given to those holding key positions in the various callings are M r . H . J . Thornton, well known Secretary of the Nelson Education Board, and a member of the Teachers' Salaries Committee; M r . R. Donne, Lecturer in A r t at Auckland Training College; M r . R. A . Falla, Director of the Canterbury Museum (the "bird-man") ; M r . V . C. Peters, Music Master at Christchurch Boys High School, and M r . G. M . T. Goldie of the Wellington City Engineer's Department. (Town planning is Mr. Goldie's pet subject). To all these "National Education" tenders hearty congratulations. N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1938 H U R R I E D and surreptitious glance at the galley poofs of "Littledene," a study of a New Zealand rural community, to be published in the course of the next month or two by the New Zealand Council for Educational Research, indicates that it is a book of unusual human qualities—as one might expect in view of the fact that the author is M r . H . C. D. Somerset, whose valuable contributions to "National Education" were interrupted by his overseas educational tour. The following is a quotation illustrating a method of raising funds which is quite familiar to most teachers: "One or two examples of the futility of this method of giving will make the point clear. There are 24 women on the committee of the Infant Welfare Society. Funds recently were short, so they decided to hold a bridge party. The 24 women made all the arrangements and provided supper. With their husbands for partners the 48 sat down in the evening to play bridge for four hours. The funds were augmented by £6. But the supper was most sumptuous and a conservative estimate placed its total cost in the neighbourhood of £5. This is the popular anaesthetic method of giving in Littledene." Agite Pugni—Our New Contributor J N order to forestall questions we state here and now that Agite Pugni means, to the best of our knowledge, "Up, Guards, and at 'em," or "Stick 'em up," or something of that kind. A t first, Agite was a little diffident about taking on such a job. "What qualifications have I, in no way connected with the system to comment on education?" he asked. We pointed out that he was a parent, that he was more than ordinarily interested in education, and that he was an accomplished free-lance journalist. Moreover, he could view the whole scene dispassionately — and he could have a pretty free hand. This last decided him. He, and we, would be glad to have readers' opinions of his contributions in, say, three months' time. Next Month N E X T month "National Education" will commence a short series of brightly written articles on New Zealand History. The author is one of the most published and popular writers in New Zealand, whose contributions are certain to receive a warm welcome from the teaching profession. Page 9 Sandy at the Nudist's Club The Childish Oyster ^ H E N M r . Stevens, Principal of Wellesley College, Wellington, referred in his breaking-up speech to the weakening morality of youth, and indicted the cinematograph, the radio and Governments at large as subversive of youthful morals, he was at once making a rhetorical overstatement and missing an important educational clue. The radio, cinematograph and the Government—surely an ill-assorted trio—are as good or as bad as men and women make them. The remedy lies not in a return to primitive days, but in enlightened human endeavour to improve them if necessary. If the influence of radio and cinema is bad—proof one way or the other is sadly lacking—then they are so because they take a lasting grip on the child mind. Where education fails to take a similar grip, it must be, on M r . Steven's own showing, because that education is cut off, sometimes deliberately, from what is true and human, vital and realistic, in the childish world of fact and fancy. J ) I C K E N S , perhaps more than most other English writers abounds in pithy comments on educational processes. For instance, this from "Dombey and Son": "It was part of Mrs. Pipchin's system not to encourage a child's mind to develop and expand itself like a young flower, but to open it by force like an oyster. The moral of these lessons was usually of a violent and stunning character, the heroes—the naughty boys,—seldom in the mildest capacity being finished off by anything less than a lion or a bear." What's Stopping Them? JfyJANY English educationists are beginning to ask themselves whether the threefold division of education in the Old Country really does serve the best interests of the community as a whole. Mrs. Elsie Parker had something to say on this topic in our last issue. Now we have received a piece of outspoken comment from an English M.P., Mr. E . H . Keeling. Pie says: "Snobbery is our greatest national vice. It can best be eradicated Director of Rural Libraries in youth, and I would like to see every child, from T H E Association for Country Education, formed the children of the Royal Family downwards, sent with assistance from a Carnegie Grant as an to an elementary school for at least three years of experiment in cultural education in rural districts his life." and administered through Canterbury College, formerly conducted courses in Home Science and Miss Palmer and the School Journal Organized Dramatic Work, and administered a Travelling Library. The scheme, with M r . G. T. T H O S E with an eye for such things will notice that the "Education Gazette" appears this Alley as Librarian and Tutor, met with a conmonth with a small caption on the cover page siderable measure of success, and in its essentials has now been taken over by the Government. which reads "Acting Editor 'School Journal' and In December M r . Alley resigned from his position 'Education Gazette': A . M . Palmer, B . A . " This at the Canterbury University College to take up puts into words what has been fact for some his appointment as Director of Rural Libraries considerable time, for the "Journal" has been conducted by Miss Palmer since M r . T. A . Fletunder the Government's scheme, and M r . Alley's cher was transferred for special duties in wide and detailed knowledge in this field will go the Native Schools Inspectorate over six years a long way to ensure the success of the movement. ago. Members of the teaching profession need scarcely be reminded—for nearly 200,000 copies of the evidence are distributed each month—that Flat Beer Miss Palmer has a discriminating taste in literature and an extraordinary understanding of jyjISS P E N D R E D , Principal of the Kindergarchildren's preferences in reading matter. In her ten Training Centre in Perth, in the course hands the "Journal" will continue to be as good of a recent conversation, stated that some years as she has made it in the past few years. ago she had seen an eight months old child being fed on a green banana and beer. Those whose misGood News fortune it has been to deal professionally with certain text-books have come to the conclusion J U S T as we were going to press, copies of the new that some of the mental diet of New Zealand regulations abolishing the fee of 10/6 for apschool children is also of the green banana and peals to the Teachers' Court of Appeal, were rebeer variety—flat beer at that. ceived. Page 10 N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1938 Centralism—Localism A Choice of Tyrannies? A Review by F.L.C. ^ / B I T I N G history in and of New Zealand is no task for a dilettante. A Moses uniquely gifted is ab initio required to spy out the land, a Joshua equipped to enter and subdue it. Then, too, there are a host of Canaanites, a particularly objectionable subtribe of the Philistines, to be reconciled to conquest and amendment by the leader of the chosen. In other words a New Zealand writer has to begin at the beginning, to find his own point of view and winnow the scanty grains of significant evidence from rickyards of documents. Finally, and it is here that Philistinism enters as a debit into the undertaking, he has to pursue his task undaunted by the thought of an audience mostly unprepared to give ear unto his speech. ways sober, had posted the log book of a grade IIIC New Zealand school during the period between the consulship of Mr. Habens and that of Mr. Strong. Then indeed would the refractory and none too moist clay of pedagogical endeavour take shape under his vigorous handling, and his readers startle, sometimes indignant, sometimes amused, as its real lineaments emerged from beneath the mask of an officialdom always posed and often complacent. Boa Constrictor of Centralism Any work of the human mind to have worth must be organic. To be organic it must be unified. Mr. Webb's book has all the solid merits that What gives unity to M r . Webb's Book? It is the entitle such an effort to serious attention. Like discussion of the long protracted conflict between Dr. A . G. Butchers before him he has been to the local and central control. Marxians impatient for records. He has weighed and pondered, sifted and a rapid climax to the dialectical process will wax assimilated and as a result has produced a coher- restless at the slow progress the boa constrictor ent and well corroborated thesis. Let those who of centralism has made in breaking every bone under-value such outstanding achievement turn in localism's none-too-well-knit body. for themselves to the untidy tangle of New ZeaA sub-title of this volume might well be: "The land's disregarded yesterdays. Finally he has Evolution of Centralisation, and the Evils Attendmade his findings judicially. He has written them ant Thereon." Dr. Butchers' books revolved up in style always clear and sometimes pointed: round the same topic. Dr. Condliffe like Mr. Webb, and he possesses that prime qualification of an a commentator on our education system from the historian, that godfather and godmother of im- outside, drew similar conclusions to his, and to partiality, a sense of proportion. those of Dr. Butchers. Has education eluded the grasp of the dead hand of tradition to fall into the clutches of The System's Sapless Limbs bureaucratic control? The handful of people who have bothered to investigate our State system If he has not with these substantial qualifications with any measure of detachment seem to say so, produced a richly humanistic work, it is because and this too with as little animus as may be his material in its present condition would defy against those who have been often the passive and the artistry of a Tacitus joined to the journalistic always the inevitable instruments of bureaucracy. flaire of a Macaulay. As he remarks in his preHow explain the growth of centralism? In the face, "To the extent that this book is a history of first place it is a universal phenomenon and has the administration of Education in New Zealand, affected the governance of every social and it places facts in an artificial isolation." One economic activity of modern times. (In vain do might add, "To the extent that this book depends so very largely upon official documents it is cut Auckland and Otago, those last ditches of a off from the sources of what modicum of human valiant but pathetic struggle to defend the genius juice has ever permeated the rather sapless limbs loci, set themselves to withstand i t ) . Centralism of the System." Would to God that a wild Irish- is fast fusing the 49 States of the United States man, another Manning, always reckless, not al- of America into an amorphous conglomerate. Centralism will, during the next half century crush European particularism underfoot and cause * "The Control of Education in New Zealand," by Leicester Webb (N.Z. Council for Educational Research, and the Marxists of Poland, France and Spain to take common ground in warring against a financeWhitcombe & Tombs.) N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1938 Page 11 capital which has anticipated the modern trend by already becoming international. Unescapable Process The process is unescapeable. Modern transport and communication bind vast areas together in the ties of economic interdependence. Provincial centres wither into insignificance as metropoli a thousand miles distant focus influence and disseminate opinion. A metropolitan press shapes, maintains and modifies the norms which serve as a basis for the thinking of the million. Modernism is a potter's thumb whose all-obliterating touch is rapidly effacing the lineaments of localism. The equal pressure of like needs and similar economic and social problems is fast reducing the citizenry of the west to identical atoms in a stupendous and disquieting common denominator. The question of 2038 A . D . may be not shall New Zealand education be administered from Wellington, but shall a Carnegie foundation as fatherly as a catholic and once universal Church control it from New Y o r k ? The material basis of such control in the form of planes, radio and television is already here and the spirit of the age, mechanistic in its estimates of progress, is all in its favour. Seen from this standpoint centralism in New Zealand education is but a ripple on the incoming flood tide of our times, a minor episode in a centripetal tendency in life and government which threatens to swirl across and obliterate the cultural landmarks of every parish. Maybe we are within a generation or two of the day when effigies of the last governing authority will gaze with disconsolate fixity on visitors to Madam Tussaud's. Sic Transit Gloria Mundi. F o r those who still relish a pun let "transit" be underlined. "Semi-Profession: Pseudo-Science" Viewed at shorter range other causes of centralism appear. Specialism is a factor. The accepted thing may be the right thing or the wrong thing to do, but the specialist will be best equipped to do it, and to argue into dumb submission the laymen who would oppose his doing it. Like to like they gather under their administrative wings all who in a measure share their aims and views and labours. Education thus becomes a semi-profession, a pseudo-science—a mystery and craft segregated from the ken of the laity. Losing its broad humanity, its parental, its fostering attitude, it issues prescriptions (it uses the very word "prescriptions") : in its pharmacy it compounds preparations devised to cure all social ills: "bottoms" and "tops," "types of school," Page 12 "courses of instruction." To use Dr. Kandel's words, its main concern becomes "distribution," the division of its cure of souls into groups and the dosing of each group with appropriate studies. What Babbitt called modern merchandising is being given its part to play in education. In the planning of it something very like efficiency engineering is coming to the fore. The mere system is becoming so intricate that it needs experts to understand and co-ordinate it. Something fibrous, stringy is evolving out of what was luscious and protoplasmic. The human sap is being squeezed out of the material it essays to handle. In a zest for organization it is losing sight of the organism. Severing its true affiliation with biology a science that never shirks the difficulty of probing into the often baffling complexities of living processes, education is becoming mechanical. It has its analogies to large scale production with its routing and efficiency. It was in no worse case when, allied to the medieval Church, its was dogma-ridden. In its essence education is the reaction of spirit upon spirit. This is a one to one business. The teacher divines and stimulates, the pupil responds. Education is, therefore, a commerce of soul with soul that defies system. How every hour of the day to awaken in each individual pupil the genuine interest that, fostered, will become a true and lasting inspiration; how to contrive activities that will realise that interest; how, once the germinal stages are successfully passed through, to withdraw into the background, and to become selfeffacingly ministrant to the self determined development of a being whose laws of growth are his own—these are the essential and vital problems of education. Fast in Bonds of Bureaucracy A system embracing at the base a quarter of a million educands held fast in the bonds of a bureaucracy, will never accomplish this vital essential purpose. Such a system is too authoritarian. It directs downward through a hierarchy in which each owes obedience to the one next above. It stamps and patterns, it does not mould personalities. The immediate unfettered initiatives that both pupil and teacher require, initiatives whose reciprocal and harmonious interaction is the educative process, are inhibited—often ham strung. In the end, as inspectors complain, and teachers admit, the vital spark of independence and originality flickers up but rarely, only to glow fitfully and to splutter out. What had best be done? Shatter the system, revert to local control? A t least this would give (continued on page 32) N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1938 History was Dull at School By Ernest L Mann J N spite of the fact that history, like novels