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1911. NE W ZBA LAN I>.
EDUCATION: SECONDARY EDUCATION. [In continuation of E.-6, 1910.]
Presented to both Houses of the General Assembly by Command of His Excellency.
CONTENTS. Pa 8 e I Page 1. Extract from the Thirty-fourth Annual Report of 3. Reports of Governing Bodies -continued. the Minister of Education. (E.-l) .. 2 Thames High School .. .. 28 New Plymouth High School .. .. 28 2. Detailed tables,— Wanganui Girls' College.. .. .. 30 Roll and Fees of Secondary Schools .. 13 Wanganui Collegiate School .. ..30 Years of Attendance of Pupils .. .. 14 Palmerston North Higli School .. .. 31 Staff and Salarios of Secondary Sohools .. LS Wellington Bojs'and Girls' College .. 33 Holders of Scholarships and Free Places .. 16 Gisborne High School .. .. .. 34 Net Income from Endowments, and Cost Napier High School .. .. .. 36 per Head of Roll 17 I Dannevirke High School 38 Income of Secondary Schools .. ..18 Marlborough High School .. ..39 Expenditure of Secondary Schools .. 19 Nelson Boys'and Girls' Colleges .. ..40 School Commissioners' Accounts in oonnec- Greymouth High School 43 tiffn with Secondary Education.. .. -20 J fi _ _ „„ : Hokitika High School .. .. .. 43 Lower Departments .. .. .. 20 6 . „ , „ , , j Raneiora High School .. .. .: 43 List of Secondary Schools, incorporated or B 6 endowed .. .. .. .. 20 i Christchurch Boys' High School .. .. 45 District High School,— . Girls' High School .. ..40 Attendance, Staffs, &c. .. ..20 Christ's College Grammar School .. .. 48 Staff, Classification, &c, in Detail .. 21 Akaroa High School .. .. .49 Junior National Scholarships .. ..23 Ashburton High School .. .. ..50 Education Board Scholarships .. .. 23 > Timaru Boys' and Girls' High Schools .. 51 Waiuiate High School .. .. .. 52 3. Reports of Governing Bodies, including State- Waitaki Boys' and Girls' High Schools .. 53 ments of Accounts, — Otago Bojs' and Girls' High Schools . . 54 Whangarei High School .. .. .. 24 Gore High School .. .. .. 57 Auckland Boys' and Girls' Grammar School 25 Southland Boys' and Girls' High Sohools .. 59
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1. EXTRACT FROM THE THIRTY-FOURTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE .MINISTER OF EDUCATION.
Secondary Education. Number of Schools. The schools usually included in the list of secondary schools in this report which were open in 1910 were thirty-one in number, namely,— (a.) " Endowed secondary schools " within the meaning of section 89 of the Education Act, 1908, and included in the Eighth Schedule to the Act 26 (b.) Secondary schools within the meaning of the same section (89), but established by the Minister under section 94 ... ... ... 3 (c.) Other endowed secondary schools not coming within the definition of section 89 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 2 Total ... ... ... ... ... ... 31 Of the endowed secondary schools only twenty-two were in operation during the year. Of the other four —Akaroa, Greymouth, Hokitika, and Waimate —the last three have never been in operation, and the first existed as a small struggling high school for a few years only; but a permanent increase of population might lead to the establishment (or re-establishment) of one or more of them at any time. Meanwhile secondary education is carried on in the secondary departments of the district high schools established in each of these four centres, and to some extent these district high schools are assisted by funds derived from the endowments of the secondary schools. Roll and Attendance. The total number of pupils attending the thirty-one secondary schools in the last terms of 1909 and 1910 respectively was— , 1909. , 1910. Boys. Girls. Total. Boys. [Girl*. Total. Eoll (exclusive of lower departments) 2,797 1,870 4,667 2,844 2,062 4,906 Number in lower departments ... 114 75 189 178 92 270 Total 2,911 1,945 4,856 3,022 2,154 5,176 Number of boarders (included above) 566 140 706 614 141 755 The average number of pupils on the rolls of the secondary departments of district high schools in 1909 and 1910 respectively was — 1909. 1910. Boys ... ... ... ... ... ... 1,100 1,128 Girls ... ... ... ... ... ... 1,063 1,061 Total ... ... ... ... 2,163 2,189 If, instead of taking the average roll throughout the year, we take the roll at the end of the year, as was done in the case of the secondary schools above, we find the number in the secondary departments of district high schools to be as follows :— 1909. 1910. Boys ... ... ... ... ... ... 944 954 Girls ... ... ... ... .. ... 947 962 Total ... ... ... ... 1,891 1,916 The average attendance at the secondary schools for 1910 was 5,012. It will be evident from a comparison of these figures that in the case of district high schools there was a distinct falling-off in the roll numbers towards
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the end of the year, both in the case of the figures for 1909 and in those for 1910. The same falling-off is apparent in the case of secondary schools, though not to so marked an extent. It was more noticeable in the case of boys than in that of girls, and is no doubt due to the large number of scholars, especially boys, who leave school before the close of the year to enter some employment. In addition to those in secondary schools and in the secondary departments of district high schools there should properly be included in the number of pupils under secondary instruction in the Dominion (a) the pupils attending certain day classes in connection with technical schools, which in this regard may be called technical high schools; and (b) the pupils in various institutions for the secondary education of Maori boys and girls. The number of pupils on the rolls of the day technical schools during the year was 1,253, made up as follows : — 1909. 1910. Boys ... ... ... ... ... 345 545 Girls .. ... ... ... ... 501 708 Total ... ... ... 846 1,253 The following was the average roll of pupils in the secondary school for Maoris (all of whom were boarders) for the years 1909 and 1910 : — 1909. 1910. Boys ... ... ... ... ... 169 IS2 Girls ... ... ... ... . 191 196 Total ... ... ... 360 378 If we summarize all these figures, substituting in the case of the secondary schools the average roll for the roll at the end of the year, and excluding pupils in the lower departments of the secondary schools, we find that, as nearly as can be estimated, there were 8,988 pupils receiving some form or other of secondary education during the year 1910. 190' J. 1910. Secondary schools ... ... ... ... i, 834 o, 168 District high schools ... ... ... ... 2,163 2,189 Day technical schools ... ... ... 846 1,253 Maori secondary schools ... ... ... 360 378 Total ... ... ... 8,203 8,988It will therefore be seen that there has been an increase in all the four groups of schools giving secondary instruction, particularly in the case of the day technical schools, the numbers being half as much again as those for the previous year. The population of New Zealand, including Maoris, but excluding the inhabitants of the Cook Islands, was, according to the 1911 census, 1,058,033, so that the proportion of persons receiving some form of day secondary instruction during the year 1910 was 85 per 10,000 of the population. In 1906 the corresponding proportion was 72-7 per '10,000, so there has been a steady development of secondary education in New Zealand during the past four years. It may be of interest to make a comparison in this respect between New Zealand and other countries. The following figures, so far as can be gathered from the reports, represent the position for the year 1909-10 : — United States ... ... ... • ■ 958 per 10,000 New Zealand ... ... ... ••• 850 „ 10,000 England and Wales ... ... ... ... 552 „ 10,000 Scotland ... ... ... ... ... 42-4 „ 10,000 Further information in regard to the roll and attendance at secondary schools will be found in Tables Xl and K2, and of district high schools in Tables LI and L 2.
