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EDUCATIONAL NOTES.

. — ♦ TEACHING PROFESSION. (By- “Dominie.”) Some 500 teachers from all parts of Great Britain, and also from some of the dominions, are attending the City of London Vacation Course, now in session, writes a London correspondent under date August 3. New Zealand is represented by Miss Jessie MacArthur. The main object of the course is to bring the teacher -into touch with the latest developments in educational theory and practice and closer contact with world activities. In addition to these 500 British teachers, 20Q from overseas who are visiting Europe under the auspices of the Overseas Education League attended the Guildhall this week at the invitation of the corporation and city. Viscount Burnham, the president of the course, occupied the chair. Sir Robert Blair (education officer of the London County Council) said that it seemed to him that the business of teachers and of schools was to prepare the rising generation for the successful (control of the destinies -of this country. In that great task the most potent factor was, of course, the home. After the home some people said the street came next. His view was that the school, and not the street, came next. If teachers were called to the higher office of preparing the next generation for successful control, then clearly the teaching profession was one of the most powerful social forces in the civilisation of this and other countries.

Outlining some of the features that were necessary to the growth of a great and an efficient teaching staff, Sir Robert pointed out, first, that the mind of the teacher should be free. He did not mean by that that teachers wanted freedom —because he had heard freedom spoken of as the removal of obstacles —but the freedom of the teacher’s mental condition; that unless the teacher felt he was mentally free progress was greatly hampered. His next point was the honesty cf promotion. He might have used the word “fairness," but he deliberately chose “honesty." because anyone whether servant or member of the authority, who, by using influence on behalf of one member of the staff as against the merit of another, was robbing that member of what was his due, and also robbing the community of what it deserved. Another point he urged was that of continuing their education,' for if they wished to keep pace with the changes ahead they must he fresh, and keep up their skill. The broadening of the mind was also a matter of importance, and in this connection the provision of a library was a necessity for a large tcacliing staff. Tlie London County Council had a library of 20,000 volumes, and during the last 2 months 50,000 volumes had been issued to teachers at no cost to themselves.

Our Heritage.

Mr 11. A. L. Fisher, M.P. (Principal Director of Studies) delivered the first of a series of studies, as subject being "Our Heritage." It had long been Ills dew, he said, that if elementary education' was to he lifted upou a high tableland of efficiency, many more opportunities must be afforded to teachers to refrcsli and extend their knowledge than had hitherto been available. The question was, what was the heritage which it was, tlie office of the teacher to communicate to the young. They had got not only to transmit the mechanism of knowledge, but to moke it desirable and attractive. That hei’itage had a long history and descended from the unseen origins of time. Even when teaching the English language, how many obligations had to be recognised to other tongues and to civilisation very different from our own. The English language was one of the features of our heritage, for it was now by far the most important living speech In tlie world. Think of the vast span of its influence, and then to reflect upon our great responsibilities in connection with the English language. From those reflections, was it a far cry to consider the special responsibilities of the British teacher in regard to the preservation of good English throughout the world? No small part of tlie great duty of preserving our heritage of English speech, and of handing it on pure and intact to the rising generation, devolved upon those who were called upon to teach in the schools. Legacies from the Past.

Among legacies from the past was a certain national character. As a people wc were good-natured, and easy-going, able, and industrious under pressure, tenacious of individual right, passionately fond of sport. The love of sport ran all through our history, and from Great Britain it had been carried throughout tlie Empire. Industrialism was also a part of our heritage for weal or woe; and though it meant, but not necessarily, the big town,it sharpened the wits and widened the experience, hut it brought with its own form of barbarism, which it was the office of education to correct. Bad houses and bad papers went together. Too many newspapers, too many cinemas, too many distractions of the thoroughfare and the market place frittered away the soul. Against the growth of the slum mind, restless, precocious, superficial, empty of purpose, incapable of concentration, the school waged a gallant and essential battle. The question was oftejr asked whether industrialism had substantially changed the national character. All the fears of racial degeneracy, all the anticipation of the failure of our townbred population to stand the test when tlie day of trial came, had been falsified in tlie event. In our long national epic of courage and duty there was no more splendid page than that upon which were inscribed its latest trial, and to communicate some part of its lustre to succeeding generations would, he trusted, be reckoned among the functions which it was the office of tlie British teacher to perform.

COST OF EDUCATION. Sir Donald Maclean, M.P., says that in the current year, from Ihc public Exchequer and from Ihc ratepayers, there is bring raised nothing short of £87,000,000 in Hie cause of education in Great Britain. That is about £?.5,000.000 more Ilian war. spent on I lie Army and £2 4.000,000 more Ulan was spent on the Navy,

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WT19231006.2.85.6

Bibliographic details

Waikato Times, Volume 96, Issue 15359, 6 October 1923, Page 11 (Supplement)

Word Count
1,027

EDUCATIONAL NOTES. Waikato Times, Volume 96, Issue 15359, 6 October 1923, Page 11 (Supplement)

EDUCATIONAL NOTES. Waikato Times, Volume 96, Issue 15359, 6 October 1923, Page 11 (Supplement)

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