Website updates are scheduled for Tuesday September 10th from 8:30am to 12:30pm. While this is happening, the site will look a little different and some features may be unavailable.
×
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

A BETTER SYSTEM

FOR AGRICULTURAL INSTRUCTION . ' VIEWS OF EDUCATIONISTS. Agricultural education was a subject discussed at some length at to-day's meeting of the Council of Education, and a motion urging the Department to systematise instruction was carried. The chairman (Mr. J. Caughley) said he thought there should be at least one inspector of Agriculture for .the purpose of systematizing instruction. What. he wanted to know was if. 'Education Boards would object to having all instructors being put under the direct supervision of the inspector. Systems of instruction at present differed very widely. He thought that the boards should be circularised in order to ascertain their views. The question was a very big one, said Mr. W. A. Banks (Rangiora), who added that his opinion was that there should be something done towards setting up a committee of experts to go into the details of the matter. Mr. E. C, Banks (Auckland) said that there was at present no step from the primary schools to the universities. He thought that the' Ruakura and Weraroa farms should be established agricultural high schools, and should be under the control of the Education Department, not the Agricultural Department. What they wanted the Department .to do was to set up a commission to consider the matter, and ensure that there should be students coming forward for the professors to teach. It was felt that there should be an inspector in charge of the whole instruction, but that, the teachers should be under the control of the hoards. Mr. F. Milner (Waitakei High School) said that when the boys at his school finished their agricultural course they found great difficulty in going on to the universities. It would be found, that the agricultural course in the secondary schools was little more than an academic course. Lack of puolic support for the rural course, said Mi-. F. 11. Bakewell (Dunedin) was due to the fact that the course involved an abandonment of matriculation honours. A warning against systcmatising on too strict a scale was issued by Dr. E. Mareden (Assistant Director of Education). What was really wanted was a ruralised course in secondary schools as a whole. There was no use hiding the fact that the average pupils taking the agricultural course were the "duds'." The intelligence test had made the discovery that tho average agricultural pupils were at least a year and a half behind other pupils as far as mental abilities went". Mr. W. W. Bird (Wellington) said that tho difficulty had been to obtain teachers to teach agricultural science. _ The chairman said he thought it was time they sot post-primary courses in proper order, to suit the cultural needs of the community, and entrance to the university should begin where that course left off.. H« was hoping that they would get some solution of the accrediting eystem. A rural course carried out in a proper way. with a necessary amount of instruction in subjects sucii as English, should get the same credit as any other course. ' . j After some 'further discussion the fol- j lowing motion was carried :— I "That the Department bo urged to systematise agricultural instruction from the primary schools to the university, and that the. curricula in post-primary schools he broadened in this direction, and the matriculation examinations he amended accordingly;" i( .The following motion was also carried : "That the Government Experimental Farms, and the' Lincoln Agricultural College should be turned, into Agricultural High Schools under the control at least as far as the teaching is concerned of the Minister of Education."

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19240619.2.69

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CVII, Issue 144, 19 June 1924, Page 6

Word Count
591

A BETTER SYSTEM Evening Post, Volume CVII, Issue 144, 19 June 1924, Page 6

A BETTER SYSTEM Evening Post, Volume CVII, Issue 144, 19 June 1924, Page 6