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Free Secondary Education. Under the free-place regulations free places are divided into two classes, junior and senior, both being tenable at secondary schools and district high schools. Boys and girls who qualify for Junior Education Board Scholarships, whether they obtain scholarships or not, are entitled to Junior Free Places, and those who pass the special examinations for free places are also participants in the privilege. Junior Free Places may, again, be obtained by those who qualify for a certificate of proficiency—that is, essentially, pupils who pass with credit the Sixth Standard of the public-school syllabus; but on this qualification the age of the candidate must not exceed fifteen years. Generally speaking, Junior Free Places are tenable for two years, with a possible extension to three years without examination, or, in the case of district high schools, to the age of seventeen. A Senior Free Place is tenable by any pupil who has passed the Civil Service Junior Examination or the Intermediate Examination, the latter of which is regarded as the special examination for Senior Free Places. Both these examinations are held simultaneously, and differ mainly in the fact that in the Intermediate Examination different papers are set in certain subjects to meet the requirements of non-competitive candidates. The passing of the Matriculation Examination is also regarded as a qualification for a Senior Free Place. But in a largely increasing number of cases Senior Free Places may now be obtained without the necessity of having recourse to an external examination. By a recent amendment in the regulations, the Minister has been empowered to award Senior Free Places to eligible scholars who have satisfactorily completed a two-years course in a secondary school or district high school in accordance with the specified conditions, and are recommended by the Principal of the secondary school attended, or, in the case of a district high school, by an Inspector of the district, such recommendation being subject to the concurrence of the Inspector-General of Schools. Senior Free Places are tenable up to the age of nineteen. For free places granted in secondary schools in accordance with regulations grants are payable on a sliding scale, in which the capitation payments vary according to the income of the school from public endowments, and are calculated in such a way as to secure to the school for each free pupil under instruction an annual income from public sources and from endowments taken together not less than £12 10s. per pupil, which is estimated to be sufficient to cover the necessary expenditure. At the end of 1910 the secondary schools giving free tuition to duly qualified pupils, and receiving grants therefor under the Act, were twenty-eight. The total number of pupils on the roll of these twenty-eight schools, exclusive of pupils in the lower departments of the schools, was 4.906, and out of this total, 3,685, or 75 per cent., were given free places under the regulations. The total annual payment at the rate paid for the last term of the year would be approximately £40,698; the approximate average cost to the Treasury was therefore £11 os. lid. per free pupil,- as against £10 10s. 2d. for the previous year. In addition, free tuition was given to 170 others who were holders of scholarships or of exhibitions granted by these schools, or by endowed secondary schools not coming under the conditions for free places, making the total number of free places held at secondary schools 3,855, or 75 per cent, of the roll of all these schools. Further information in regard to the free places and scholarships held at secondary schools will be found in Table J4. Moreover, in reckoning the amount of free secondary education in the Dominion must be included the pupils in attendance at the secondary classes of district high schools, 1,918 in number, all but a comparatively small number of whom were free pupils, receiving free tuition at an average cost to the Government
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of £9 10s. 2d. per pupil. There should be added also those receiving free education in Maori schools, 134 in number, and the holders of certain free places in technical schools, numbering 1,144. There is thus an approximate total of 7,051 pupils receiving free secondary education, exclusive of those holders of free places in technical schools who were art students, or were evening students, or were taking courses which may be more approximately described as technical rather than as secondary. The following table gives a summary of the various secondary free places at the end of the year for which payment was made by Government:— Free Places in December, 1909 and 1910. , 1909. , , 1910. , (i.) Secondary schools— B°ye- Girls. Total. Boys. Girls. Total. (a.) Junior free pupils ... 1,326 1,004 2,330 1,468 1,193 2,661 (b.) Senior free pupils ... 571 394 965 578 446 1,024 Total ... ... 1,897 1,398 3,295 2,046 1,639 3,685 (ii.) District high schools ... 944 947 1,891 955 963 1,918 (iii.) Maori secondary schools .. 51 73 124 51 83 134 (iv.) Technical day-schools ... 345 501 846 505 639 1,144 >j jj g Grand total ... 3,237 2,919 6,156 3,557 3,324 6,881 In the above table (in the case of the secondary schools and district high schools) the roll at the end of the year has been taken; a fairer estimate of the number of persons receiving free secondary education in public institutions would be obtained by taking the average roll throughout the year and including in the total the holders of foundation and private scholarships or exhibitions who received free tuition not paid for by Government. We obtain thus the following approximate figures : — Ntimber receiving Free Secondary Education in 1910. Secondary schools ... ... ... ... ... ... 4,073 District high schools ... ... ... , ... ... ... 2,189 Technical day-schools ... ... ... ... ... ... 1,144 Maori secondary schools ... ... ... ... ... ... 134 Total ... ... ... ... ... 7,540 The corresponding number for 1909 may be estimated as 6,748, showing an increase for the year 1910 of 792 in the number in the Dominion who are receiving free secondary education. • Scholarships held at Secondary Schools and District High Schools. These scholarships are of four kinds, — (i.) Junior National Scholarships; (ii.) Education Board Scholarships; (iii.) Foundation or Governor's Scholarships, given by the governing bodies of secondary schools; (iv.) Private scholarships, endowed by private owners. (i.) Junior National Scholarships. —These scholarships are allotted to the several education districts practically on the basis of population, as in each district there is offered annually one scholarship for each 4,000 or part of 4,000 children in average yearly attendance. The scholarships are awarded by the Education Boards on the results of an examination conducted by the Education Department, and the Boards exercise a certain control over the holders, and pay over to them from time to time the amounts falling due. With the Junior National Scholarships are now incorporated the Junior Queen's Scholarships,
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which were established by the Victoria College Act, 1897, to enable pupils of public schools in the Victoria College University District to attend a secondary school as a stepping-stone to a course at Victoria College. Eight Junior Queen's Scholarships, of a total annual value of £197, were held during 1910, and of these the Victoria College Council has granted an extension of two for the year 1911; after the end of the current year the Queen's Scholarships will cease to exist. The following summary to Table XLI shows the number and value of the Junior National Scholarships current in the Dominion in December, 1910 : — Number of scholarships,— 80y5... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 75 Girls... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 37 Total ... 112 Number receiving boarding-allowance (included in the above total) ... 49 Number receiving travelling-allowance (similarly included) .. ... 3 Number held at secondary schools ... ... ... ... ... 94 Number held at district high schools ... ... ... ... ... 18 Total annual rate of payment as in December, 1910 ... £2,649 (ii.) Education Board Scholarships. —The scholarship funds of the Boards are provided by grants which, although not statutory, are of old standing, and amount to Is. 6d. per head of the average attendance. The conditions of the scholarships are determined by regulations approved in the case of each Board by the Minister of Education. For the award of the Junior Scholarships all the Boards now use the Junior National Scholarship Examination, and for their Senior Scholarships nearly all use the Civil Service Junior Examination; but the awards themselves and the subsequent control of the holders are entirely in the hands of the Boards. The number and value of the Board scholarships in the various districts are shown in Table KL2 of E.-6, the totals of which are for the whole of New Zealand :— Scholarships. At £40 per annum ... ... ... ... ... ... 100 At £35 per annum ... ... .. ... ... ... 9 At £30 per annum ... ... ... •• ... ... 41 Under £30 and not under £25 per annum "... ... ... 6 Under £25 and not under £20 per annum ... ... ... 16 Under £20 and not under £15 per annum ... ... ... 2 Under £15 and not under £10 per annum ... ... ... 192 Under £10 and not under £5 per annum ... ... ... 134 Under £5 per annum ... ... ... ... ... 63 Total... ... ... ... ... ... 563 Number of scholarships, — Boys 349 Girls ••■ 214 Total 563 Total expenditure of Boards on scholarships— £ In 1909 8,694 In 1910 9,232 As will be seen from the above summary, the value of the scholarships varies considerably. In five out of the thirteen education districts scholarships of the value of £40 are offered for competition, while in another the highest scholarship offered is of the value of £15. Further, five Boards do not give scholarships of a lower value than £10 per annum, whereas others offer scholarships of a value of £2, and even £1 ss. per annum.