and penny dreadfuls, deals with the lives and adventures of persons and peoples, it seems to be the subject boys know least about when they leave the elementary schools. Unless they are to be trained as teachers themselves, it is history that fades most quickly from their memory; for what they have learned of this subject is of no use to them at all. Suppose, in a certain school, the boys were taught the wrong story; that the English won the Battle of Hastings and drove the Norman host into the sea, and that Napoleon won at Waterloo and drove the English host into the sea; that S i mon de Montfort was crowned king after Evesham, and that John forced the Barons to sign a Regal Charter at Runnymede; that Tyler got his deserts and was reduced to the position of Lord Mayor, and Ball degraded to the rank of Archbishop; and that while Charles executed Cromwell, his son James re-established the monasteries ; the boys would leave that school to enter upon the next phase of their servitude to Industry not a whit worse off that the boys who are taught the accepted truth. It is claimed that boys should know something of certain important crises in our history. But (supposing they could get at the real truth behind the history-book version) this is a mistake. It is necessary, or at least desirable, that men should know about such things. Teaching them to boys by no means ensures that they will know of them as men, and goes far to decide the reverse. This may be the teacher's error. Seeing that, since the age of fourteen, he has had his memory continually refreshed by contact with the subject, he does know something of the superficialities of history. He hardly guesses that his pupils will never make contact with the subject for any utilitarian or cultural purpose any more, and that the "facts" he has so hardily driven into the boys for examination results have, at the highest computation, no more than a conversational value. If the little tales they tell in the infant's school at first attract the pupil to the consideration of what men did in the past, the lifeless confusion of acts and persons, dates and societies, aims and consequences, usually presented to him later on turns his interest away. This, of course, is true of other subjects also. N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1988 Any capable man could teach his pupils, taken at the right age, the elements of reading and writing in a twelvemonth. But the boy has all of nine years of schooling to go through, and the rest of the time has to be filled in somehow. Textbooks on all subjects are liberally provided, and elementary school teachers are expected and supposed to know the teachable facts about almost everything. Like Hercules, they tackle the task. A n d it may be that one or two little facts that the pupil learns in chemistry or physics, or a little elementary arithmetic, may come in useful after his schooldays are done, if only for reckoning "odds on." But of what earthly use can the usual elementary history be? Alice was the only one to find a purely utilitarian purpose for history. She used it when she fell into a pool, because it was the driest thing she knew. The attempt to inculcate in her young mind an understanding of adult motives and considerations was not only useless but harmful; for it resulted in history being classed as "dry." A n d no doubt she, and her generation, like ours avoided history for the rest of their lives, to the detriment of the well-being of the community. If the essentials of our history should ever come to be properly taught in this country, or any other, it will be a matter for grown men prepared to hear the worst, not boys. Boys may be entertained with interesting tales and romances about the past, and the more the merrier. But these should not be labelled "History." Unless it be conceded that the motives of the renowned figures of history have been childish; which at first sight they do indeed appear to be. But only at first sight. It would be better if we left school history alone, for we only "queer the pitch" for a later appreciation. A n d our erstwhile pupils, grown up, give no thought to the powers and proceedings in that epic struggle which, beginning with the conquest of the animal kingdom, passed on to dominion over the vegetable world and the very rocks and oceans and all visible earthly things, and lately arrived at its most fascinating and awful phase—the Division of the Spoil. And the boys from our ele(Continued on Page 26.) Page IS Our Collaborators in Education (I.) "The Old M a n " By "Old Timer " J - J E A V E N requite him for his trials and tribulations. Since whiskers became vestigial or extinct he is no longer what he was. No "Old Man" for example, can fitly enact his role with a tooth-brush moustache though a walrus ditto I well remember adorned the visage of a particularly ferocious patriarch who gave the law to a household of four, a mongrel bull terrier and seven flustered hens at a home two doors away from my own when I was a boy. But if the old man is no longer an Atlas solely sustaining the roof tree, he is still a Hercules involved in many labours. He carries a heavy bundle. He procreates, determined that however much our economic system sags and staggers it shall rest on a solid foundation of healthy consumers. He still imparts those first lessons in obedience without which Thomas Carlyle and John Ruskin and Rudyard Kipling state time and again you will never never rear a sovereign people. His footwear is neither as agile nor as substantial nor is his heavy hand as apt to din into our craniums the injunction we as a younger generation incline to disregard. His massive Roman outline has been chiselled and polished by our more fastidious era into something less rugged and dynamic. Again I regret the obsolescence of whiskers. This subject of the decadence of fatherhood has for me a morbid fascination. I was reared in the old school. "Wait till you father comes home," uttered of a Saturday morning full often cast a twenty minutes gloom over my careless mind. I even on one such occasion "stiffened my sinews, summoned up the blood" and cleaned up a corner of the back yard before becoming the normal affable loafer that nearly all boys are in their heart of hearts. I do not know that the parental hand fell frequently upon us. It was a rather massive force, an eye like Jove's to threaten and command, a voice that still reverberates across Page 14 half a century, a voice reminiscent of a lightning flashing Sinai that imposed the law. We apprehended and dreaded a latent something, a lava flow of righteous wrath that could and would destroy and obliterate us from the pleasant world of childhood. A friend tells me that his awe of his Old Man was begotten by his having as a lad of ten to clean his Sunday boots. This friend is now an "Old M a n " himself, indeed a grandfather. I have heard him, when admonishing his own graceless offspring, give pretty convincing imitations of the thunderous onslaughts he used to endure in days gone by—that golden age of the patria potestas. Yet venerable as he has become the effects of his rearing are indelible. Mark the extraordinary consequences. His Old Man is now a toothless octogenarian. In his presence, though he loathes the act, my friend dare not drink his tea without holding the saucer under the cup. So he was taught. On visits to the ancestral home he goes outside to smoke and hides behind the wood pile. A gifted thinker, he has a constructive plan which would, if put into operation, get us out of our present difficulties. If, however, he ventures to broach it to his Old Man, he is shut up sans ceremony and treated to a two hours disquisition on single tax. He dare not, when visited by the octogenarian aforesaid, take first read of his own daily paper. He writes, when stirred to the depths, a very good letter to the press. His clippings are returned to him by his aged parent with the invariable comment, "This is what I tried to tell people sixty years ago." Our Empire is founded upon this wonderful power of generations of "Old Men" to impose the past upon the present. A mighty engine of authority. As Kipling says: "John Calvin might have forged the same enormous, certain, slow, and wrought it in the furnace flame—his institutio." Whence did our Old Men derive their marvellous insight into boy nature, their profound infallible understanding of the art of parenthood? N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1938 Not from books. I come now to speak of a man I despise, a recent father of twins, George and Emmeline, each eight pounds seven ounces at birth, both healthy babies. On a recent visit to his home I found him nursing a twin and reading a book, "The Parent and the Pre-school Child." It was opened at a chapter headed "The Father's Influence" and selected passages were heavily underscored. He attempted to start a discussion on the dawn of moral intuition in the very young. I answered him curtly, left early and have never returned to his house, though his home brew is the best and most uniform I have ever tasted. Great heavens! A man with inalienable indefeasible rights to use the powers vested in him as a begetter of offspring—a man who need only consult the natural promotings evolved by a hundred generations of British parenthood in order to meet and to deal with every crisis—such a man to sit and consult a text book written by a wretched hack who (he savs so himself) spent six weeks finding out which of the primary colours was first preferred bv his own as yet unweaned infant! The whole business is reougnant to me. I instance it as a sure svmntom of the decadence of the oaken hearted breed which has made us what we are. Such aenamic panderihsr to influences subversive of the errand old da^s must be counteracted. I am doing mv share. I have formed a Society for the Revival of Fatherhood. There are a few simole rules. A l l the members must grow beards and wear belts instead of braces. Thev must cultivate the art of rnarmo- and also the equally effective one of deadlv calm. Thev must as regards all topics discussed in the dailv prints acquire a pose of finality little short of omniscience. Thev must pass a test before being invested with the regalia of the society. Thev must in the presence of six of its members be able to reduce a son of their own who previously had a conscience void of offence to a condition of guilt-stricken stammerine imbecility. Members whose household is hushed into quiet bv the sound of their evening footsteps on the front porch will be awarded the society's gold medal. All the members must be sound on the question of homework and able to say to a querulous youth in accents that carry conviction, "I wish they R A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1938 gave you twice as much. Its the only thing that keeps you out of mischief. Do you know young man I'd have given one of my eyes to have had your chance of a good education." The membership of this society is going to be select. Only a picked company is capable of retrieving the lost ground. There always have been and always will be fathers lax or weak or careless or indulgent who let things slide. Reverting to my boyhood days I can recall many such. We might envy the boys who had these parents, but I am sure we thought less of them. There was George Alabaster who used to take his sons botanising of a week-end. The second eldest boy is now a F . L . S . It became neither him nor them. We other boys never interfered for the act was on the debatable borderline, but the young Alabasters were never made confederate in our enterprises. I remember the time we saved up two hundred rotten eggs for the first one-man-one-vote election. They had no hand in that epic celebration of the epoch making emancipation of a downtrodden people. Henry Hancock's parent was something of a puzzle to us. Henry rarely had boots, when he did he used to take them off on the way to and from school and carry them slung over his shoulder by the laces. On the other hand he was never without the best-known kind of elastic for catapaults. He sometimes camped on the beach in an amazingly small tent, his parents apparently serenely indifferent as to whether or no Henry had for the time being foresworn the family roof tree. Hancock pere was not entirely unmindful of his goodly heritage of authority; I have myself seen him in full pursuit of Henry with an axe handle. This was a whole-hearted way of administering reproof from which we could not withhold respect—not that M r . Hancock often caught Henry. Once only did I see him fairly lay hands on his boy. It was on the Town Domain. Mr. Hancock had, I think, "been in the sun." A t the end of a complicated struggle both, a knotted mass of humanity, fell into the ornamental pond. Henry decamped to his tent for a week. A s I later saw him preparing elaborate gear for a week-end fishing trip to be taken in company with his father I assume that the breach had been healed. Etiquette in regard to fathers was strict in my day. In your own backyard you might foregather Page 15 and gloom and concoct sedition with brothers stung to revolt by an unendurable tyranny. Mutterings of the coming storm might even be communicated to your mother, but beyond the front gate little was said that could offend the most reverent mind acutely attuned to note the smallest hint of a breach of the Fourth Commandment. It was on the other hand "tika" when abroad to brag about your "Old Man." Mostly we passed on embellished by our lively youthful fancies complacent stories of his prowess recounted in genial moments by the old man himself. One gentleman, whose occupation, when he could muster enough energy was splitting cord wood, and who domiciled an innumerable brood in a three-roomed shack I always regarded with respect. He had twenty years before been half owner of the famous race horse Helter Skelter. "Had Helter Skelter lived," so roundly asserted this woodman's eldest son, "we would all have been riding in our carriages." A n oleo of Helter Skelter over the kitchen mantelpiece clinched this veracious story. It was identical with five other hundred portraits I have since seen of famous race horses. Of Hancock senior we thought, on the whole, well, because of his royal generosity when "elevated" or successful at the races. Henry then had a spate of coin and I have seen on Miss Cooley's desk a mouth organ, a half-eaten quince, two and fivepence in small change and a twelve bladed pocket knife, all taken from Henry during the course of one short school afternoon. However flush he might be it never occurred to Henry to buy himself a decent pair of breeches. Another famous father had been in the Royal Navy and preferred chewing to the pipe. Experiments of our own with odds and ends of the fragrant weed convinced us that he was a miracle. Dates should be firmly driven home to nail down historic events to their place in the long record of time. Vague in our chronology we had to accept from this tobacco chewing Jack tar's son an account of his father's great doings at Trafalgar. In sum, all "Old Men" were bragged about. It was hardest to discover anything striking or picturesque about a thoroughly respectable father, but it had to be done. The Herald's College I Page 16 understand never shirks the task of contriving a pedigree to suit the status and purse of its purchaser. Youthful loyalty to an "onlie begetter" performed the same office for the most humdrum of parents. Withal I recall no concern for the tribulations and difficulties of the Old Man. F i n ancial stringency might compel him to purchase cheap a cord of knotty wood into which the backyard axe failed to bite. Then he was reviled unsparingly. The full implications of his being out of a job we never, I think, either understood or bothered to understand. Nor were we sentimental about those Sunday afternoon naps wherewith he was wont to rest and recuperate his week-day swollen feet. We only knew that we were in for an exceedingly warm time if he should be disturbed. Clothes at any rate till the age of fifteen were in weak demand. Sunday suits were genuinely disliked, our only association therewith being a tight and prickly discomfort. Food, so long as there was quantity we took pretty much as it came, though, like Penrod, told off by Aunt Sarah Crimm, we were "young pigs" on rare occasions of getting alongside a festive board. We may be half excused. A n y sort of juvenile beano was a rare orgy. A life long friend tells me in confidence, "I only once remember having enough lemonade. It was at the burning down of Galbraith's Brewery. I floated home and had to be put to bed under a wardrobe." Personally I only half believe this, but I tell it here for what it is worth. So I end as I began. Heaven requite all "Old Men." Samson blind renewed his strength. Scores of blind domestic Samsons I have known battling against sickness, misfortune, injustice and the darndest of hard luck. They grumbled a good deal; occasionally they raged