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RESEARCH WORK.

SCOPE OF EDUCATION

DR. BEEBY'S DEFINITE PLAN. VISIT TO AUSTRALIA. The opinion that there is definite scope for educational research work in New Zealand, and that it has every prospect of being valuable, has been formed by Dr. C. E. Beeby, who was recently appointed executive officer of the New Zealand Council of Educational Research, after a visit to Australia for the specific purpose of seeing how the work was conducted in the Comnionwealtfal Dr. Beeby, on his return to Christchurch, informed a "Times" representative that he had formed definite plans as to how the work should be organised in the Dominion, and hopes to have them in operation about the end of the year. He said, however, that the work in New Zealand would not be modelled on the Australian lines, because of the different conditions in the two countries. The council would collect material from home and abroad and act as a kind of clearing-house for ideas and information about education. Such work was being done in Australia, and it was needed in New Zealand, even though the organisation could not be modelled on similar lines. Dr. Beeby explained that.although he would be going to Wellington ,about the end of the year, the central organisation would not .be concentrated on Wellington alone. "The local educational institutes and interests, which already exist, will be organised and linked up throughout New Zealand, and the central organisation will be a sort of focal point for them," he said. "That is really the only excuse for such a large sum of money being spent on research in New Zealand." The Australian Council of Educational Research, which had its centre in Melbourne, and branches throughout the country, had been doing for five years successful work of a similar nature to, what it was now intended to do in New Zealand, said Dr. Beeby. He had studied the organisation of the council, the progress it had made, and its relationship to other educational bodies; and there was no doubt that it was gaining increasing influence in Australian education. Australian educationists were tending to turn to it not only for information about educational matters, but also for the solution of specific problems in the Commonwealth.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19340903.2.130

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume LXV, Issue 208, 3 September 1934, Page 9

Word Count
372

RESEARCH WORK. Auckland Star, Volume LXV, Issue 208, 3 September 1934, Page 9

RESEARCH WORK. Auckland Star, Volume LXV, Issue 208, 3 September 1934, Page 9