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The most common period of tenure is two years, but in one district the scholarships are tenable for three years, and in four districts scholarships may, in deserving cases, be extended to three years if the funds of the Boards admit. By the terms of the Act every Education Board scholarship is tenable at a secondary school or its equivalent approved by the Board. With very few exceptions holders of Education Board scholarships are also holders of secondary free places. (iii.) Foundation (or Governors') Scholarships. —These are of two kinds, those offered by the Governors of secondary schools not granting free places under the Act, and those offered as additional scholarships by the Governors of schools providing free places. (iv.) Private Scholarships. —These are derived from funds provided by private donors at certain schools, by bequest or otherwise. The number of foundation and private scholarships in the last term of 1910 was 193. Of the holders, fifty-nine were also Government free pupils under the regulations. The total value of the scholarships in cash was £1,160 Gs. 6d. In addition, free tuition was given by the schools to holders of foundation and private scholarships to the value of £943 17s. 6d., the value of the Government free places already mentioned not being included in this amount. Staff. The staffing of the secondary schools was as follows :— , 1909. . , 1910. M. F. Total. M. P. Total. Eegular staff ... ... ... 131 93 224 140 107 247 Part-time teachers ... ... 44 33 77 48 31 79 The average number of pupils per teacher (excluding part-time teachers) was 21-7 in 1909 and 20-9 in 1910. The head teacher of a school at which district high school classes are held generally takes some part in the secondary instruction, and receives from the Government the sum of £30 in addition to his salary as head teacher of the primary school. In 1909 there were also 93 special assistants —namely, 43 men and 50 women. In 1910 there were 45 men and 50 women. Leaving out of consideration the head teachers of district high schools, the average number of pupils per teacher was 23-3 in 1909 and 230 in 1910. Salaries of Secondary Teachers. The total amount paid as salaries to the regular staffs of secondary schools as at the rates paid at the end of the year was £55,769, as against £51,681 at the end of 1909. Full particulars will be found in Table K3 of the Secondary Schools Report. As might be expected, the salaries paid vary considerably; the following summary shows the average salary paid to principals and assistants :— Salaries in Secondary Schools. , 1909. , 1910. . M. V. All. M. F. AH. £ £ £ £ £ £ Principals ... 474 361 437 490 368 450 Assistants ... 230 153 196 232 145 194 Whole staff ... 269 175 230 271 167 226 Note.—The salaries of part-time teachers are not taken into consideration in the above summary. In the secondary departments of district high schools salaries are uniform, in accordance with the schedule to the Act. The average salaries actually paid
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to assistants, exclusive of the sums paid to head teachers by way of extra salary, were, in December, 1909 and 1910, as follows : 1909. lyiO. £ s. d. £ s. d. Male assistants ... ... ... ... 198 2 L 195 9 9 Female assistants ... ... ... ... 154 10 0 159 2 1 All secondary assistants ... ... ... 174 13 2 176 14 2 (The Bcalo of salaries is the tame for men and women.) The total amount paid in salaries from receipts from Government for the secondary departments of district high schools, including the special payments to head teachers, was £18,240, as against £18,618 for 1909. The professional qualifications of the secondary-school teachers of the Dominion are as follows :— Status of Secondary Teachers (Regular Staff only), December, 1910. District Secondary High Schools Schools. (Secondary Departments). Principals, — Graduates ... ... ... ... ... 29 24 Holding certificates or other qualifications (excluding graduates) ... ... ... ... ... 2 37 Assistants, — Graduates ... ... ... ... ... 174 62 Certificated (excluding graduates) ... ... ... 10 32 Uncertificated ... ... ... ... ... 33 1 Total ... 248 156 Further information in regard to the salaries of secondary-school teachers will be found in Table K3 of the Appendix, and of district high schools in Tables Ll and L 2. Finances of Secondary Schools. The income of secondary schools is derived from the following sources : — (i.) Rents from the special reserves allocated to them by statute; (ii.) Statutory grants given in lieu of special reserves; (iii.) Interest upon moneys derived from the sale of reserves and invested in accordance with the Education Reserves Act; (iv.) Income from the secondary-school reserves controlled by the School Commissioners, divided among the secondary schools in the several land districts in proportion to the number of pupils in average attendance, lower departments excluded; (v.) Government payments: (a.) Statutory capitation upon free pupils under the Act; (b) subsidies on voluntary contributions for the general purposes of the school; (vi.) Government payments: (a) Capitation for manual-instruc-tion classes; (b) subsidies on voluntary contributions for manual-instruction purposes; (vii.) Special Government grants for buildings and apparatus; (viii.) Tuition fees of pupils* (ix.) Boarding fees of pupils; (x.) Miscellaneous sources, such as interest on moneys other than those obtained by the sale of reserves, donations, and special endowments (for scholarships, prizes, &c), rent of premises, loans raised, &c. The revenue derived from the sources (i) to (iv) is the income derived from endowments, and the " net annual income derived from endowments " is the average for the three preceding years of this revenue, less the expenditure upon the endowments and investments and upon buildings, and less mortgage and other charges.
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Table X summarizes the receipts of all the secondary schools taken together under the several heads above named, and also the various items of expenditure during the year 1910. Table X.—Summary of the Accounts of Income and Expenditure for 1910 furnished by the Governing Bodies of Sf-condary Schools. Receipts. Expenditure. £ s. a. £ s. d. Credit balances on Ist January, 1910 .. 22,689 17 9 Debit balances on Ist January, 1910 .. 7,497 7 6 Kndowment reserves sold, and mortgage Expenses of management .. .. 4,333 18 1 moneys repaid and insurance .. 4,076 14 8 School salaries .. .. .. 60,024 4 1 Rents, &c, of reserves .. .. 32,924 16 9 Boarding-school accounts .. .. 16,690 5 9 Interest on moneys invested .. .. 1,448 8 5 Scholarships and prizes .. .. 2,558 13 6 School Commissioners'payments .. 4,607 4 9 Printing, stationery, fuel, light, &c. .. 4,633 6 7 Government payments— Buildings, furniture, insurance, rent, For manual instruction, capitation, and rates .. .. .. .. 53,554 610 and subsidies .. .. .. 871 7 2 On endowments .. .. .. 8,881 2 9 For free places, capitation, and subsidy ' On manual instruction, exclusive of on voluntary contributions .. 40,771 0 2 buildings .. .. .. .. 1,559 6 4 Grants for buildings, sites, furniture, Interest .. .. .. .. 1,867 10 1 &c. .. .. .. .. 11,794 •"> I Sundries not ola«sifiecl .. .. 4,004 12 9 Statutory grant (Marlborough High i Credit balances, 31st December, 1910 .. 22,143 1 6 School).. .. .. .. 400 ■ 0 0 School fees (tuition) .. .. .. 17,828 4 8 Boarding-school fees.. .. .. 17,035 15 5 Sundries not classified .. .. 25,703 0 8 Debit balances, 31st December, 1910 .. 7,597 5 0 £187,747 15 9 £187,747 15 9 The following table gives a comparison of the chief items of income and expenditure with those for 1908 and 1909 :— 1908. 1909. 1910. Income. £ £ £ Income from reserves and endowments ... 36,774 37,478 38,980 Grants from Government (exclusive of building grants)* ... ... ... ... 29,108 41,258 42,492 Building grants ... ... ... ... 16,164 4,746 11,794 Tuition fees ... ... ... ... 19,160 18,887 17,828 Expenditure. Salaries of staff ... ... ... ... 52,340 56,494 60,024 Expenses of management ... ... ... 3,412 3,637 4,334 Buildings, &c. ... ... ... ... 