and we gave them a wide berth. When fortune smiled they were ever foolishly open handed. Witness pianos none could afford to learn to play and imitation fur jackets that in dreary days recalled to a workworn wife a forgotten gleam of prosperity. Blind Samsons! How many of us would stumble and struggle up again and blunder off our course and toil painfully back to the main road if at the outset we were allowed a few trial throws against the loaded dice of Destiny? Life is all trial and error. Is it a stupid business? A t least it was a heroic one as carried on by a bye-gone generation of "Old Men," well-known I think and warmly regarded by both you and me. N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 193S A Layman Looks on By "Agite Pugni' ^ G I T E PUGNI, who has no official connection with the N.Z.E.I., is a responsible layman well qualified to comment on education in New Zealand. As his name suggests, he is "trailing his coat" and it must therefore be stressed that it is his coat and not that of the N.Z.E.I. The opinions expressed and the topics chosen are his own. Play the Game You Cads! Q N E would think that when both an Education Board and a School Committee want a school built, there would be joint rejoicings when Cabinet approves of grant for the building. This was not the case recently in Taranaki. In fact, the committee received a reprimand from the board, instead of congratulations. The trouble began when the committee, expecting the Hon. R. Semple to visit its district, decided to enlist his aid in securing the grant, and asked the board chairman to lend his weight to the local pressure group. He declined, pointing out that application had been made through the proper channel and that the Kaponga School stood at the top of the board's monthly list of urgent work sent to the department. The fat was properly in the fire when Mr. Semple informed the committee that the grant was sanctioned before the board had been notified officially. The board declared itself slighted and proceeded to pass a resolution asking the Minister of Education to prevent a recurrence of such incidents and to see that the Board was properly dealth with in future. It is fairly clear that political prejudices entered and that the board did not like to see a Labour Government making goodwill for itself in the K a ponga district. The root of the board's resentment is exposed by the statement of one board member that a certain class of person was beginning to think that they had only to take their troubles direct to Cabinet to obtain satisfaction. • More Responsibility, Less Touchiness J T seems to me a Board to which a grant is made, should be more interested in the grant itself than in the way in which it gets word of it. E x cessive regard for status and dignity is not characteristic of those who are preoccupied with a job of work to be done. I cannot help seeing the *As we go to press we hear that Mr. C. A. Wilkinson, M.P., claims to be the fairy godmother of the Kaponga School. N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1. 1938 sensitiveness of this Board as a symptom of emasculation. When the Education Boards were created they were masters of their own finance, while to-day, when it is a question of major expenditure, they are simply sturdy mendicants, like the Provinces they replaced. Shorn of much of their original importance, they inevitably cling agitatedly to their remaining dignity, as this Board did, in a manner essentially undignified. It will not thank me for saying so, but I hope to see it, and other Boards, raised again to positions of responsibility so high that they will be able to laugh at their old selves as such incidents as that described above make others laugh now. Please, Mr. Chancellor y H E Hon. J . A . Hanan, from New Zealand's academic apex, the Chancellor's chair at a meeting of the University Senate, last month inveighed against stereotyped education. A l l to the good. Then he delivered himself of a stereotyped jeremaiad upon the use of leisure. Not at all so good. I know of no subject in more urgent need of research than this. How is leisure spent in New Zealand? I declare, and will maintain, until evidence is adduced to prove to the contrary, that New Zealand spends its leisure more healthfully than any country, and that it is getting better rather than worse. I want an investigator to correct this guesswork table of mine which shows how each 100 New Zealanders spend a fine summer Saturday afternoon. A t ordinary work, including domestic . . . . 35 Gardening, or "working round the place" . . 25 Sick 1 Games 5 Watching games 2 Roads, beaches and riversides 5 Pictures 2 Loafing at home, reading, radio 10 Visiting friends (tea and talk) 5 Infants and unaccounted for 10 Page 17 New Zealand is New Zealand February Curriculum ' J T I E Chancellor committed what I see as the characteristic error of New Zealand thought. He saw New Zealand in his mind's eye as a part of England, and he voiced, as true of New Zealand, what others had said, perhaps with truth, about England. He was completely given away by this sentence: J H E A R that the Director of Education has declared ordinary time tables suspended during February. The new freedom is becoming very real, and in February, at least, should not be restricted by inspectional preferences for tried and tested methods. A s a parent, I approve of February being spent in the water, on Nature rambles and at hobbies, but feel that some children are going to be more fortunate than others. The New Freedom is going to be uncomfortable for the uninspired teacher, the routineer, and the time server. A nature ramble under the right direction would be full of delights and educational value; under an unsympathetic teacher, it would be an affair of fraying nerves with possibilities of riot. The new freedom, is, in fact, giving the scope that exists in other professions for conspicuous successes and miserable failures. "The daily press—(reflects) the abnormal devotion of the great majority to sensationalism —." I wish he would test this remark by making a list of the headlines in his daily paper for a month. They would cover all the real questions in the world to-day, and sensation stories would scarcely be represented. I turn to my paper and take the top lines of the two chief pages, cables and local news. The nearest approach to a sensation is the report of the inquiry into an aeroplane crash in my own town. Is that sensationalism ? Speaking of Newspapers ^ T H A T is wrong with New Zealand dailies is not sensationalism, but a uniformity of bias. We could do with a News Chronicle in this country, for its tendency to a slight luridity is more than atoned for by its policy of securing facts which the vested interests served by the Times and the Daily Telegraph prefer to leave in obscurity. I do not mean that it goes in for muckraking but, for instance, that its Spanish news is far more complete and illuminating than that of the "great" dailies. In December, the News Chronicle, I noticed, organised, with the co-operation of the authorities, the first School Exhibition to be held in Britain. The "Evening Post's" representative reports that the star attraction is the nursery school "now being instituted in infant schools throughout the country," consisting of garden, class room and ablution room. "It is amazing," he says, "to see the independence and efficiency of the tiny tots, who can dress, feed, and bathe themselves, put away their toys and keep themselves happily amused with their 'occupational' playthings." New Zealand was well represented by produce and travel films! The "Post's" representative has a nasty turn of humour. Page 18 The world is sceptical of the wisdom of dethroning the old values of "schooling." Its conversion depends upon the number of teachers who can make good. Practising Co-operation y ^ F T E R reading Vindex's description in the last number of this journal of consumers cooperatives, I was particularly interested to read of a consumers co-operative society functioning in a school—the International School at Geneva, whence Miss Millicent Kennedy, M.A., of Canterbury College has just returned after two years on its staff. Bi-lingual, co-educational, progressive and international, it has 200 pupils and 35 teachers. I suppose it teaches the children of the League of Nations staff since three-quarters of the children are day pupils. It qualifies them for entrance to the Universities of France, Switzerland, England, Canada and the United States. Its co-operative is a stationery and tuck shop, controlled by a committee of pupils. There is a surplus of £15 to £20 yearly, which is devoted to the school, particularly to the library and the science room. I would like to see the idea adopted in some larger schools in New Zealand. Playing shop is recognised as educationally valuable. How N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N . February 1, 1938 Education Under Difficulties London Slum School By N. S. Woods Mr. Woods has returned to New Zealand after two years' study abroad under a Rockefeller Fellowship in Social Sciences. 'J'O appreciate fully all the lessons to be learnt from this particular London school it is necessary to know something of its environment. If the visitor to London takes a "No. 60" bus from anywhere in Oxford Street, Regent Street, or the Strand, proceeding in the direction of Fleet Street and the East End, he will pass, in perhaps half an hour, along Bethnal Green Road and then into Roman Road. He will pass streets lined with open pavement stalls and barrows on which almost everything imaginable in the way of day-to-day necessities is offered for sale, streets packed with people. No expensive dresses or top-hats here though, for these are work-a-day folk who come from those side streets which the visitor catches glimpses of—those narrow slits between endless walls of brick rising flush with the pavement to a height of several storeys and pitted with innumerable windows and doors; streets full of playing children and drab with the utter absence of any blade of grass. Here and there, however, comes a little square of lawns and trees, one of London's innumerable breathing spaces. "Keep off the grass," though, for otherwise these little spots of green would quickly be annihilated by the thousands of little feet, tired from their street-pavement playgrounds and longing for the unattainable respite of some turfy green. Here the visitor is very near the thresholds of slum-land, and here —along Roman Road—he must plunge into this tenement labyrinth if he is to visit the school I have in mind. Three Storeys It is an L.C.C. primary school. It uses three or four storeys in red brick, almost jostled by the high tenements on either hand. Between them and it is a narrow margin of enclosed paving broadening out on one side to a small paved square for playing. Its packed young humanity, however, cannot possibly all play here, and so the boys at playtimes go upstairs instead of down— up to the flat, netted roof. There is a good view of London from that roof, too. These boys who Page 22 play games on a roof-top are just the same as boys anywhere—perhaps a little pale, but bright aiert and not noticeably unrobust. Only, one of their teachers will tell you that they come from those grim streets which the visitor has glimpsed, from the threshold of slum-land and beyond, and that they cannot stand up to any home-work. They have little in reserve, little of a barrier between good health and illness — clean, neatly dressed little fellows and as pleasant a set of boys as one could wish to meet anywhere. Brave little fellows, too, in their struggle upward through their hopeless environment. This school-, handicapped by the home environment of its pupils and by the limitations of its own situation, would hardly seem the place to visit for a teacher wishing to see the best of the practical application of a great experiment in education—for that is what it undoubtedly is. Remarkable Water-Colours To speak of the most striking aspect of its work first, there is water-colour painting to be seen here which it is no exaggeration to say would take its place with full justification on the walls of any art society's exhibition in New Zealand. Here is my own note, made at the time of my visit, on the water-colour work of a class of boys of age eight to ten years: "These paintings are amazingly fine—life and action in every one, bold and firm use of colour and line, daring yet thoroughly effective. This astonishing work has been achieved by the absence of teaching. From the time these children first start at school with a large sheet of drawing paper and a piece of charcoal, beyond being told to outline their figures bold and large, their work is unrestricted in choice of topic and execution. No drill with ruler and compass, no drawing of pots and pans, no dictatorship and no criticism, suggestion by the teacher only where the child is himself dissatisfied with the product of his work, or in doubt and voluntarily seeks assistance. These boys have never been 'taught' a single stroke. Their work has been allowed to N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1938 much better actual shop-keeping would be, particularly if it were co-operative. Did not the N . E . F . manifesto in this journal speak of "making co-operation a day-by-day reality in schools." I Dote on Denmark It has long been one of my peculiar ideas that we in New Zealand, should take much more interest than we do in the Scandinavian countries. Most people are like the Hon. J . A . Hannan. They think of New Zealand as a small England. A few rebel against this habit of mind, and in extreme cases, set up Russia as a model. If we must have a model, which I deny, I would like it to be Denmark. There is no sense in a sparsely populated, primary producing country like New Zealand, imitating England, a highly industrialised country, and one with an hereditary aristocracy, extremes of wealth and poverty and by comparison, rigid class stratification. Denmark, with its constitutional monarchy, rural economy, and equalitarian outlook, has a remarkable resemblance to INew Zealand. Its problems are similar to ours, Dut it makes short work of tnem. M r . Robert Bernays, English M.F., has indeed, described it as A Country Yvithout a Problem. My regard for Denmark and its northern neighbours has not been tested by personal acquaintance with them, but receives new support from someone who has. I am able to parade him in "National Education" because it was Danish agricultural education which aroused his enthusiasm. My witness, the Managing Editor of the "New Zealand Dairy Exporter" is just back from an eight month's tour, and says, "In many respects I think the ideas on education which obtained in the Scandinavian countries, are far ahead of those held in New Zealand." Enthusiasm for Agriculture Mr. Burnard was enthusiastic in particular about the agricultural high schools. The Danes and Swedes bring imagination to agricultural education, and he knew, he said, only one secondary school in New Zealand where the boys are stimulated as they are at the Danish agricultural high schools. The Danish scheme is for boys going on farms to have an ordinary primary school education, then between the ages of about 14 and 17, a few years on a farm, followed by an agricultural high school course of some 6 months. B y the time they go to the high school, the boys are found to be extremely keen to learn. Mr.Burnard N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1938 stayed for a time at one of these schools, and declares that the students were the keenest he ever saw. Later, the young farmer and farm-worker goes to the Folk High School if he so desires. The majority do, and there they are absorbed in cultural activity in a way which has made the folk school world famous. I like Mr. Burnard; above all, for his sentences. "I feel sure that if the question (of agricultural education) were handed over to a few of our younger educationalists, sound suggestions would be made. In Denmark, they believe that when changes are to be made, it is men between 30 and 40, who have proved themselves in their profession, who are best qualified to give the necessary advice. It is to be hoped that our own Government will remember that point. Progress cannot be made if the men selected to study conditions abroad receive their appointments as "plums," just before they finally retire from active teaching life." To M r . Scott Oh Mr. Scott You have a shot At everything that's going; On "Peanuts Sir!" We too concur But you have something owing. And when we thrive You'd us deprive Of B.O. ads. and stories Of glamorous stars And lipstick wars What would you then restore us? The movies then Have strong he-men And end in honeyed kisses With happy ends For sweet girl-friends While the villain always misses. 