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SCHOOL LEAVING AGE

RAISED TO 15 YEARS IN NEW SOUTH WALES. The Youth Welfare Bill, the primary object of which is to raise the school leaving age from 14 to 15 years, has passed the Legislative Assembly of New South Wales. The bill will take effect on January Ist., 1941. The school leaving age is advanced to 15 years in two years and through three stages. For 1941 the age is 14 years and four months, for 1942 14 years and eight months, and 1943 and subsequent years, the age is 15 years. Children who reach the age of 14 years before January Ist., 1941, will be exempt from the requirements of the Bill. The Bill also empowers the Minister to establish an advisory committee on youth welfare. The Minister for Education, Mr. Drummond, said that despite such facilities as bursaries and technical education, if this legislation was not passed, 22,500 boys and girls between 14 and 15, years of age would leave school in ”1941. In other words, he added, the voluntary system of education beyond 14 years, despite ail the advantages of free tuition, had proved defective as a means of re-

taining children beyond the primary stage. : I; This increase in the leaving age is described by a leading headmaster as “the greatest educational reform of the decade.” He said, “Thfs will enable many boys who had previously been turned out into ‘dead-end’ jobs to obtain another year’s- schooling, at a stage in their development when it will have a' very great value. They will not be sufficiently old to have been given the necessary background of knowledge and interest in world affairs to beepme citizens capable of sound and independent judgments, but it can at least be made a move towards direct education for citizenship.”

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GRA19410109.2.96

Bibliographic details

Grey River Argus, 9 January 1941, Page 10

Word Count
299

SCHOOL LEAVING AGE Grey River Argus, 9 January 1941, Page 10

SCHOOL LEAVING AGE Grey River Argus, 9 January 1941, Page 10

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