40,103 41,911 53,554 • These include, in addition to grants for secondary education properly so called, amounts paid to secondary schools as controlling authorities of technical classes: These amounts in the years 1908, 1909, and 1910 were respectively £2,208, £6,521, and £850. The receipts under the heading "Tuition fees" show a general decline, due to the steady advance of the free-place system. The Education Amendment Act of 1908, by the introduction of a higher scale of capitation on free pupils, benefits not only those secondary schools which have few if any endowments, but also the more numerous class of schools whose income from endowments is small in proportion to the number of pupils; further, it will relieve from anxiety those schools where a necessity arises for a large building expenditure in any year, as the effect of the new sliding scale is that in any year the total of the net annual income from endowments and the capitation—that is, of the moneys available for the payment of staff salaries and working-expenses — cannot, with due safeguards, fall below £12 10s. per pupil—a sum which past experience shows to be just sufficient. Eighteen of the secondary schools «how a credit balance at the end of the year, and nine a debit balance. The net credit balance of all the secondary schools taken together has fallen considerably since the previous year —£14,546 as against £19,310 for 1909; the chief cause is the large amount of building operations undertaken by several of the schools during the past year. Generally speaking, the finances of tne secondary schools are in a sound condition, notwithstanding the large expenditure under the head of buildings. Tn last year's report it was said, " Indeed, it would be as well if the governing bodies of many of the secondary schools would consider carefully the need for increasing the staffs of their schools, and of giving greater encouragement in the form of increased salaries to assistant teachers. At present there is no doubt that in many cases the salaries paid to assistants are far too low. Effi-
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cient work cannot reasonably be looked for in a secondary school unless the staff is sufficient and well paid." It would appear from the fact that the expenditure on salaries in 1910 was almost £8,000 in excess of 1908, that the assistant teachers were now receiving much better treatment financially, but this is only partly true. The average salary of a male assistant has certainly risen in these two years from £224 to £232, but that of a female assistant has fallen from £147 to £145. The increased expenditure must largely be put down to the larger number of teachers necessary to cope with the steadily increasing number of pupils in attendance. The item of income " Sundries unclassified, £25,703," includes two loans amounting to £20,550. For the whole Dominion, if there are taken into account only the secondary schools that admit free pupils under the Act, we find from Table K5 the following position :• — 1909. 1910. Total number of pupils, excluding lower departments ... ... ... ... ' ... 4,421 4,638 Total net income from endowments (average of three years ending 31st December, 1910) ... £11,775 £9,561 Net income from endowments per head ... £2 - 66 £2 06 Approximate annual rate of capitation ... £10-40 £10-98 Total available net income per free pupil for salaries and management ... ... £13-06 £1304 Total expenditure on salaries of staff ... ... £45,081 £48,570 management ... ... £2,851 £3,275 „ staff salaries, and management ... ... ... ... ... £47,932 £51,845 Expenditure per head on staff salaries ... ... £10-60 £1082 „ on management... ... ... £064 £070 Total expenditure per head on stafi salaries, and management ■ ... ... ... ... £11-24 £11-52 The last figure given shows as nearly as may be the actual cost per annum for each pupil, exclusive of those in the lower departments. Further details of the income and expenditure of the secondary schools will be found in Tables K6 and K6a. Lower Departments. —The Education Act provides that pupils who have not obtained a certificate of competency in the subjects of Standard V or a higher standard of the public-school syllabus may be admitted to a lower department of a secondary school if they are taught in a separate building or class-room and if no part of the actual cost of their instruction is met out of the endowments of the secondary school. There were lower departments in thirteen secondary schools during 1910; the total number of pupils in those departments was 270 (178* boys, 92 girls); the total cost of their instruction was £2,024; the total amount of fees received on their account was £2,248. * Including Christ's College Grammar School, for which no return has hitherto been made.
General Remarks. (a.) Length of Time spent in Secondary Schools. School Age of Pupils in Attendance at Secondary Schools at the End of the Year.
11109—30 Schools.* 1910—31 Schools. School Age. I Boys. Girls. Total. Boys. Girls. Total. 'irst year iecond year ... 'hird year 'ourth (or a higher) year I 1,139 792 1,931 682 535 1,217 424 280 704 316 263 579 1,072 885 1,957 840 564 1,404 471 326 797 461 287 748 2,844 2,062 4,906 Total 2,561 1,870 4,431 • Exoli isive of Christ's College Grammar Schi ool.
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Last year it was pointed out that the average time spent by a pupil at a New Zealand secondary schooi was slightly over two years and a half. Information in greater detail has been gathered since that date, and it is now possible to give a closer estimate of the average length of secondary-school life. The following table* shows, as nearly as can be estimated, the number of pupils who stayed one, two, three, four, and five or more years. Stayed one year ... ... ... 1,049 pupils or 27-3 per cent. Stayed two years ... ... ... 1,066 „ 277 Stayed three years ... ... ... 864 225 Stayed four years ... ... ... 248 „ 6-4 Stayed five or more years ... ... 619 „ 16-1 „ Hence the average time spent by a pupil in a secondary school is 2-56 years, or slightly under two years and seven months. This is greater than the average duration of a pupil's stay in New York or Chicago (about two years), but less than the corresponding period in England, Scotland, Switzerland, and other European countries. One of the provisions, for instance, of the Secondary Schools Regulations of England is as follows : — Article 2.—A school will not be recognized as a secondary school unless (i) an adequate proportion of the scholars remain at least four years in the school, and (ii) an adequate proportion of the scholars remain in the school up to and beyond the age of sixteen. In determining what is an adequate proportion of scholars for either of these purposes, the Board may (where circumstances justify it) take into account scholars who have left the school and are pursuing their studies in some other secondary school approved for this purpose. While the average length of a pupil's course in a New Zealand secondary school may, for a young country, be considered fair, there can be no doubt that, in the interests of the pupils themselves and of the community at large, a longer stay is in every way desirable. There are three causes which have contributed to shorten the average length of the secondary-school course :— (1.) As has already been mentioned in another part of this report, j children are kept so long in the preparatory classes of the public schools that they have reached an unduly high average age before they have attained to the standard required for admission to a secondary school. (2.) The Matriculation Examination of the University of New Zealand, although primarily intended as an entrance examination to one of the affiliated colleges, has come to be regarded as a leaving examination; in the past the standard of this examination has been such that pupils have been able without difficulty to cover the work required in three years, and in some cases even two. The standard of the examination for 1911 and subsequent examinations, however, has been raised to that standard which a secondary-school pupil should reasonably cover in a four-years course, and it is probable that this alteration will have some effect in prolonging the length of the secondary-school course. (3.) Economic reasons are to some extent at the root of the evil; closely related, indeed forming part of, this cause is the absence in the community of a thorough and hearty belief in the advantages of secondary education. Except in the comparatively few cases where it is the intention of the parent to send the pupil on to the University, the parent is naturally inclined to begrudge the years spent by his child in learning mathematics and foreign languages, and to consider that he is better qualifying .himself for the business of life if he is placed immediately after leaving school in some employment, and perhaps sent to evening classes at a technical school. In the past there has no doubt been some ground for this belief, but the present movement towards making the work of the secondary schools more vocational in character will tend to overcome an objection which has hitherto been well founded. It is not the province of a secondary school merely to qualify a pupil for the work he will be called upon to perform in after-life any more than it is its province to give him a purely theoretical education, such as has been the tendency in the past; but there seems to be no reason to fear that a thorough mental training could not be obtained as well through the medium of a vocational course as from a