'Tis men who read Th' revolting screed— And oh! how hot the wade is Of sloppy books And tales of crooks— How C A N you blame the ladies ? Oh! foolish pawn You're but thorn To pierce a woman's armour And then her taste. You find unchaste When you've done all to harm her! —B.L.W. Page 19 got advice, not hammering, from his teacher. Don't you think that will do him more good than slogging through those ghastly problems that were in the back of Workman's Arithmetic when you went to school—and were still there when I went ten years later?" "Well " h e said and we both smiled and were calm again. An Interview with The Man-in-the-Street • ^ H I L E the schools were closed, "National Education," convincingly disguised as a holiday loafer, interviewed the Man-in-thestreet and sought his opinions upon this process called education, with which it is our common lot as parents and teachers to deal. We met him first in a city garage in which we are known. His problem was peculiarly personal. "What do you know about this a-b, ab, eb and a, ba, be, bi, bo, bu business?" he asked. "When I went to school I learnt my A B C like a Christian and now when I try to help my own 6 year old I get all muddled up with these farmyard noises." We tried a little quiet talk about phonetic methods and muttered something sympathetic about modern teaching. We even tried to persuade him to leave techniques to the professional, and to rouse his interest in plain everyday things like buildings. Did he know how many children were in that infant class? Did he know that that building was fifty years old and one hundred years out of date ? And above all did he know that he as an interested parent and a unit of voting strength could do a lot for his child and others without puzzling over professional methods? But it was no good and we parted amicably but both a little disappointed. A bad beginning. The Ancient Dens like our headteacher who has been here for fifteen years. But it's a mixture of all these things and because it's our school that we hate its going." "Your youngsters might get better teachers, better equipment and better buildings in a new consolidated school" we suggested; but he would have none of it. "There is no better teacher than Mr. ," he said. "There are several hard-worked women in this district who have had their first holidays since Mr. and his wife arrived. Any teacher who will milk his neighbour's cows for two weeks running, who is automatically elected chairman of every local committee, who is liked and respected by every child, is a good enough teacher for us." Education a Vital Issue Nothing we could say could shake his faith in the local village school. In that community we found that education was a vital issue, for the influence of the head teacher radiated into every corner of the community, and it had more to it than merely teaching technique and formal schooling. In his third appearance the man-in-the-street manifested himself as a lawyer on holiday. "I'd sink your whole ship," he said in the course of an unnecessarily heated argument, "for a A Genuine Educationist little teaching of the old kind for my children. Next time we were better prepared. Our In my day we were taught to do a job of work man was leaning on a pitchfork glumly watch- and if we didn't do it we got what was coming ing the steam rise from hay that should have to us. This namby-pamby pandering to chilbeen dry enough to stack. A n inauspicious dish interests weakens the moral fibre." moment this, but we had learnt that he was "But nobody wants to take the effort out of chairman of the school committee and a genu- education," we countered, ''but only to see that ine though quite unacademic educationist. "We effort is expended where it will do most good. hear there is talk of closing your school for Cramming children through the Proficiency exconsolidation" we said. "What do you think amination, which had become an entity in itself about that?" cut off and far removed from anything vital "I don't think—I know," he replied, scarcely and real in children's lives, was not education shifting his gaze from the hay. "Our school whatever else it might have been. And anyhas been here for thirty years. Everything way," we said, perhaps irrelevantly, "we've that ever happened in this district has taken seen a ten year old boy devote three weeks of place in the school. It's not only euchre par- unremitting spare time toil to making a model ties or dances, and it's not only that many of yacht. And he didn't have to be taught to us remember what a hive of activity it was concentrate and to carry through a difficult during the War, and it's not only because we technical feat to a successful conclusion. He Page 20 N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1938 "Yes, I've seen a thing or two," said No. 4, who with three of his camp mates was an itinerant contract-painter of schools. "Thank God I'm not a kid in some of the ancient dens we've brightened up lately. There is one place with two rooms and windows so high up the wall that even I could scarcely see out. The day we were there it was sweltering hot and even through the slap of brushes you could hear the droning roar of cicadas in the scrub outside. Maybe the teacher does take the youngsters outside" he went on in reply to our suggestion, "but I still say it's not fit for kids. If I'd had this job when my two were at school and had known what some schools were like, I'd have kept mine away until the truant officer was as blue in the face as his own forms. Outside is the place for children and if they can't be outside they should not be asked to go inside unhealthy hovels." This put the baby on our own doorstep as you might say. From now on we tackled the building problem. I Don't Know Six times more in all we met the man-in-thestreet, and six times we asked "what sort of rooms are your children taught in?" Five times —one, we found to our secret embarrassment, was a bachelor—we received the reply "I don't know." Even the wife of the man-in-the-street had the same answer, which was strange, considering how much care and attention she lavished upon the home her children lived in. "We can't have a proper nursery," said one, showing us round her new house, "but we've done the best we can. This is the boys' room. They can do what they like here—short of breaking up the home," she added smiling. It had been an ordinary bedroom, 12 by 11, with not overmuch room for two small beds. Now the walls were lined with cretonne covered shelves packed with the impedimenta of boyhood—broken cappistols, half finished boats, pieces of string and cord, and books, many of them. Hanging at the end of each bed was the business end of what our still youthful eye made out to be a "cotton telephone." Pictures ranged from Stanley Wood's pirate-drawings torn from an ancient "Chums," to a yard-long study of a jetty and launches in poster colours. See John About It "Obviously your boys have a home" was all we could say, for the other parts of the house were in keeping, with airy, tastefully decorated rooms that looked and felt as though they were used, and used often. "Oh well, they have to live their lives," was the reply. "Our only regret is that they can't have much room. Jack —he's ten—wants to make a work-bench, but there's no place for it. Perhaps he will forget about it after the holidays." This from the same lady who did not know what sort of rooms her children were taught i n ! We told her about the famous "12 square feet per child," and of the endeavours being made by the authorities and the teachers to give active children room in which to be active. "If you feel that your boys boys are cramped when the two of them have only this room and the whole of outdoors in the holidays, how do you think they feel at school?" we asked. She paused for a moment and said that if that was the way of of it something just had to be done, and she would see John about it. Education! Our last man-in-the-street, old and weather beaten, wrinkled and tough looking as well tanned leather, sat in a dinghy chewing tobacco while we waited for the fish to bite. A "character," this old sailor, whose reminiscences sounded like a recitation of the Z-pages of a world gazetteer. He had been everywhere, seen everything, and had done all that man could do—except going to school. "Education!" he said with a rumble that might have been a laugh if it had come to the surface; "Education!" he rumbled again; and he expressed his feelings with that emphatic gesture vhich is the special prerogative of tobaccochewers. So that was that. Impressions, Serious and not so Serious, of a Holiday Tour N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1938 Page 21 grow freely out of their own innate sense of balance, harmony, etc. The work is all done in class, they choose their own subjects, they take their own time over them, and they evolve their own methods. The results are truly amazing, and not from one or two talented boys in the class, but from every boy in the class. I looked through one set of finished paintings and everything was painted in motion—alive and vital. I have noted a few subjects from this set—a bus coming round a corner of a busy street and two pedestrians in the act of jumping out of the way; a horse and cart coming along a road and viewed from threequarters front; boys playing football with every boy caught in typical motion or poise; a ship just lifting on a heavy sea;"a dense crowd at a night speedway meeting with a race in progress; a classmate (a good portrait) in the act of stepping back from his easel to study the effect of his last stroke. Everything is bold, bright colours. Moreover, the pictures were not detailed. Close up they were often almost indecipherable, but from eight to ten feet away they were perfect in form. This is real art, not merely good photographic reproduction." Well, that is my note about it made at the time and I think it is sufficient. No Timetable Here! I went into an arithmetic class. There is no time-table or syllabus here. They do arithmetic or history, etc., when they want to and until they are tired of it. I hear someone say "Then they do precious little of such a dull subject as arithmetic." Dull! In my mind I see one of these London school teachers come into his class. "Boys, let's play pirates for a while." The class-room becomes a roaring den of piracy, doubloons are captured by the hundreds and as the plunder comes in it is carefully entered up on the blackboard. The figure reaches the hundreds of thousands and then the teacher suggests that it is time they thought about dividing up the spoil so that every member of the pirate gang gets a fair share. How will they set about this formidable task? A puzzled silence. A boy suggests dealing out one each all round until all is distributed, but the suggestion is soon ruled out as too laborious. "How many pirates ? Suppose we divide this plunder by the number of pirates ? Let's try it anyway." But who said this was a lesson in long-division and who thinks it's dull ? When I went into this arithmetic room I could hardly make myself heard. They were doing a set of sums and every boy seemed to be comparing notes with his neighbours. "How did you get that answer, Jack?" "What should I do here, Bill ?" "Hey, your answer isn't right, Joe. Look, you should have done this." And so the lesson goes merrily on, and boys learn N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1938 faster from each other than from any teacher or blackboard. Of course, the teacher comes in for his share of questions too—he's just a big boy himself. Yet there's fine discipline here beneath this babel of voices. The teacher rises to say "Just a minute, boys," and there is at once perfect, even eager, silence. Whatever is to be done, there are as many pairs of eager hands to do it as there are boys in the class. They go out to play quickly in single file with no hurry, no jostling, no order to form single file, quick march, or anything like that. The handwork in this school was of just as high a standard as the art. In the class-rooms were big charts, relief models, etc., executed by the boys themselves. Half the length of the wall in one room was occupied by a model of London docks done by the boys and every little piece of wood in the thing was neatly jointed. The boys are encouraged to make notes about things, but to make their own notes and never to copy from the blackboard. Individuality and originality are the key-notes to everything. Each boy keeps a diary day by day and in it he writes up something —anything he wants to write—every day. He writes as much as he likes in any way he likes. The diary is read by the teacher, but never corrected and never criticised. There must be no check or hindrance to this self-expression. The boys' sense of rhythm gradually leads him into well-balanced prose construction. The diary gives him an opportunity to give the individuality and the freshness of his own ideas full play—to write something that is for him vital and living, to develop in fact all the essentials of the essayist. But the day any teacher tried to tell him what to put in his diary or pointed out a spelling error (of which there are dozens) or raised any word of criticism, that essential spontaneity would be smashed to atoms. Spelling and punctuation can be taught at another time and in another way. Good Team-work Needed To run a school with this extent of freedom requires not merely teachers who have strong personality, who can be big boys and girls themselves, who have a never-failing sense of humour and the combined gift and knowledge of how to make every lesson something that the child looks forward to with eager anticipation. It requires more than this, for it requires perfect co-operation by the whole staff. The inclusion of a single teacher out of harmony with the rest in temperament or methods would upset things. This particular staff has been chosen and built up with care over a number of years. To build up such a school requires great qualities in the headmaster who does so. Page 23 The Mystery in the Common Room Another Amusing Tale By Spenceley Walker T E A C H E R in his time plays many parts. only has he to be a "guide, philosopher friend" to his pupils, but a doctor, a lawyer, also, upon occasions, a detective, as witness following: Not and and the In a large city school, some years ago, money began to disappear mysteriously from the handbags of the lady members of the staff in the common room, especially from that of the infant mistress, who, being the most highly paid of the females, and being in charge of the tea and luncheon arrangements, always had loose cash in her bag. The ladies were much concerned as these thefts had been going on for some considerable time. They had done nothing because they had a vague hope that they might accidentally surprise the culprit, or that he (of course the thief was a masculine person) would become conscience stricken and stop his nefarious actions. But the money continued to disappear regularly almost every morning, so, as usual in such a difficulty, they decided to call on a man to elucidate the mystery. It was no good referring the matter to the headmaster— the "boss'—for in his thunderous and mighty voice he would be sure to make biting and sarcastic remarks about leaving money about so carelessly, nor to "Tiger B i l l , " the first assistant, for he was too busy attending seances in theosophy or "whacking" his boys probably to prepare their souls for their next re-incarnation. They finally decided to call upon Charles Trugood, one of the second assistants, a rather brilliant young man who was just finishing his L L . B . at the University College, and who, it may be interesting to relate, after making a stepping-stone of the teaching profession, afterwards gave it up, and is now one of the most successful lawyers in the city. A t that time Sherlock Holmes was at the height of his glory, and our amateur detective, Charles, began to investigate this crime on the model of the methods of that great man. He therefore obtained the following facts as a basis for his deductions :— Page 24 The theft took place between the opening of school (9 a.m.) and the morning (tea) recess at 10.45 a.m. The ladies, having no convenient pockets like the men, left their money in their bags, which, as they were usually in a hurry to begin work, were thrown carelessly on the table, or on the couch, or on top of a low tea cupboard behind the door. The thief did not take all the money, but one coin only—a sixpence or a shilling, rarely a two shilling piece or a half-crown. The money was invariably taken from a bag on the low cupboard behind the door. After these facts had been obtained Charles went to the common room, familiar though it was to him, to re-examine it with the keen eyes of a detective. The door was never locked, for (as usual!) no key could be found. A large double framed bay window projected outwards almost to the inside edge of the footpath of the busy street, and passers-by could see inside the room when the rather flimsy curtains were drawn aside. The windows were too high