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'•The meiital test will eventually take its proper place ill education, but just now we have got the mental test fever as though we had all got the measles, said Mr B. N. T. Blake, addressing an audience under the auspices of the W.E.A. at Wellington on Wednesday night. "The mental test needs to be handled with care. We had an adjustment room, with the idea of determining the needs of certain children. A boy might have spent his early .years on a farm, it was thought, and he might need special assistance. Then there was the case of the boy whose parents might have been six mouths in one place, and six months in another, and who had been unable to study steadily. When the room was put in, we thought we should have no difficulty in filling it, But we found the surprising position that there was difficulty in finding a single child who needed 'adjusting' in an upward - direction. What we did find was a large number of children who needed adjusting downwards. By pursuit of. the ideal extent of advancement, by the wprk of an earnest teacher, sometimes by the overearnest work of the child itself, these children had reached the point of strain, and a slight downward adjustment 'was necessary in order that the child'* educational life- might be T "ft "RT Z GIN BOUTS RHEUMATISM. KEEPS you well. Banish BheumaUsm and Gout by the ■judicious use of J.D.K.Z.—the pure-pot-«tni Malt Gin. Cleanses the system, tones up the Nerves. You'll know it bv-the White Heart Label on the Square Bottle. All hotels and bottle stores. —1

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19260308.2.29.2

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume LXII, Issue 18634, 8 March 1926, Page 5

Word Count
271

Page 5 Advertisements Column 2 Press, Volume LXII, Issue 18634, 8 March 1926, Page 5

Page 5 Advertisements Column 2 Press, Volume LXII, Issue 18634, 8 March 1926, Page 5