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course based upon old-fashioned lines. The ideal vocational course should embrace a sound study of English literature, history, and civics, a practical knowledge of the fundamental scientific principles underlying the common facts of life, particularly, in the case of boys, applied science (including agriculture and commerce), and, in the case of girls, domestic science and art. No doubt, if the programmes of the secondary schools were adjusted somewhat on the lines just mentioned, parents would have a greater inducement to allow their children to go through a complete course in a secondary school. The present regulations for admission to Senior Free Places, which have now been current for more than three years, give the secondary schools ample scope to modify their programmes as suggested; the only compulsory subjects are English and arithmetic, and the optional subjects include (besides mathematics, foreign languages, and the ordinary branches of science) such subjects as the following : Elementary practical agriculture; elementary hygiene (including elementary physiology, with instruction in " health " and in " first aid "); domestic science (including cookery, dressmaking or advanced plain needlework, and housewifery); shorthand, book-keeping, and commercial correspondence; woodwork or ironwork. There appears to be a growing tendency on the part of many of the schools to lean more towards the vocational course, especially in the direction of subjects bearing on agricultural and pastoral pursuits. To qualify for a Senior Free Place or an Intermediate certificate it is not necessary, under the regulations, for the pupil to sit for examination; it is sufficient if he or she gives evidence of having diligently and intelligently completed a satisfactory two-years course. Upon the completion of a similar satisfactory four-years course is based the senior or " leaving " certificate for which provision is made. (b.) Average Duration of a Girl's Stay in a Secondary School. According to the census returns for J 906, there were 97 girls of secondaryschool age to every 100 boys. From the figures set out in Table K2 we find that there were in 1910 only 72 girls to every 100 boys. This great difference is only partly accounted for by the number of private secondary schools for girls in the Dominion. There can be no doubt that the chief cause is that parents do not consider a secondary education as necessary for a girl as for a boy. If we apply the same tests to the numbers of boys and girls separately on the rolls of secondary schools as was applied in the case of all pupils, we find that the average duration of a girl's stay is slightly greater than that of a boy : — Average girl's stay in a secondary school ... ... ... 2-58 years. Average boy's stay in a secondary school ... ... ... 2 - 55 years. :;: Average stay of a pupil (boy or girl) ... ... ... ... 2-56 years." From Table K2 we get the following information :— 110 girls stayed 1 year to every 100 boys. 88 „ ' 2 years „ 100 „ 97 „ 3 years „ 100 „ 85 „ 4 years „ 100 „ 120 „ 5 years or more „ 100 „ It would therefore appear that, in addition to the fact that a large number of girls are never sent to a secondary school, an undue number are withdrawn after their first year; those that are left after the year, however, stay longer than the average boy. Domestic reasons are, no doubt, at the root of the trouble. That the trouble is not insurmountable is evidenced by the fact that in the United States the very reverse is the case—there are 129 girls on the roll to every 100 boys.
* Exolusive of Chribt's College, for which no separate figures were available for the year 1909.
E.—6
Girls' High School, Dunedin. —Science Class-room.
Girls' High School, Dunedin. —The Office.
8.—6
Girls' High School, Dunedin.
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Girls' High School, Dunedin. The dotted lines show future additions.
E.—6
High School, Palmerston North.
High School, Gisborne.
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High School Palmerston North. N.Z.
13
E.—6
2. DETAILED TABLES.
TABLE K1.—Roll and Fees of Secondary Schools, as in December, 1910.
Note. —The classification of secondary schools, as shown in the above tables, may be interpreted thus:— A. Schools established under special Acts of the Legislature, with endowments derived from grants of money from the public revenue, or from grants of land. It is optional with these schools to admit free pupils or offer scholarships equal in value to one-fifth of the net annual income derived from endowments. B. High schools established in places where there are no secondary or district high schools. These schools must admit free pupils, for which they receive grants according to scale. C. Schoole which, though endowed, do not admit, nor are they empowered to admit, free pupils.
Total Roll for Last Term of 1910. s|= „_ %%& SβS Annual Bates of Fees. a = §!* "is 111 « « ! . i . c '~ For ' S7g "" S 3 2 °° ESS: 0 "' For Tuition. Board ! £ | F I i :5: i W i i i 1 I,I; pi «& Id p 3 3ohp23oh«c5p5cs A. Endowed Schools included in the Eighth Schedule to the Education Act, 190S. £ s. d. £ 3. d. YVhangarei High School .. .. 12 33 . . 45| .. 6 27i 1 34 1 8 8 0 .. 73 Auckland Boys'Grammar School 1 124 316 15 456 : 10 10 0 .. 460 Girls'Grammar School .. ..122 174 8 304 .. 10 10 0 .. 332 Thames High School .. .. 15 2!) .. 44 .. 9 22 .. 31 8 8 0! .. 77 New Plymouth High School .... 17 36 2 55 .. 14 29 .. 43: ....<>.. 6 fi 0 35 3 6 94 I 8 18 0 I Waneanui Girls' College 7 59 107 27 200 .. 14 .. 85 J, 10 10 0 40 0 0i 109 ( 11 0 0J Wellington Boys' College .. 1 103 244 18 366 21 .. 62 .. j 2 j }J g J 42 0 0 388 Girls'College 10 81 104 II 206 .. 13 .. ■ • ' jj Jγ 9} ■• 192 Napier Boys'High School .. 18 58 46 8 130 45 .. 27 .. 10 4 0 '40 0 0 88 „ Girls'High School 7 38 63 6 113J .. 39 .. 21 9 9 0 40 0 0 68 Gisbome High School .. 2 27 38 1 68 .. 14 40 1 56 6 .. 9 .. 9 0 0 47 10 0 123 Marlborough High School .. 1 19 26 3 49 .. 30 361 "2 68 3 8 11 0 .. 113 Nelson Boys'College .. 3 71 95 21 190 12 .. 92 - -11 j| § 0 } j* 2 - ° ° 189 „ Girls' College 11 61 28 9 163! .. Iβ .. 36 j J ® ® J 42, 0 (N 156 Christchurch Boys'High School 8 87 105 13 213 20 i 10 10 0 ! " 195 Girls , High School .. 4103J124 7 238 .. 10 .. .. ' ®l .. 218 Rangiora High School .. .. 18 16 2' 36 .. l>5 12 2 39 9 9 0 .. 85 Ashburton High School .. .. 19 33 3 55 .. 13 40 5 58 ..: 6 6 0 .. 112 Timaru Boys' High School .. .. 17 51 4 72 ti .. 9 0 0 45 0 0 72 Girls'High School j .. ! .. .. .. 20 44 3 67 \ ..1900 .. 65 Waitaki Boys' High School .. 5 t>8 126 14 208 23 ..146 ..I 7 10 0 46 1 0i 192 Girls'High School .. .. 21 40 (. l>7 7 10 0 .. 71 Otago Boys' His;h School .. .. 92 1691 12 273 23 .. 10 0 0 43 10 0 | ■„. „ Girls' High School 581 141 10 182 10 0 0 Southland Boys'High School.. .. 47 76 13 136 10 0 0 .. 143 Girls' High School 31 88j 9; 128! I 10 0 0 .. 131 Total .. ..39 789 1,439129 2,396 397051146106 1,996130 92871141 .. .. 4,267 i is 103 58 i>7 III 71 7 10 7 II 8 4 f> 4,267 B. Secondary Schools established under Section 94 of the Education Act. Palmerston North High School .. 45 t>2 3 110 .. 32 35 3 70 .... 13 .. 10 0 0 4019 0, 173 Dannevirke High School .. .. 17 21 .. 38 .. 14 25 .. 39 10 0 0 .. 82 Gore High School .. .. i .. 17 29 2 48 .. 13 34 2 40 10 0 0 .. 98 Total .. .. .. 79 1 112: 5 1 196 .. 59 94 5 158| ..| ..j 13 .. .. .. 353 173 82 98 353 C. Endowed Secondary Schools not coming within the Definition of Section 89 of the Education Act. Wanganui Collegiate School .. .. 47 119 21 187 148 .. 12 0 0 , :,1 0 0 174 / 7 17 fi \' Christ's College Grammar School 49 103 79 12 243 .. .." 48 .. 82 .. 11 0 6 -' °° I 218 (14 3 <J i ' 4j ° ° ' Total .. ..49 150 198 33 430 48. ..i230 .. .. .. 392 Grand total for 1910 .. 88 1018 1,749|167 3,022 39:764 1240 111 2,154 178 92614141 .. .... Grand total for 1909 .. 100 1009 1,666!136 2,911 34:635 1204 72 1,945 114 75!566 140 ■___! 1 L_ ' , ' I Difference .. -12 ! 9 83 3l' 111! 5 129 36 39 209 64 17 48 1 .. .. 5,012 ! De, m of Section 89 of the Education Act. 148 .. 12 0 0 , .,1 0 0 .. 4S .. 82 .. Ill" SI |12 0 0 (14 3 6 J ,4500 ! 48 ..i230 .. 174 I 218 392 1240 1204 111 72 2,154178 926141411 1,945114 75!566'140 36 39 209 64 n' 48 ! 5,012
8.—6.