off the ground to be climbed without a special effort, but things (coins for instance) could be thrown or even passed by hand from the room to the footpath. Access, almost unobserved, from the street to the room could be gained by entering the front door of the school, walking along a corridor past the headmaster's room, then along a rather narrow and dark passage out of which the door of the common room led. On the other side of the passage was the cloak room of Standard 6. On further enquiry he found that during the morning some of the ladies occasionally and at irregular intervals visited the room, out that Miss X , a junior assistant in the infant room, when the infant mistress was taking singing, prepared work there for about twenty minutes. He found also that a boy came into the room just before the recess to fill the kettle and put it on the gas ring for morning tea. Charles enquired from the teacher of Standard 6 if any child was in the habit of leaving the room N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1938 regularly before play-time, but he received a nega- light the gas. He was out of sight behind the door tive answer. As the windows of this room looked for a second or two, and then came out. Charles out on the street, he asked if the children had no- stopped him and ordered him to turn out his pocticed anyone hanging about the footpath or enter- kets which he did without hesitation or confusion. ing the front door. One bright boy said that he Except for a piece of string, a knife and some had noticed the milkman but no one else. He then rather grubby sweets, there was nothing to insaw the infant mistress about the boy who put on criminate him. the kettle. The little chap, she stated enthusiasWhen the ladies came in to morning tea, they tically,, was one of her angels, a bright, willing, immediately looked at their bags. A two shilling thoroughly reliable dear, little fellow, whose inno- piece was missing from that of the infant miscent eyes and manly, straight-forward manner tress ! absolutely forbade even the faintest suspicion of Rather puzzled, but not disheartened, Charles his guilt. Charles had a good look at him both tried another "dodge." B y permission of the inin school and in the playground, and he seemed a fant mistrees, and with a file, he marked, with a brighty, happy and carefree little man. Now, what scratch just under the date, each one of the coins about Miss X ? He had studied her fairly closely in her bag. A t lunch time he interviewed the proat morning tea times, for she was a bright, talka- prietress of the "tuck" shop on the opposite side tive girl, very pretty, and always dressed in the of the street, asking her to take particular notice latest fashion. She was rather nervy and jumpy, of anyone who passed in one of the marked coins. and financially irresponsible—living like a million- On a further review of the evidence he also interaire for two or three days after pay-day, and then viewed for the same purpose the manager of the existing by borrowing for the rest of the month. bookseller's shop in the main street, which he Well, well he was narrowing the evidence down. knew Miss X and the other teachers frequented. It looked as if Miss X was the guilty one, or, well, He then awaited results. On his enquiry next perhaps the boy. Of course there might be other afternoon there was no result from the "tuck" visitors to the room so he determined to watch, shop, but at the bookseller's the assistant behind and the next morning, after handing his class over the counter showed him a marked half-crown, and to his pupil teacher he placed himself in the shad- said a lady had tendered it for a book. Charles ows of the cloak room opposite, and keeping very felt his heart beat a little quicker. He was on the right track at last! Breathlessly he asked the still, waited. name of the lady, but the assistant, a new girl in After the ladies had gone, no one came near for the shop, did not know her. "Wait a bit," he said, half an hour, and then the milkman, with much however, "the lady is in the shop somewhere. A h , banging of cans, strode along the passage, and, here she comes behind you." Like a true detecfilling the jug, placed just inside the door, without tive, anticipating a dramatic moment as he congoing into the room, strolled away whistling. Miss X then went into the room, carefully closing the fronted the guilty and confused Miss X , Charles door. Charles determined to test her, so, after waited until she was quite close. With the halfwaiting a while, as if in a hurry to get something, crown in his hand, and his arm bent ready to push burst into the room without knocking. Miss X the the guilty coin right under her eyes, he turned was standing by the open window, and seemed to suddenly, and looked into the smiling and placid be waving her hand, or signalling or pointing to face of the infant mistress! Of course! he had someone in the street. She was very confused marked all the coins in her bag. and blushed furiously when Charles apologised. The coins still continued to disappear with moIn about ten minutes she came out still looking uncomfortable and confused. Just before the recess notonous regularity, and Charles reviewed the evithe boy went into the room, and through the half- dence again and again. To be quite certain about the boy, he intercepted him again, searching him opened door Charles saw him take up the kettle, thoroughly. Not only did he make him turn out bring it outside to fill it, place it on the ring and his pockets, but he felt under his arms and all N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 193S Page 25 over his body and arms, looked at his tightly laced boots, and turned down the tops of his stockings to the rather tight garters. He even made him open his mouth, but through it all the child looked at Charles with his wide-open innocent eyes. The infant mistress waxed very indignant at the throwing of suspicion on this dear little lamb. With the dogged persistence of the true detective, Charles continued to worry at the problem. He looked over the room again, and noticed that next door to the common room was a dark storeroom filled with the flotsam and jetsam of a large school. Suddenly an inspiration came to him. He would bore a hole in the dividing wall and so be able to watch the interior of the room more thoroughly, quietening his conscience with the thought that "The end justified the means." After school he borrowed an auger from the caretaker and bored a neat hole through the wall in such a way that it was not noticeable in the shadow near the door of the common room. Here in the lumber room next morning, he took his post, and glued his eye to the peephole, which gave him a view of the whole room and the street beyond Nothing happened for some time after the assembly bell had rung and the ladies had departed. The milkman came and filled the jug, whistling a merry tune the while. Then Miss X came in and carefully closed the door. Charles' heart jumped as she went to the top of the low cupboard behind the door, and took up the bag of the infant mistress. However as soon as she opened it she gave an impatient exclamation, closed it again, and, putting it down, picked up her own which was very like the other. Then she went on with her work at the table, until, just as the city clock boomed out the hour of ten, she went to the window watching the street eagerly. As a young man, dressed in the latest fashion, passed he waved his hand and Miss X waved in return, and Charles saw the glint of a diamond ring on her finger. A h , he remembered hearing that Miss X had become engaged to the son of one of the richest men in the city. She went out shortly afterwards. A few minutes passed and the infant mistress came into the room. She went to her bag, and, rather furtively the watcher thought, took a coin out. Was this the solution of the problem ? Was there some psychological kink in the mind of the infant mistress whereby she took her own money to accuse others, or perhaps to bring a kind of Page 26 sympathy to herself as being robbed? Was it Kant, or James or the immortal Sherlock himself who had mentioned this strange trait in human nature. Charles thought this was a very tame ending to the whole thing, and was just puzzling his brains as to the best way to approach the infant mistress on the matter, and was turning away from the peephole, when he heard the door of the infant room open, and her voice saying, evidently to an elder scholar, "Take this to the shop over the road, and get six ham sandwiches for morning tea." "Well, well," he thought, "the end's not yet," and resumed his vigil. Just as he was getting cramped and his eyes began to water from overmuch staring, the boy came in, took up the kettle, went outside to fill it and, having lit the gas, placed it on the ring. Then, in a flash, he raced to the low cupboard behind the door, opened the bag, took out a coin, stooped down for a second, and made for the half open door. Framed in the round peephole, Charles had never seen such a hard criminal face and such greedy glittering eyes as transformed this innocent looking child as he grabbed the coin. Charles at once rushed out of the store-room, and, as the child came through the door, his face all innocent and smiling, the man held out his hand and said i n a peremptory voice, "Give me that money." Without hesitation the boy stooped, rolled down his stocking, pushed his finger and thumb below the top of his tightly laced boot, took out a two shilling piece which he handed to the triumphant Charles. That boy is now one of the richest and most respected merchants in the city. ...•tiiiitiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimMiiiiiiiiiiiimHiiiiiiiiuiiiiiitiiiiiiiHMii if Continued from page 13 mentary schools go to the mines and the factories. They see tyrannies unbearable being borne, and they do not curse. They see the humble and the meek triumph over the embattled despots of the earth, and they do not thrill. Across their fields they hear the battle-cry of the destroyers, and they do not shudder. Without emotion, impartially, they hear alike the thunder of the hoofs of the Great Tosh Horse of the Cinemas, or the clatter of the Four Horsemen of the Prophecy riding the sky. Because, behind all the apocalyptic visions of men, they have one more awful still. Midnight Moon might not win at Lincoln on Thursday. Here at the apogee of this disastrous drama they live, our late pupils, here at the Division of the Spoils; and they are playing Penny Pools! History was dull at school. —By Courtesy of Thos. Nelson and Sons. N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1933 After the N.E.F. Conference By P. E. Hornibrook ' J ' H O S E teachers who Certificate Examination. J-JERE an Australian, writing in were unable to atThroughout the Confer" Education," an Australian tend the N . E . F . Conference the general attitude teachers' journal, roundly condemns ence must by now have a expressed by the speak"the village-pump patriarchs who distorted and garbled imers was that their unhave now rushed into print and pression of the lectures familiarity forbade them delivered there, and of speech to refute any progressive sugto discuss the local systhe personalities of the tem. The schools of gestion offered by the lecturers." "If overseas delegates. Their N.S.W. were mentioned we are to believe these reports," he main sources of informamainly in the discussions says, "a nefarious band of ignorant tion have been the newsthat followed the lectures foreigners . . . abusively and discourpaper reports and, rewhen teachers asked cently, the contributed teously insulted the educational sysquestions definitely relaarticles; I do not refer tem of N.S.W., which, as all know, is ting to their own local to the reports of the problems. perfect." lectures, appearing i n I have been impressed "Education." Since most of us realise that the discretion (I could use a different word) in Australia we possess no newspapers but only of these falsifiers of the tenor of the Conference the murder-divorce-sex-crime type of journals, in allowing the delegates to depart before launchteachers and parents alike have surely decided ing their attack. Nor in the discussions that folthat it would be most unwise to base their opinlowed the lectures did I hear any of them take the ions of the Conference on the information supplied them by the reporters. But it is excusable opportunity to rebuke the speaker in person. Our for anyone to give credence and authority to the guests have gone home, now let's criticise them. views expressed by a teacher who attended the We who attended the Conference were privileged lectures. A n d these village-pump patriarchs, who to hear men and women of high professional emihave now rushed into print and speech to refute nence explain to us the future trends of educaany progressive suggestion offered by the lectur- tion throughout the world. We sat entranced as ers, have succeeding in promulgating an account Rugg or Happold described what they consider of the Conference proceedings that is basically to be the ideal type of school, and we listened with untrue, and which might well engender the at- avid interest as our visitors discussed the steps titude that at the Conference no reform was men- taken abroad to bring the schools into line with tioned which could with any profit be adopted the modern world. A n article by Donald Short, in last month's "Education," adequately epitoin our country. mises the benefits gained by thinking teachers When discussing the Conference, we must keep and their gratitude to the N . E . F . But in addiin mind a true perspective of its actual aim. The tion to our gratitude we feel shame at the churlish series of lectures was so arranged that the recog- attitude adopted by those who now seek to sneer nised pedagogic authorities from as many na- at and belittle the Conference; we feel sorrow at tions as possible were enabled to explain the edu- the smug complacency of such people who, after a cational objectives of their native countries and week's contact with the world's educational the practical measures taken to modernise their leaders, can decide with such repulsive self-satisschools. But i f we are,to believe those reports faction that they have noting to learn from the to which I take a strong objection, a nefarious outstanding minds of their profession. band of ignorant foreigners, led by a boorish Scot, The general line taken up by these unwanted abusively and discourteously insulted the educa- defenders of the N.S.W. educational system is not tional system of N.S.W. which, as all know, is that of a calm, reasoned reply to a man with perfect. If, in the course of his address, a visit- whom they are in disagreement, but a patronising ing speaker declared that he personally was op- disparagement of the conditions prevailing in his posed to external examinations, and that in many own country. D r . Hart, who advocated the aboschools of his country such processes had been lition of the external examination, is thus comabolished, no one is justified in reporting his pletely rebutted by the naive reply that in Caliremarks as an attack upon our Intermediate fornia a pupil once shot his teacher. A plea for N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1938 Page 27 decentralisation is countered by mention of the backward conditions existing in some American countries. The considered declaration of an experienced examiner that subjective marking is unreliable is proved false because two local examiners once showed a correlation of .86. A physician who, on our invitation, is paying a social call to our home ventures to suggest, in reply to a question, that his host has incipient influenza and should take precautions. After his guest's departure the host petulantly cries, "How dare he say that my health is not perfect! Why, only last winter his own child had whoopingcough, yet he is now illogical enough to diagnose me as unwell." The vast majority of practising teachers who attended the Conference were interested in the different outlook shown by the Americans and the Englishmen. Both exhibited unbounded pleasure in their job, but, while the former betrayed unlimited enthusiasm in reform, the latter revealed a more cautious and deliberate striving after the same ends. But all the visitors, unlike some of their listeners, held i n common the belief that education must progressively change along with the changes of social life, that a nation's schools must keep pace with that nation's development, that a nation that is not making the effort to bring its educational system into line with the trends of to-day is failing in its duty to its children. Perhaps the greatest benefit bestowed by the Conference was that it provided us with a brief survey in a small compass of the educational systems of other nations. To pass from a lecture by Laurin Zilliacus to one by G. T. Hankin brought a realisation of the different circumstances to be faced in Finland and England, brought, too, a realisation that no matter how dissimilar the situation, both nations understand the importance of a dynamic system of education that keeps abreast of sociological progress. It was reassuring to hear so often and so conveniently expressed the opinion that the most important work of any country takes place i n the school-room. Page 28 But it would need volumes to set down the benefits conferred on teachers by the Conference. This is why it is so depressing to find publicity given to reports which make no mention of the widened horizon delineated for the classroom teachers, but which instead create the impression that our visitors had nothing to teach us and that our only response should be to shut tight the door of our house of glass and thumb our noses at these presumptuous foreigners. The value of the addresses would be given a permanent record and would permeate to every teacher if the Conference organisers could issue in book form a verbatim report of the lectures delivered. This would comprise a most modern textbook of educational ideals and methods, and would reach those teachers whom distance or expense prevented from coming to Sydney. A t the same time it would supply a healthy antidote to the false reports. I would suggest to the compilers that they incorporate in the preface an apology to the delegates for the parochial insults that have been hurled at their departing backs. RESERVE EARLY ENGLAND NEXT YEAR? T H R E E fascinating C.P.R. routes from which to choose . . . via Suva, Honolulu, Vancouver, the world-famous Rockies, Toronto, Niagara Falls, Ottawa, Montreal, Old Quebec and the St. Lawrence Seaway . . . via Sydney, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Japan and thence Canada and by the "EMPRESS OP BRITAIN" World Cruise, joining at Singapore, Hong Kong, Yokohama, Honolulu, San Francisco or Los Angeles. Due New York May 16th, Southampton May 23rd. Literature and full information from (2z4tcu&a4i (Pacific (Incorporated in Canada) 11 Johnston Street, Wellington. 32-34 Quay Street, Auckland. N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1938 Power in Politics Roosevelt's Fight with Electricity Trusts Current History, by "Vindex" J 7 L E C T R I C I T Y has sold at wholesale in America for ten times the price at which Power Boards and Municipalities in New Zealand are able to buy it. "Vindex" here describes salient factors in President Roosevelt's attack upon the semi-monopolies which have exploited the users of electricity in the United States. The power companies, combined in trusts, wield immense influence in American politics, and the President's first line of attack was to re-start the Federal owned hydroelectric power scheme on the Tennessee River, established for war purposes, but never used. The "power lobby" kept it idle from 1918 to 1933. The latest news tells of a strange reversal. The billion dollar Commonwealth and Southern Corporation, feeling the weight of Tennessee Valley Authority competition, has offered to sell out to the Government. L A S T month a cable from Washington reported that M r . Wendell Lewis Wilkie had made an offer to President Roosevelt to sell to the United States the entire undertaking of the billion-dollar Commonwealth and Southern Corporation. M r . Wilkie is President of the Corporation but his startling action is made infinitely more significant by his being also the recognised spokesman—he came in to "power" quite recently by way of law— of the embattled electric supply industry. This is the latest phase in a struggle which has occupied part of the American scene for many years, the struggle between the power and light "utility" companies, and a growing section of public opinion which demands that electricity should be generated and distributed by public authorities. New Zealand Shames New Jersey That there is a case for public ownership is interestingly established by an article by a New Zealander in the American "New Republic" of February 7, 1934, in which appears the statement, supported by figures, that, "The New Zealand Government sells for 34 cents the same amount of power which in New Jersey, for exN A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1988 ample, costs 3.48 dollars. And New Zealand makes it pay. Retailing of electricity," the author, M r . Quentin Pope, continued, "is in the hands of other local corporations which have had to modify their original ideas of the proper level for power charges. "But against the rate calculated by M r . Stephen Raushenbush for New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts and Kansas, the rates for New Zealand's four largest cities are illuminating. Here are the figures: 40 Kilowatt hours. $2,936 New Jersey (private) . . 3.485 Massachusetts (private). 2.995 Kansas (private) 3.188 Auckland (public) 1.114 1.304 Christchurch (public) . . .910 .738 80 Kilowatt hours. $4,550 5.858 5.189 5.959 2.228 2.608 1.820 1.476 While President Wilson showed some sympathy for public ownership, it remained for Roosevelt to espouse the cause with vigour. But even his boldness has been daunted by the strength of the combined utility interests. President Roosevelt opened fire on utilities within two months of his inauguration in 1933, in a theatre of war selected by himself—the Tennessee Valley. Page 29 A Munitions Fiasco When America entered the World War, the Federal Government began the construction of two hydro-electric plants at Muscle Shoals on the Tennessee River for the purpose of producing nitrates from air. A sardonic fate, however, decreed that these plants should not be ready to produce until the day of Armistice. The 12th November, 1918, saw the first batch of ammoniumnitrate come out of Muscle Shoals. To complete the fiasco, it was found that the plant had already become obsolete, so rapidly had the technique of taking nitrogen from air been improved. Until the Roosevelt Revolution, the vast dam and generating stations stood idle, but on the 18th May, 1933, the President's Tennessee Valley authority bill was carried. This law provided for the generation and sale of electricity by the Federal Government and much more besides. It created the Tennessee Valley Authority, which was given jurisdiction over an area of 42,000 square miles and two and a half million people, and was charged, in the President's own words to Congress, "with the broadest duty of planning the proper use, conservation and development of the natural resources of Tennessee drainage basin and its adjoining territory for the general, social, and economic welfare of the nation. "It is clear," said the President, "that the Muscle Shoals development is but a small part of the potential public usefulness of the entire Tennessee River. Such use, if visioned in its entirety, transcends mere power developments. It enters the wider field of flood control, soil erosion, elimination from agricultural use of marginal lands and the distribution and diversification of industry. In short, this power development of War days leads logically to national planning for a complete river water-shed, involving many states and the future lives and welfare of millions." Professors to Catch Financiers Three outstanding men were placed at the head of the authority: Arthur E . Morgan, President of Antioch College, a water control engineer; H . A . Morgan, President of the University of Tennessee, an agricultural expert; and David Lilienthal, a utilities expert from Wisconsin. The utilities interests have two grudges against T . V . A . The smaller grudge is that it competes directly with some companies in its own region. More significant, however, is the declared intention of the Authority to make itself a "yard-stick" Fage 30 by which the reasonableness of the charges made by the utility companies can be tested. A n d above all there is the fear that the principle of public ownership may be vindicated in practice. The way in which Muscle Shoals stood idle for a decade indicates the political power of private enterprise, a power which springs from organization. The power interests are so co-ordinated that their full weight can be brought to bear on White House and Capitol H i l l , Washington. In 1930, Mr. Raushenbush estimated that onehalf of the electric power generated by the larger power companies in America was in the hands of three great holding company groups—The United Corporation, The Electrical Bond and Share, and The Insull Group; that two-thirds of the electrical energy was controlled by six groups and over 90 per cent, by 15 groups. In a University of Texas bulletin, a contributor states that such figures do not reveal adequately the degree of concentration of control. The part played by interlocking directorates and by the concentration of control in the field of investment banking, which field, in turn, controls the utility holding companies, is highly important. President Roosevelt was reported last month as telling a press conference that all holding companies must be eliminated from the nation's economic structure, whether they were in control of public utilities, banking, or other businesses. It is quite incredible that he should attempt so colossal a process of elimination, and it is doubtful whether he made such a statement. Holding companies are too numerous and located at far too vital parts of the American leviathan to be peremptorily excised. How a Holding Company Works In 1927, Senator Walsh, speaking in the Senate, outlined the structure of one utility empire. "The Standard Gas and Electric Company has subsidiary companies with a total capital of 1,171,000,000 dollars, all of which it controls through its own share capital of 198,000,000 dollars." The hierarchy of subsidaries ran as fallows: "The Standard Gas and Electric Company controls the Standard Power and Light Company which controls the Pittsburgh Utilities Company, which controls the Philadelphia Company, which controls the Pittsburgh Railway Company, which controls the Consolidated Traction Company, which controls the Fort Pitt Traction Company, which conN A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1938 N E W f r o m every a n g l e ! Here are some of the Outstanding Features: Here is motoring news indeed! A n entirely New Car in the 8 horse-power field. The New Ford "Eight," embodying a host of advanced and proved features. This New Ford "Eight" has the roominess, comfort and convenience hitherto associated only with cars of greater power and price; yet it provides easy handling and maximum economy—40 to 45 miles per gallon. On the mechanical side, it combines proved features, with numerous advancements ensuring the greatest efficiency and reliability. Frame, engine, clutch, gear-box, steering, brakes, springing—every feature has been designed and tested to give service of a really lasting nature. Welded All-Steel Body of distinctive modern design. Roominess of a new high standard for four tall people. Roomy interior luggage compartment. 99-inch springbase. A l l passengers cradled between the springs. Individual body-conformity seats on tubular-steel sliding frames. Transverse Springs, giving independent suspension on all four wheels. Four Double-acting Hydraulic Shock Absorbers. Easy-clean Pressed-steel Wheels. Girling-type mechanical brakes. Hand-brake, latest push-pull type. Torque Tube and Radius Rod drive (found in no other inexpensive car except Ford). Dry Single-plate Clutch, with light pedal action. Easy Self-centering Steering. 3-Bearing Crankshaft with Pressure fed lubrication. Oil-bath Air-Cleaner (an exclusive Ford feature). Precision-set Valves, requiring no adjustment. Spare Wheel with metal cover recessed into rear panel. Ford Motor Company of New Zealand Limited reserves the right to change specifications and prices without notice. Read through the list of New Ford "Eight" features. Then examine and drive this entirely New 8 horsepower car yourself. See and drive the "New Ford Ei&ht " To'day ! NOW ON DISPLAY A T A L L AUTHORISED FORD D E A L E R S E V E R Y W H E R E THROUGHOUT N E W Z E A L A N D . FORD MOTOR COMPANY OF NEW ZEALA N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 193? D LIMITED LOWER HUTT WELLINGTON Page 31 trols the Alleghany Traction Company, which controls Millville Sharpsburg and Etna Railway Company." In the great depression, the trend was towards an amalgamation as never before, and investigation would, without doubt, reveal a number of pyramids of companies taller and proportionately wider based than that just described. Power Propaganda The utilities, moreover, maintain the National Electric Light Association, recently re-christened, with amazing cynicism, the Edison Institute. This defence organization maintains a highly efficient lobby at Washington, and has for years, carried on an enormous and cleverly directed propaganda, subsidising educationalists and newspapers to popularise its point of view. Even the Smithsonian Institute has been fooled into issuing utility propaganda. According to last month's cable already referred to, the Commonwealth and Southern Corporation is a 2,000,000,000 dollar company, and it appears that it is prepared to sell to the Government such of its plant as is affected by the Tennessee Valley operations. "Time," the news magazine, tells of an hour and three-quarters conversation between M r . Roosevelt and Mr. Wilkie, the President of the Commonweaitn Southern, guesses (there being no communique) that the conversation was comparatively amiable, M r . Wilkie being on considerably better terms with the President than most utility chiefs. Mr. Wilkie was credited with saying that he was agreeable to the abolition of holding companies beyond one degree, that is to say, he desired that companies holding geographically diversified properties might be co-ordinated through one holding company. I remarked earlier that it is improbable that the President should attempt to forbid the holding company technique of organization altogether. It would have been a revolutionary step at any time during his term. A t the moment he is stepping delicately, particularly in the neighbourhood of utility companies. America's new depression, christened "recession," which is sufficiently serious to have impelled the President to call a special session of Congress to deal with it, can be, to some extent, mended by the utilities, if they will. The recession is generally attributed to the extreme reluctance of big business to spend big money. The Roosevelt philosophy of politico-economics has been that by increasing the spending power of consumers, demand would be created not only for consumer Page 32 goods, but for the capital equipment to produce them. After some four years of priming, the pump began to produce and the administration to reduce its priming activities, cut down relief expenditures and dared to look forward to a day when the budget might again balance. But the pump did not continue to function as expected, and as Government spending was tapered off, no countervailing increase in private spending appeared. Powerman Wilkie is reported by "Time" to have tried to convince the President that investors had very real fears, and consequently would not furnish money for utilities to spend. Each concurred that the utilities could profitably spend a lot of money in the next year, perhaps as much as 1,500,000,000 dollars. A l l that can be said confidently is, however, that a long urawn-out fighi has reached a dramatic stage. In 1928, the Federal Government's plant at Muscle Shoals stood idle because the power interests prevented the Government from operating it. In i938 Muscle Shoals, enlarged beyond the imagination of 1928, is an item in a vast Federal Government enterprise and private interests are onering to sell out. Shades of Herbert Hoover who vetoed two bills providing for Federal operation of Muscie Shoals! (coutmued from page 12) education an opportunity to escape from its prison house. But escape where to? Local control was in bad oid days not yet forgotten, piebald witn parocniaiism. If revived will this leopard repeniant have changed or even dissembled his spots'/ i ttese are questions every working teacher will ask not altogether disinterestedly for the toad beneath tne harrow lacks something of the admirable detachment of researchers. .But at least those who seek answers to these questions will in future have to resort to the book here so unsatisfactorily reviewed. Its author has focussed the problem. He has wrestled by no means unavailingly with its solution, a solution which must be found for the sake of those who like the Mock Turtle are getting "the best of all educations," because "they go to school every day." Note: Bureaucracy is in the above used scientifically, not opprobriously. It is a factor in control which becomes inevitable once large numbers spread over wide areas have to be administered. Bureaucrats do not make bureaucracy but bureaucracy bureaucrats. In his own circle where he makes abundant and intimate personal contacts