TABLE K2.—Classification of Pupils in Secondary Schools in 1910, according to Years of Attendance (exclusive of Preparatory Departments).
14
Schools. First Year. Second Year. Third Year. , Fourth Year. Filth Year. Total. ■Jrand - Total. Boys. Girle. Boys. Girls. Boys. (Mils. Hoys. Girls. j(Boys. cirls. Boys, (iirls. A. Endowed Schools included in the Eighth Schedule to the Education Art, WOK. Whangarei High School.. 20 12 14 I 8 1 6 10 3 4 2 .. i 45 34 79 Auckland Boys'Grammar 173 .. 143 I 75 .. tn .. 25 .. 466 .. 151. School Auckland Girls' Grammar .. 154 .. 56 .. 59 .. Hi ..9 .. 304 304 School Thames High School .. Si 14 II 8 5 4 5 4 .. 1 44 31 75 New Plymouth High 25 17 17 14 7 10 8 1' .... 55 43 98 School Wanganui Girls'College.. .. S3 .. 42 .. 32 .. 15 .. 44 .. 186 186 Wellington Boys' College 119 .. 149 .. 44 .. 23 .. 10 .. 346 .. 346 Wellington Girls' College .. 96 .. 42 . .. 38 .. 7 .. 10 .. L93 19:', Napier Boys' High School j 39 .. 19 .. 13 .. 10 .. 4 .. 86 .. 85 Napier Girls' High School I .. 35 14 8 .. 9 .. 8 < .. 71 74 Gisborne High School ..39 26 23 29 (Opened in 1909) (ii , r>:, 117 Marlborough High School 15 32 17 19 9 12 5 6 .. .. 46 [68 114 Nelson Boys' College .. ' 52 .. 50 .. 43 .. l>1) .. 13 .. 178 .. 178 Nelson Girls'College .. .. 54 .. 44 .. 27 .. Hi .. ti .. 147 147 Christchurch Boys' High 79 .. 52 .. 26 .. 19 .. • 17 . . 193 .. 19." School Si Christchurch Girls' High .. 91 .. 65 .. 30 .. 30 .. 12 .. 228 228 School Hangiora High School .. 18 24 13 9 4 2 2 12 36 39 75 Ashburton High School.. 27 22 18 22 4 7 4 4 2 3 55 58 113 Timaru Boys'High School 29 21 12 6 .. 4 .. 72 72 Timaru Girls'High School .. 29 17 11 5 .. 5 .. 67 67 Waitaki Boys' High School 59 .. r>4 .. 42 .. 21 .. 9 .. 186 .. 186 Waitaki Girls'High School .. 31 19 7 .. 7 .. 3 .. i>7 Ii7 Otago Boys' High School 105 .. 68 .. 60 .. 31 .. 19 .. 273 .. 273 Otago Girls' High School .. 68 .. 57 .. 32 .. hi ..9 .. 182 182 Southland Boys' High 54 .. 38 .. 28 .. 13 .. !! .. 136 .. 136 School Southland Girls' High .. 47 .. 42 .. 20 .. 11 •• . « •■ 1-« 1 2S School —— : Total .. 876 803 707 517 368 309 206 153 109 120 2,266 1,904 4,170 the Ed; 4 16 4 2 15 "7 9 ' 6 16 uxttitm Art, IDO.S. 2 .. 45 25 . . 166 9 1 44 44 10 .. 346 10 4 .. 86 8 .. . . 62 46 13 .. 178 li • 17 .. lit:! 34 304 31 43 186 193 ■74 65 J68 147 228 79 466 304 75 98 1 si; 346 L93 85 74 117 114 178 147 19? Si 228 30 12 2 4 5 7 1 2 36 2 3 66 4 .. 72 9 .. 185 .. 3 .. 19 .. l't:{ 9 .. 3 .. 136 39 58 ' 67 67 182 75 113 72 67 L86 67 273 182 136 in 11 .. 8 .. 128 I-is 876 805 707 517 368 B. Secondary Schools established under Section 94 of the Education Act. Palmerston North High 47 36 35 19 14 7 11 5 3 3 110 j 70 180 School Dannevirke High School 17 19 11 14 5 6 4 .. 1 1 38 39 ; 77 Gore High School .. 28 25 10 14 S 5 , 1 3 1 j 2 48 49 97 , j ■ "1 » 'econdary Schools estab 47 36 35 blished under 19 14 17 19 11 28 25 10 14 5 14 8 Total .. 92 80 56 47 27 17 16 8 5 6 196 158 354 92 80 56 47 27 17 Iβ 8 5 6 196 158 354 C. Endowed Secondary Schools not coming within the Definition of Section 89 of the Education Act. 'econdary Schools not coming within ! Definition of Section 89 of the Education Act. Wanganui Collegiate School 62 .. 51 .. 33 .. 21 .. l>0 .. 187 .. 187 Christ's College Grammar 42 .. 26 .. 43 .. 29 .. 55 .. 196 .. !!»."> School j ! : ! ! Total .. 104 .. 77 .. ~(< .. 50 .. 75 .. 382 .. 382 62 .. ! 51 .. 33 42 .. 26 .. 48 21 .. 20 .. 187 .. 187 29 .. 55 .. 196 .. I!*.". 50 76 I ..I 382 .. 382 326 I 272 161 j 189 126 2,844 i 2,062 4,906 104 77 Tβ 50 75 Grand total for 1910 1,072 885 i 840 5114 471
15
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TABLE K3.—Staff and Salaries of Secondary Schools as in- December, 1910.*
s j afl Salaries at Kate paid at End Btafl. S choou.t Begu1 "' Part - Ume - *<«<"» 8tofl - j £Eh£! Regular. Fart-time. —I r " r g Schoeto.t _1_ xeacners. NotM g g i g" SchooU.t g § g I g 8 g § j 3 .* 3 * 3 is * A. Endowed Schools included in the Eighth Schedule to the. Ed £ £ £ £ Whangarei High School ..2211 480 230 15 15 Auckland Boys'Grammar School 14 .. 2 .. t,lflf> .. 120 Girls' Grammar School .. 14 .. 4 .. 2,094 .. 215 Thames High School .. 2 1 .... 550 150 New Plymouth High School .. 4 2 1 .. 1,030 390 22 VVanganui Girls' College .. ..11 2 4 .. 2,145 130 100 Wellington Boys' College .. 18 ! .. 4 .. 4,470 .. 100 Girls' College .. .. 12 2 5 .. ! 2,075 85 86 Napier Boys' High School .. 8 1,712; A. Endowed Schools included in the Eighth Schedule to the. Education Act. £ £ £ £ Whangarei High School ..2211 480 230 15 15 Auckland Boys' Grammar School 14 .. 2 .. 4,155 .. 120 Girls' Grammar School .. 14 .. 4 .. ; 2,094 .. 215 Thames High School .. 2 1 .. .. 550 150 .. .. Principal has reeidenoe. \t r>1 t-U tj:~i» c»k An ! i o i ■ *»oa *>nn oo New Plymouth High School .. 4 2 1 .. 1,030 390 22 VVanganui Girls' College .. ..11 2 4 .. 2,145 130 100 Principal has residence. Parttime fc'achers receive fees. Wellington Boys' College .. 18 i .. 4 .. 4,470 .. 100 Girls' High School .. .. 7 1 . . .. 1,140 30 Gisborne High School .. 4 3 1 1 940 320 45 40 Marlborough High School .. 2 2 1 1 665 :(l(l 12 12 Nelson Bbys , .College. . .. 0 .. 2 .. 2,020 j ■ 1 10 Girls' College .. .. 12 2 5 .. \ 2,075 85 86 Napier Boys' High School .. 8 1,712 .. .. .. Including £52 house allowance for second master ; also, Principal has residence. ,, Girls' High School .. .. 7 1 .. .. 1,140 30 .. Principal has residence. Gisborne High School .. 