the bureaucrat is as human as the rest of us. It is "the files" that dessicate human nature that bureaucratise it in Moscow, in Calcutta, in Lambton Quay and at Whitehall. N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 193S News from Branches Paihia Sub-Branch "T/HE meeting held at Pahia on Saturday, November 6 was well attended, there being a large number of teachers present and keen interest was taken in the discussion on the not altogether free hand that is talked of so much. The presence of the visiting inspectors Messrs. Pritchard and O'Connor, together with that of the president of the sub-branch lent colour to the meeting. Mr. Boswell reminded those present that there were very definite problems ahead and that we were at most, experimenting with very precious lives. He exhorted one and all to do his or her best at all times—therein lay happiness for child and teacher alike. Mr. Pritchard advised everyone to endeavour to develop the young personality along systematic lines. His definition of a teacher was one who has synoptical knowledge of what children should learn, one who could and would guide and help along life's way. His opinion was that the school environment should be a blaze of glory in which the child learned to regard knowledge as truth and to realize that he had a definite job in life. He regarded the syllabus as being widely suggestive and slightly compulsory. Mr. O'Connor urged every teacher to have a method and policy of his own. Before the year ended it would be well for all to have a stocktaking. Inspectors and teachers alike are as yet in the dark as to what is and is not a success. A t the request of M r . Prichard, M r . Harris of Kaikohe District High School explained the working of his time-table. On rising, he paid a tribute to the Native school teachers to whose schools he and others had access. The time-table was divided into four broad classes (a) mechanical, demanding greatest effort and concentration; (b) aesthetic, a restful period; (c) explanatory; (d) creative. Mr. Lindaeur, of Russell, whose excursions into the storied past and into the life of the ocean and the seashore are things to marvel at, assured colleagues that such studies left their mark on the child/ Miss Rains of Kerikeri gave her recent experiences of fitting the child to his environment. More will be heard of the proposal to form a boys' model yacht club. The pros and cons of the wireless as an educational element were freely discussed. A vote of thanks to all speakers and to Miss Lloyd of Pahia School for the hospitality she had extended, brought an interesting meeting to a close. N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1938 Goldfields Sub-Branch JJTNTDER the auspices of the local sub-branch of the Educational Institute, a very helpful and interesting evening was held on November 26 in the Methodist Hall, Te Aroha, commencing at 4 p.m. Mr. Ramsay Howie, assistant music lecturer at the Auckland Training College, and Miss Pole, arts mistress at the Waihi District High School, gave very interesting lectures on their respective subjects. M r . Howie demonstrated with a class of Standard 3 and 4 pupils the latest developments in school music. This was much appreciated by both teachers and pupils. The teachers then adjourned to the local tea rooms for dinner. In the evening Miss Pole spoke and chose for her subject, "Wood and its Decoration," illustrating her lecture with a display of many artistically decorated articles, made by her pupils. Mr. Graham past president, on behalf of the teachers, thanked Miss Pole and M r . Howie for their very instructive lectures and said that could these subjects of handwork and music be developed along such lines, teaching would be nearer to attaining the ideal in education. This was followed by a delightful musical programme contributed by Mr. and Mrs. Howie and Miss J . McLeod. Supper was then served. A t the conclusion of the evening M r . T. A . Murphy, president of the local sub-branch of the Institute, in a short speech said that he hoped that this meeting which had proved so successful and enjoyable would be followed at an early date by others of a similar nature. He also congratulated the lecturers for arousing so great an interest and the outgoing Executive for organising such a splendid programme. Members of the Teachers' Institute from Waihi, Paeroa and Te Aroha surrounding district attended the meeting in large numbers. A further gathering of the sub-branch was held on Wednesday, 1st December at Paeroa in the Paeroa District High School when the teachers from Waihi, Paeroa, Te Aroha and the surrounding districts sat in round table conference on the "New Freedom" in education. The gathering was honoured by the presence of the District Inspectors, Messrs. Henry and East. Mr. T. Murphy, who acted as chairman, called upon M r . Henry to initiate the discussion by reading extracts from a departmental circular. A n animated discussion followed, several members expressing their views and understanding of the "New Freedom" Page 33 Northern Wairoa Branch Q N Wednesday evening, November 9, the teachers of the district met in the Holburn tea rooms, Dargaville, to farewell M r . J . A . Henry, who is leaving to take up the position of senior inspector in Hawke's Bay. Mr. Henry was accompanied by M r . A . F . D . East, also inspector for this district. A programme of musical items and community singing had been arranged, and after supper M r . W. A . T. Underwood, President of the Northern Wairoa Branch, explained that it was M r . Henry's last visit to the district and that opportunity was being taken to bid him farewell. He remarked that freedom of teachers had been very much in the forefront since the abolition of proficiency, but the seeds of freedom had been first sown in the minds of the Northern Wairoa teachers at the meeting on May 2, 1936, when M r . Henry and M r . East first addressed a meeting of the Branch. A s a result of this advice the lot of the children and the educational progress of the teachers had undergone much-needed and appreciated changes from that date. It was regrettable that M r . Henry's stay in the district had been so short, but the President congratulated him on his appointment and extended the good wishes of the Northern Wairoa teachers. In reply, M r . Henry expressed his regret at leaving the district where he had felt so much at home with the teachers. He assured the teachers that they had no cause for anxiety in the future as the district was to be left in he hands of M r . East whose capabilities were well known. Speaking of the local Branch Mr. Henry said that he considered it a very live body whose activities were worthy of high praise and that he appreciated the way in which its official duties were carried out. He urged the teachers to move about from place to place as it would be to their advantage. Mr. Henry hoped that teachers would continue similar social functions as he considered them a very important part of a teacher's life. Waiapu Branch ' J ' H E monthly meeting of the Waiapu Branch of the N.Z.E.I. was held in the Tuparoa Native School, on Saturday, December 4, the president, Mr. H . W. Black, presiding over an attendance of over 40 teachers. After the usual formal business was dispensed with, the following remits were brought forward: 1. "That a teacher who has completed 5 years' service in his present position in a public school, shall be entitled to removal expenses when going to a new position." Page 84 The remit proposed by M r . Duff was supported strongly by M r . Dobson and others. 2. "That Native schools be paid, in addition to the present free supplies, a capitation allowance." The remit, which was brought forward by M r . Fairbrother, was fully discussed and approved by the meeting. Mr. R. W. Hamlyn was then called on to address the gathering. His room was filled with samples of art and craft work done by pupils during his stay at Tuparoa. He explained how to paint on wood without the paint running, how to trace designs and produce beautifully finished articles suitable for sale. He gave advice on sand papering and polishing trays and other wooden ornaments. He showed samples of weaving done by different classes and gave suggestions concerning the construction of a loom. This was followed by illustrations of rhythmic line drawing which aimed at giving life to the work. Mr. Hamlyn's practical blackboard demonstration to music concluded a most interesting lecture. On behalf of the audience Mr. Dobson expressed appreciation of the inspiring address of M r . Hamlyn who was accorded a very hearty vote of thanks. The samples of work on display were open for inspection and a light luncheon brought to a close a very happy gathering. Poverty Bay Branch G A T H E R E D for the purpose of meeting the senior inspector, of the Hawke's Bay Education Board, M r . T. A . Morland, M.A., 40 teachers met in the Gisborne Central School. M r . J . E . Shimmin, president of the Poverty Bay branch of the New Educational Institute, presided over the meeting. Mr. Morland stated that it was the wish of the Education Department and of the Executive of the N.Z.E.I. that he address the teachers in each district so that the new policy might be outlined. The teachers were anxious to know what was being done with this "New Freedom" and how their colleagues were reacting to the removal of the cramping of the proficiency examination. There had been a change—a subtle one—or rather, a new spirit had come into being. Owing to the very broken school year, M r . Morland was of the opinion that teachers felt they should push on with the essentials—the three R's. Therefore, perhaps, there had been neither the branching out that there might have been, nor the recasting of schemes with a new outlook. In one large school advantage of the opportunity had been taken of the chance for specialisation. One member of the staff, for instance, would handle N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1. 1938 perhaps all the geography or history of the school. In the morning the usual programme would be followed in the main, whereas in the afternoon period the teachers would change from class to class pursuing their special subjects. In that the interest of the children had been increased and if the work covered and the amount retained had not been lessened this experiment had been successful. In the smaller schools there was perhaps the opportunity for the development of a more distinctive individuality. The timetable should not be so overruling and yet the teacher must provide for the progress in the essential subjects. Poetry, perhaps, had been given a new uplift and some would even go as far as to say that all history should explain this day, and all geography explain this place. A real benefit from the abolition of the proficiency examination would be felt in the intermediate school, where the children really could be taught now according to their aptitudes over a substratum of general essentials. Here proficiency had exerted a cramping influence as it had been applied equally to both the academic and manual departments. The great danger was the possibility of the falling-off in the standard of the essentials. It must be realised that there must be some form of examination. It was necessary for the teacher to measure up what he was doing. The proficiency examination was to be replaced by a certificate issued by the headteacher that the pupil had completed the course laid down for Form II. A pupil completing the course for Form I would be entitled to a certificate of attainment. Thus the onus was on the school to see that the course was being covered. It was, therefore, for the teacher to present his class or school as his conception of education. The inspector must test to a certain degree, but it was essential that this assessment be done fairly. A t present the speaker continued, the uniformity of schools throughout the country was amazing. In the future, maybe, there would be a great measure of differentiation. ^llllMlllllllllllllllllllllllllllinillllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIItlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliMtlllllllllllli, [ BEGIN 1938 W E A T H E R CHARTS NOW. Increased attention may now be given to Indi| vidual Work, such as keeping records of local conE ditions. Graphical wall records, for quick use, disE play and reference. Set of 6 for one year, pasted, I 2/10. DAWSONS LIMITED, | Princes Street, Dunedin. "'' m i l i u m m i l I m i n i u m i l l m i m i n i l I i l l 11 i N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February. 1, 1938 i iinn in i i E E | § i 1 E | mmmiiiiiimiiiiimimiiimmmiiiiiiimimmmimmimiiimi iiiiiiiiimimtnimi THE Correspondence Coaching College Principal: T. U. Wells, M.A. The Correspondence Coaching College offers careful and thorough preparation by correspondence for the following examinations:— PUBLIC SERVICE E N T R A N C E . POST O F F I C E E X A M I N A T I O N . MATRICULATION. SURVEYORS' A N D CIVIL ENGINEERS'. TRAINING C O L L E G E E N T R A N C E . LAW AND ACCOUNTANCY. B A N K E R S ' DIPLOMA. T E A C H E R S ' " C " A N D "B." UNIVERSITY: B A . Stages I., II., and III., Honours in History and Education. MAORI: Courses to cover the requirements of Matriculation and B.A. Examinations. Business Letters and Commercial Correspondence Course. Short Story Course. Free-lance Journalism. Clear and Concise Notes in all subjects. Full Model Answers. Careful Correction of Students' Work. Do not let Procrastination spoil your chances of success! Write for Prospectus, Box 1414, C.P.O., Auckland. NOTES FOR 1938 S E T BOOKS A R E NOW R E A D Y . The following are extracts from a few of the scores of letters recently received from successful students:— "I am very pleased to be able to write and inform you that I have been successful in passing the University College Terms Examination in the subject for which you coached me—Philosophy I. (Logic and Ethics t. As you know I was able to send in only five Sets of written work and just before the examination I relied very largely on your notes and model answers. The latter are invaluable to any student taking up serious study. Thank you very much for the help you gave me, and for your courtesy and consideration." "The Examination is over and passed. I have to thank you for your help and guidance and can assure you that, were it not for your College I don't think I would have had a chance. I think it speaks well for your College that after no schooling for four years, and only four months to prepare a year's work in seven subjects, I passed in every one." (Training College Entrance.) "You will be pleased to know that I succeeded in passing "Terms" in History I. and Economics I.—B.A." "You will be pleased to hear that I gained another section of B . A . this year, having passed in History II. and Sociology." "I am pleased to be able to inform you of success in the recent University Examinations. I managed tp gain a pass in History II., Education II. and Sociology. As this success is undoubtedly due to your instruction and help during the year, I want to again thank you very sincerely for your valuable help and attention at all times." "I must hasten to inform you that I have passed M . A . in Education with equivalent Second-Class Honours, for which very pleasing result I have to thank your excellent coaching system." "I wish to thank you for the great help which I obtained from your clear Notes on Greek History, A r t and Literature sent to me. In the "Terms" Examination I gained 60 per cent., and in Degree 54 per cent.—I consider these marks due to your clearly set out Notes and to the way in which your College allots and corrects work from month to month, making reading necessary during the whole year. Following your instructions I have been able to complete my B . A . Degree with a minimum of worry and strain. I can sincerely recommend your Courses to any student." "Last year I took a Course from you in Latin II. for B . A . I am glad to say I was successful in this, and have now completed my degree. Thank you for the efficient help you have given me." "I have been successful in gaining my Honours in History with the help of your College." II l l l t l l l l l l MM MIMII I I III l l l l l l l Mil l l l l l l IIIMtltIM I III Mill IIIIIMIMII IIIIIIIIIMIIIIIltllllllllllllllMNI Page 35 Increase of Grade of Salary attaching to Position J ^ U R I N G the past year the question of the promotion of teachers in schools which have gone up in grade has been causing some anxiety and considerable discussion among members. Below is a precis of the legal opinion on the question. Subsection 13 of Section 2 of the Education Amendment Act, 1932-33, provides that i f at any time the grade of salary attached to the position of any teacher in a school is raised, the teacher occupying that position shall not be entitled to claim an increase of salary in respect of his position unless the Board and the Senior Inspector having regard to the interests of the school and the claims of other teachers decide that he shall be retained in such position. There is no difficulty as to the application of the subsection in the case of the headteacher, nor to limit its application to the case of headteachers, nor again, to its application in the case in which an increase of pimils does not involve the appointment of an additional assistant. When the number of teachers is increased and an additional teacher has to be appointed in general the additional teacher is the Junior Assistant. The first question the Board is entitled to consider is whether the existing first Assistant is to be retained. If so the new teacher will be the Junior Assistant of the lowest grade. If, however, the Board and the Senior Inspector decide the first assistant is not to be retained the subsection requires that he be transferred and an appointment of another teacher is made to the first assistant position. If the Board has decided all other assistant teachers are to be retained in their respective positions an additional Junior Assistant is appointed. A t present the prima facie application of the subsection is to leave the existing teacher to look elsewhere for an increase of salary unless the Board and the Senior Inspector having regard to the interests of the school and the claims of other teachers decide that the teacher shall be retained in that position. A n y complaint which a teacher may have against the manner in which the subsection is being put into operation can be only a complaint as to the manner in which the discretion of the Board and the Senior Inspector is being exercised. Page 36 The Wonder Bean that makes the Perfect Food Drink Some 250 years ago, voyagers from Peru brought back the finest Cacao Beans seen in Europe. They also brought back many far fetched stories about the properties of these wonderful beans. It was claimed for these Cacao Beans that they were immense developers of strength and that they also prolonged life. As a result, many people paid fabulous sums in order to obtain these mysterious beans from an equally mysterious land. Fantastic as such stories were, the claims of these early voyagers that the Cacao Bean was a builder of strength had a definite foundation in fact. But these people did not know how to treat the wonder bean in order to obtain from it all of the nourishment that we now get from the regular drinking of cocoa. It should be realised, however, that to-day there are many grades of Cocoa. For over 100 years Cadbury's have been the world's leading manufacturers of highest quality cocoa. And in the traditional English style, Cadbjry's continue to follow their policy of seeing that the Cocoa which leaves their model Factory is as perfectly made as it can be. Careful roasting and grinding of the bean bring out the rich chocolaty flavour which the regular users of Bournville Cocoa have come to know so well. Nothing is left to chance. Every step of the process is carefully watched and examined so that cocoa of uniform quality and flavour fills the familiar Bournville tin. Many teachers are interested in introducing a little variety into their lessons and for the benefit of these, Cadburys have prepared a series of four lessons on Cocoa. These are entirely free from advertising matter and will be sent free on application to Messrs. Cadbury, Fry, Hudson Ltd., Dunedin. N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1938 ^•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiniitiiiniiHIilininniHIiliinHiiiiiiliiliHiiiniHIhliMhiHUtiiHihiiinilililliiliiii, TEACHER'S WANTED C O L U M N IMPORTANT! Cash Advertisements will be accepted from Institute Members desirous of disposing of or exchanging textbooks of study or other articles. Rates Her Insertion: lii nurds 1/-, up to 30 words 2/ti, 5/- per inch. I Advice has been received that, owing to increasing = cost of paper and printing, the price of English = educational books of every kind has been advanced I as from January 1st. CLOSES 20th OF MONTH. 1 We have a limited stock of many hundreds of titles I of Supplementary Readers and Library Books. Please : write for catalogues and place your order now, be| fore new stocks arrive. WANTED—Education I and Sociology Books. FOR SALE—Political Science and Psychology Books. Headmaster, Mangamaunu, Marlborough. W A N T E D TO BUY—Text Books, Economics Ha, History III. Headmaster, Gordonton, Waikato. FOR SALE—Williamson's British Expansion; also books suitable for Reading Test. Reply "Varsity," C/o "National Education." I " T h e I I | M a s t e r y of T a b l e s " Ten thousand copies in use in New Zealand schools. Order your requirements now. Pupils' copies 6d.; 5/6 per dozen. Teachers' edition, 8d. each. A. H . R E E D , 1 33 Jetty Street, | DUNEDIN. *W III III I MM 1 182 Wakefield Street, WELLINGTON. 1 I 1111 I III! III! Ml MM lilt MM II I I II I III III till till I I I I l*" M.A. EDUCATION—Books wanted. Send list and prices to "Student," C/o. "National Education." EXCHANGE—Grade II Male Assistant, Auckland Suburb, would consider Exchange Positions with Grade III Headmaster in North Island. Write to "A. Change," G.P.O., Auckland. JKIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIMIMIIIIIItllllllllllltllllllinilllllllllllllllllHIMIIKIIIIIIKIIl jj PEOPLE'S 5 = PALACE. T H E SALVATION ARMY. ~ M A N C H E S T E R ST., CHRISTCHURCH. 8/- per day; 45/- per week. BRIGADIER T. BUTTIMORE, Manager. in iiiitiiiiini iMiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiniiiiiimi ^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiittiniiiiiiiiiiiii | a iiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiitiiiniiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiitiMiiiiiiiiiii- JUST | I I ! I | I { in? f J l m PUBLISHED! BOOKLET OF ESSAY MATERIAL Reduces blackboard work and correcting. Demonstrates form, interest-value, thought content. A graduated scheme for a year, in loose sheets ready for use by pupils. A boon to the busy teacher. Teacher's copy i n booklet form 2/10 posted or send now for Free Synopsis. COULLS, SOMERVILLE, WILKIE, Publishers, Christchurch. iiniiii i iiiiiiiiiiinii m i " iiiiiii'imiiiiiiiiii i j j j j j IIIIIIIIIIIII. i i i m i i t 11 i i i m i i n i h u h i i i i m i 11 i n i i t i i n i i i m i ••• it i i r u t i n t i n m i i n n . ^tiiiiiiiiiinnitHiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniHiiHiiiinniiiniiHiiiiiiiiuniiiniiiniiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiHiiniiH it, H E A D M A S T E R S ! ! I FOR: Increased Mechanical Accuracy i n 1 Number. 1 FOR: Efficiency of 95% in Tables. I FOR: Labour saving benefits to staff and i pupils. { FOR: Happier and better arithmetic. | I •"" " T H EM A S T E R Y O F T A B L E S " I A Specialist i n Speech-Training j I 1 I I (3rd Edition). PRICE: 6d. 5/6 per doz. to schools. Teacher's (with explanations), 8d. Obtainable at all Shops and Book Stores, i •••••••MiieiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiniiniiniiHii NATIONAL E D U C A T I O N , February 1, mini 1938 iiiiiiiiinniiiiiiiiiiiniiiuiiiin£ | | i | I I I resident in or near Wellington, is required to teach a backward paralytic (aphasia). The boy is aged 19, and it is preferred that he should attend at the home of the coach for about two hours daily. Transport to and from the teacher's home will be provided for the boy. Male preferred. = f i 1 i j Apply to SPECIALIST, Box 466, Wellington, C . l . ^IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIMIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllMIIII^ Page 37 The N e w N . Z . E . I . C l assroom Booklets Since the booklets were advertised in the December "National Education," a change of form has been decided upon. Six booklets are being published, one for each standard. Each booklet will contain exercises and tests in Formal English, Comprehension and Arithmetic for one class only. For FREE COPIES use this form. A free specimen copy of each booklet will be supplied to every financial member who makes application on the following form. A free copy of the Geography Teaching Notes—which are not designed for use by the class—will also be given to those applying. (Tear out and post to Editor, Booklets, Box 466, Wellington, C l . ) If you have already sent in the Order Form from the December issue of "National Education," do not apply again. Please supply specimen copies of the following booklets:— Standard I Standard IV Standard II Form I Standard III Form II Geography Teaching Notes (Make a X against the items you require.) Name (Block Letters) (Financial Member N . Z . E . I . ) School . . Address T H E EDITOR, Booklets, P.O. Box 466, Wellington, C l . FOR CLASSROOM COPIES Please supply the following copies of classroom booklets:— No. of Copies Use this Form Standard I. (Formal English, Comprehension and Arithmetic) Standard II. Standard III. Standard IV. Form I. Form II. Geography Teaching Notes .. .. .. PRICES— To Members: 4d. each, 3/6 per dozen. Geography Notes, 4d. each. To Non-Members, 6d. each, 5/- per dozen. Geography Notes, 6d. each. CASH MUST ACCOMPANY ORDER. v —' Name and full address (block letters) Even To-morrow m a y be too Late! before Christmas a young man returned from his JUSThoneymoon and was reminded by an A.M.P. representative of his oft-expressed intention to become a member of the A.M.P., and to start building up his assets. The young man, full of joy of life, believing himself possessed of the Sun, Moon and Stars, would not listen. "In the New Year," he said. "In the New Year you can come again." On the first day of the New Year there was a great Cricket Match and the young man, returning from it, fell from a train and was killed. The reader will guess the ending to the story. The bride—exactly! Not a penny did he leave her! Nothing but bills for furniture and a month's rent! What a difference if he had hearkened to the A.M.P. man! The bride might have had £2,000 for use while she re-adjusted herself to life. And you, reader? Have you protected YOUR W I F E against all the risks she runs on your account ? Give yourself and dependents its protection—TO T H E LIMIT. Send to-day for an A.M.P. adviser. Do it before the evening closes. Even to-morrow may be too late. THE LARGEST MUTUAL LIFE OFFICE IN THE EMPIRE Established 1849. (Incorporated in Australia) Head Office for New Zealand: Customhouse Quay, Wellington. W. T . IKIN, Manager. ASSURE WITH AsHuratirf OJfftre of Nnu £ealanfo Htfc. THROUGH T H E EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTE GROUP ASSURANCE SCHEME NEW 'Be Wise—Dominionise Head Office: Z E A L A N D I N S U R A N C E BLDG., cnr. Featherston & Johnston Sts. WELLINGTON, C l . Miss Kathleen Moore, who is in charge of the Women's Division of the Dominion Life Office, will supply all particulars with pleasure. Write to her: Box 1182, Wellington. Hastings Branch G E N E R A L meeting was held in the Passadena Tea Roms on Friday evening, December 3. Mr. E . Riley, president, being in the chair. There was quite a god attendance. Correspondence from Head Office was received in connection with branch activities, and it was agreed that M r . E . Neilsen, branch secretary, should attend a conference of branch secretaries at Palmerston North in the near future. It was also agreed that the membership fee for the teachers' library which is to be housed in N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1988 Napier should be 2/6 to be paid from the local institute funds. Mr. Ngata, an assistant master from Te Aute College, was present by invitation, and gave a most interesting and informative talk on the pronunciation of Maori words. He stressed the value of sounding the vowels correctly, and mentioned that the spelling of Maori words was phonetic. At the conclusion of his talk several present asked for the correct pronunciataion of various place names that are used frequently in our schools. Page 39 New Zealand Educational Institute Directory Executive, 1937-38 President—Mr. R. McGlashen, Te Awa School, Napier. Vice-Presidents—Mr. P. L . Combs, M.A., Training College, Wellington; Mr. T. Kane, M.A., D.H. School, Foxton. Treasurer—Mr. 0. A. Banner, Kelburn School Wellington. Non-Official Members— Mr. C. Boswell, D.H.S., Kawa Kawa. Mr. J . Barnett, School, Johnsonville, Wellington. Mr. D. Forsyth, School, Port Chalmers. Mr. F . A . Garry, Mt. Roskill School, Auckland. Mr. G. F . Griffiths, Middle School, Invercargill. Miss M. E . Magill, Dip. Soc. Sc., Tawa Flat School, Wellington. Mr. Wm. Martin, Brooklyn School, Wellington. Miss J . G. Park, Haughton Valley School, Wellington. Mr. M. Riske, M.A., West School, Petone. Miss K. B. Turner, M.A., Normal School, Christchurch. StaffActing Secretary—Mr. D. C. Pryor. Secretary, also Group Assurance Secretary— G. R. Ashbridge, A.C.I.S., A.A.A., A.A.I.S., Chartered Secretary (Eng.). On leave. Assistant-Secretary and Editor of "National Education"— E . S. Andrews. Registered Office—Third Floor, "Evening Post" Chambers, Willis Street, Wellington. Postal Address: Box 466, Wellington. Telegraphic Address: "Edistute, Wellington." Telephone: 40-551. All correspondence on Institute business should be addressed to the Secretary, Box 466, Wellington; correspondence, MSS and advertisements for "National Education," to the Editor, "National Education," Box 466, Wellington. Branch Secretaries. N. Wairoa Mr. C. H. McKenzie, School, Aropohue Native Schools Branch Mr. M. R. Buchan Native School, Kaikohe. Auckland . . Mr. J . Armstrong, Box 29, Wellesley St. P.O. Waikato Mr. A. L. Baker, School, Frankton Thames Mr. G. McKinley, South School, Thames Matamata . . . . Mr. N. W. Gilling, Matamata D.H. School Western Bay of Plenty Mr. A. Breward D.H.S., Tauranga. Rotorua Mr. L . H . Joblin, Primarp School, Rotorua Opotiki . . Mr. P. A . Eaton, District High School, Opotiki Waiapu Mr. H . Black, Te Araroa, East Coast North Taranaki Mr. M. J . Smith, Fitzroy School, N.P. South Taranaki . . Mr. G. H . Percy, Main School, Hawera Egmont . . Mr. C. F . Hawkes, Oaonui School, Opunake Wanganui Mr. W. P. Williams, Tawhero School, Wanjranui. Rangitikei Mr. P. H. Hall. Marton. D.H.S Taihape Mr. R. B. Schulze, Taihape D.H.S. Ruapehu Mr. S. Sims, School, Raetihi Manawatu Mr. K. B. Dawkins, West End School, P.N. Horowhenua Mr. Howard J . Jones. Levin n.H.S. Wellington Miss J . W. Combs, Lyall Bay School, Wellington. Hutt Valley Mr. B. N. Bragg, Eastern Hutt School, Lower Hutt. Ms-st.ert.on Mr. J . A. Kennedy, Central School Page 40 Pahiatua-Bush District Mr. W. J. Henderson, D.H.S. Eketahuna. Southern Hawke's Bay Mr. C. J . Bishop, School, Woodville. Central Hawke's Bay . . . . Mr. T. Taylor, School, Takapau Napier . . . Mr. R. McMurray, Nelson Park School, Napk. Hastings Mr. E . Neilsen, School, Havelock Nth. Wairoa Mr. G. A . Read. D.H.S., Wairoa Poverty Bay, Mr. J. E . Shimmin, Central School, Gisborne Marlborough . . . Mr. J . E . Willett, School, Dillon's Point, Blenheim. Nelson Mr. W. S. Bestic, Hampden St. School Motueka . . . . Miss P. M. von Tunzelman, School, Motueka Buller Mr. R. Harden, Russell Street, Westport Grey . . . . Mr. R. K. Holmes, Kaiata School. Greymouth Westland Mr. G. L. Harper, D.H.S., Hokitika Ashley Mr. A. R. Chambers, West Eyreton School Rangiora. North Canterbury Mr J . Bowden, Fendalton School Christchurch. Mid-Canterbury Mr. R. A. Young, Borough School, Ashburton. South Canterbury . . Mr. H . Scott, Waimataitai School, Timaru. Waimate Mr. J . L . Menzies, Waimate School Otatro . . . . Mr. W. F. Abel. Musselburgh School. Dunedin South Otago Mr. A . E . Patterson, School, Balclutha Southland Mr. G. F. Griffiths, Middle School, Invercargill Secretaries are requested to notify any changes or additional information affecting the above Directory. Teachers' Representatives. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Superannuation Board. F . A. Garry, Mt. Roskill School, Auckland. T. Kane, M.A., D.H. School, Foxton. J. G. Polscn, M.A., Training College, Christchurch. W. F . Abel, Musselburgh School, Dunedin. The Superannuation Board meets in February, May, August, November. Next meeting, Tuesday, 15th February, 1938. N.Z. Men Teachers' Guild. President: Mr. D. Hepburn, Oxford D.H. School. Secretary: Mr. F . R. Price, Waimataitai School, Timaru. Treasurer: Mr. D. A . Scott, Waimataitai School, Timaru. N.Z. Women Teachers' Association. President: Miss F . J . Taylor, Kowhai Intermediate School, Auckland. Secretary: Mrs. M. C. Chisholm, Kowhai Intermediate School, Auckland. Treasurer: Miss M. E . Schwebe, Shirley School, Christchurch. Education Board Meetings. Auckland—First and Third Wednesday in month. Taranaki—Third Wednesday in month. Wanganui—Third Wednesday in month (in Dec. 2nd Wed) Hawke's Bay—Third Friday in month. Wellington—Third Wednesday in month (in Jan. usually 4th Wednesday). Nelson—third Monday in month. Canterbury—Third Wednesday in month (December. 1 week earlier). Otago—Third Wednesday and Thursday in month. Southland—Fourth Friday in month N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N , February 1, 1938