4 3 1 1 940 320 4P 40 Principal has residence, one assistant has board, and one board and residence. Marlborough High School ..2 2 1 1 0(i5 310 12 12 Principal has residence. Nelson Boys , .College.. .. !' .. 2 .. 2,020 i .. 110 .. Principal has board and residence, i five assistants have board, and one assistant has residence. ,, Girls' College .. ..8 2 .. .. i 1,195 .. 85 Principal and five assistants have board and residence. Christchurch Boys' High School 11 .. 5 .. 3,415 ; .. 268 40 12 Girls'High School .. 11 2 6, .. 1,824! 6] 294 Rangiora High School .. 2 2 2 1 600 282 1(1 10 Principal has residence. Ashburton High School . . 3 2 .... 850 330 Tiimmi Bovs' Hiirh School 4 1 1.260 30 i „ Girls'College .. ..8 2 .. .. j 1,195 .. 85 Christ church Boys'High School 11 .. r> .. 3,415 ' .. 268 Girls'High School .. 11 2 6, .. 1,824 (il 294 Rangiora High School ..2221 600 282 I (I 10 Ashburton High School .. 13 2 .... 850 330 Timaru Boys' High School . . 4 .. 1 .. 1,260 .. 30 Girls' High School .... 4 .. 1 .. 845 . . 15 Waitaki Boys' High School .. 7 .. 1 1 1,900 .. 15 36 85 294 10 i imam noys xlign scnooi .. <* .. i .. . . .>u Girls' High School .... 4 .. 1 .. 845 . . 15 Waitaki Boys' High School .. 7 1 1 1,900 .. 15 36 Three assistants have board and residence, ni-io' v,r,v, S/.v>™i All 7(v\ in ka is 36 Girls High School .... 4 1 1 .. VUO 10 50 otigo Boys' High School .. 11 .. 2. .. 3,263 .. 160 .. Principal has residence. Girls'High School .. .. 9 2 2 .. 1,705 100 60 Part-time teachers receive fees. Southland Boys' High School .. 6 .. 3 .. 1,609 .. 108 .. Principal has residence. Girls'High School .. .. 7 2 1 .. 1,185 83 4 Total .. .. 107 101 40 ' 29 28.919 16,920 1.514 1.022 Girls' High School .... 4 1 1 .. 700 10 50 Otigo Boys'High School .. 11 .. 2 .. 3,263 ..160 „ Girls' High School .... 9 2 2 .. 1,705 100 60 Southland Boys' High School .. 6 .. 3 .. 1,609 .. 108 Girls'High School .. .. 7 2 1 .. 1,185 83 4 50 60 4 Total .. ..107 101 ! 40 29 28.919 16,920 1,514 1,022 1,022 B. Secondary Schools established under Section 94 of the Education Act. I : I B. Secondary Sci ils established under lection 94 of the Educ Palmereton North High School 4 Dannevirke High School .. 2 Gore High School .. .. 3 Palmereton North High School 413 2 1 1,230 ' 370 t>5 15 Including£120 house allowance for Principal. Dannevirke High School ..2211 570 360 15 20 Gore High School .. .. 3 1 .... 800 150 .. 3 2 ' 1 l,2.'S0 2 11 570 1 .. .. 800 370 t>5 15 360 15 20 150 Total .. ..9632 2,600 880 80 35 C. Endowed Secondary Sclujols not coming within the Qefinition of Section 8!) of the Education Ad. Total 2 2,000 880 80 36 VVanganui Collegiate School ..12 .. , 2 .. 3,150 .. 145 .. Four assistants have board. Christ's College Grammar School 12 .. li .. 3,300 .. 23."> .. Principal and five assistants have residence. Total .. .. 24 .. 5 .. 6,450 j .. 880 .. 6,450 j 380 I Grand total .. .. 140 107 48 31 37,969 17,800 1,974,1,057 • See note to Table Kl.
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16
TABLE K4.-Number of Pupils holding Scholarships and Free Places in Secondary Schools during the Last Term, 1910.
g >, Scholarship- -j o i Number of Holders of Free Places. 3 (2 holders. H gj (Under Departmental Regulations.) .*? -3 ®^jP t II J fill School. I s i W s1| |Si Junior. Senior. Totals. 05 g g "*, E « "HS ■» ! Boys. Girls. Total. Boys. Girls. Total. Boys. Girls. Total. 1 f 3 gllB ° ta I*^ HH I P-l (1.) (2.) (3.) (4.) gO (6.) (7.) (8.) (9.) (10.) (11.) (12.) (13.) 1(14.) (15.) rahip- -go $ ers. HgS <l eg 2 1(14.) (15.) A. Endowed Schools included in the Eighth Schedule to the Education Act, 1908. (i.) Providing Free Places under Section 93. Whangarei High School 27 19 4(i 11 13 24 38 32 70 12-5 875 4 .. Auckland Grammar 287 213 500 j 128 58 186 415 271 686 12-26 8,410 113 .. 3 School Thames High School.. 34 ; 17 51 7 7 14 41 24 i>5 7-75 504 :i .. New Plymouth High 39 24 63 7 11 18 4(i 35 81 6-21 503 15 .. School Napier High School .. 58 38 96 j 22 23 45 80 61 141 7-06 996 32 .. 1 Gisborne High School 48 39 87 5 7 12 53 40 99 125 1,238 13 .. Wellington Colleges .. 217 106 323 58 26 84 275 132 107 10-55 1,2'.I4 81 .4 Marlborough High 31 43 74 9 16 25 40 59 99 12-5 1,238 23 .. 1 School Nelson Colleges .. 82, 77 159 47 43 90 1 129 120 249 12-06 3,005] 28 1 Rangiora High School 28 30 58 4 4 8 32 34 66 12-5 825 '6 .. Ohristchurch Girls' .. 147 ! 147 .. 62 62 .. 209 20!) 12.5 2,613, 32 2 High School Christchurch Boys' 81 .. 81 47 .. 47 128 .. 128 6-00 710 32 .. 2 High School Ashburton High School 42 39 81 8 6 14 50 45 95 12-0251 1,142 2 .. 11 Timaru High School 43 41 84 19 18 37 62 59 121 9-05 1,095 18 .. 1 Waitaki High School (il 50 111 41 13 54 102 63 165 12-5 2,063 I 11 .. Otago High School .. 171 117 288 86 61 147 257 178 435 9-57 4,103 61 1 Southland High School I 89 71 I 160 35 ; 48 83 124 119 243 12-5 3,038 45 .. (ii.) Not providing Free Places under Section 93. Wanganui Girls' Col- .. .. ..17 27 lege 15. Secondary Schools established under Section 94 of the Education Act. Palmerston North High 68 55 123 21 14 35 89 69 i 158 12-22 1,931 12 .. School Dannevirke High 25 31 56 14 6 20 39 37 76 11 -1+1 905 12 .. School Gore High School .. | 37 36 73 9 1(1 19 46 46 92 12-5 1,150 7 .. C. Endowed Sciiools not included in tht Eighth Schedule. Wanganui Collegiate .. .. .. .. .... .. .. .. .. .. .19 7 School Christ's College Gram- .. .. .. .. 45 28 mar School Total .. 1,468 1,193 2,661 578 446 1,024 2,046 I,(i39 3,085 11-044(40,698,550 89 81 7 28 3,085 11-044 | 40,698 i 550 89 81 •
17
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TABLE K5.—Net Income from Endowments, and Cost per Head of Roll.
3—X. 6,
x< fill! ill i is.?i !5?i'irj! ill! zim t U (i if 11 ill! mi H H l>5 «! H Eh H (1.) (2.) (3.) (4.) (6.) (6.) (7.) (8.) z&u ili m li!lKi! [ l!:i H En H (6.) (7.) (8.) IIJI I (9.) HI I S8 SI Hill fl!5" I=ljr°l3i!| co ; •α-cft, flflie ■■ Mod llil: PlllU^gl (9.) : (10.) 1 (11.) (12.) hi a (10.) a ssg S-a a fl (ii.) A. Endowed Schools included in Eighth Schedule to the Education Ac ct, 1908. (i.) Providing Free Places under Section 93. £ £ £ £ £ £ Whangarei High School .. . 81 12-50 12-50 726 62 Auckland Grammar School 841! 221 0.20; 12-26 12-52 6,945 612 Thames High School ... 83 457 6-60 7-75: 13-25 671 ! 43 New Plymouth High School 108 927 8-58 6-21 14-79 1,456 i 75 Wellington Boys'and Girls' 648 i,407 217 10-54 12-71 6,439 293 Colleges Napier High Schools .. 169 1,162; 6-87 "06 13-93, 2,009 150 Gisborne High School .. 126 .. .. 12-50 12-50 1,236 195 Marlborough High School.. 122 .. .. 1250 12-50 983 02 Nelson Colleg ■ .. .. 360 174 0-48 12-06 12-54 3,666 j 398 i Rangiora High School .. 96 .. .. 12-50! 12-50 820; 20 Christchureh Boys' High j 204 2,751 13-48 5-58 l!)(l(i :(,747 214 School Christchureh Girls' High l>41 .. .. 12-50 12-50 2,211 ; 64 School Ashburton High School .. 127 67 052 12-02 12-54 1,151 64 Timaru High School .. 155 595 3-83 905 12-88 2,052 157 j Waitaki High School .. ! 270 .. .. I 12-50 12-50 2,510 234 Otago High School .. 517 ' 1,681 3-25 I 9-57 12-82 5,289 299 Southland High School .. : 292 i .. .. 12-50 12-50 3,169 112 £ 788 7,557 714 1,531 ; 6,732 I ! 2,159 1,431 1,045 4,0li4 840 3,961 2,275 1,221 2,209 ! 2,744 5,588 3,281 £ 8-96 8-26 8-08 13-48 9-94 11-89 9-81 806 1018 8-54 18-37 9-17 9.11 i 13-24 9-30 10-23 10-85 £ 0-77 0-73 0-52 0-69 0-45 0-89 1-55 0-51 111 0-21 105 ; 0-27 ! 0-50 101 0-86 0-58 0-38 a 9-73 8-99 8-60 14-17 10-39 12-78 11-36 8-57 11-29 P 8-75 19-42 0-44 9-61 14-25 10-16 10-81 11-23 Totals .. 4,440 j 9,442 45,086 3,054 48,140 10-16 0-68 10-84 Wanganui Girls' College .. ■ (ii.) Not providing Free Places under Section 93. 186*i .. .. .. J 2,745 ! 176 2,921 14-Vli 0-94 15-70 B. Secondary Schools established under Section 94 of the Educatu Palmerston N. High School I 188 57 0-30: 12-22 12-52 1.631 150' Dannevirke High School .. 94 62 0-65 11-91 12-56 I 934 2 Gore High School .. 102 .. .. 12-50 12-50 919 69 'on Act. 1,781 936 988 8-68 0-80 j 9-94 002 i 901 0-68 0-48 9-90 9-69 Totals 384 119 ] 3,484 ! 221 3,705 907 0-58 9-65 C. Endowed Si ;hools no\ includi in the Eighth Schedule. 3,567 I 526 3,118 j 290 Vanganui Collegiate School ihrist's College Grammar School 187* 195* 4,093 3,408 19-07 15-99 2-82 21-89 1-49 17-48 Totals 382 6,685 81P> 7,501 17-50 2-14 19-64 Grand totals .. 5,206 : 9,561 2-06 10-98 , 1304 58,000 I 4,267 62,267 11-47 0-84 12-31 ■ lioll at list Decei ruber, 1911
18
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Table K6.—Income of Secondary Schools for the Year 1910.
Technical From Endowments. From Government. Classes. D (High Hchool Cr. - Boarding- Sundries Halance-i Hoards which School. Balances on Sales and ,,, ■ , ,, v For Manual ral)itation For Buildings, School Fees.; school unclassified 'list Dec Totals. are aleo 1st Jan.. Win Mortgage- Interest on s, , nl Instruction. yffifjfiS" Sites. Rent, Fees. unclassified, .list,l>ec. Controlling moneys Rents. Moneys ,.',?[- Capitation. ,,"*", Furniture, iJlu - Authorities repaid, ana invested, '. ' «-nd BobSdS ,uul of Technical Insurance. sioneis. subsidies HuDSKUee. Apparatug . Classes.) ! From Endowments. From Government. School. Balances on Sales and 1st .Inn.. 1810 Mortgagemoneys repaid, ana Insurance. Interest on Rents. Moneys invested. Paid by School Commissioners. For Manual ,- a ,,itatinn For Buildings, Instruction. ( f v^S^° n Sites. Kent, Capitation, buboes Subs,,,i,.. Aw SS tm . School Fees.', Boarilini,'sctaool Fees. A. Endowed Schools included in the Eighth Schedule to the Education Act, 1908. £ e. d. £ s. d. £ s. d.[ £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s." d.i £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. , £ s. d. £ s. d. £ ». d. £ s. d. £ •. d. Whaugarei High School .. 110 4 5 .. 106 7 0 .. 41 5 0 12 14 (i 866 13 4 .. 75 12 0 .. .. .. 1,212 16 :{ Auckland Boys' and Girls - 1.732 14 7 1,276 0 0 .->,470 1 a 199 4 11 637 14 0 .. B.190 1 11 .. 722 15 0 .. .. .. 18,228 12 I Grammar School Thames High School .. 402 10 4 .. 696 0 3 .. i>7 6 8] 14 19 8 r>28 0 2 .. 99 8 it .. 14 13 <> .. 1,822 18 10 New Plymouth High School 1,217 6 4 .. 967 10 4 46 1 ti 400 0 0 !t3 7 8 XU 12 2 336 18 6 135 9 0 205 5 6 2 6 6 .. 3,938 17 4 Wangaiiui Girls' College .. 958 5 4 .. 354 13 l> HO 0 0 151 6 8 20 15 0 30 0 0 .. 2,823 15 4 3,283 17 6 155 8 2 216 17 0 8,074 18 6 Wellington College .. 596 12 2 .. 3,668 13 0 .. 500 i 0 70 7 11 4,039 4 3 .. 2,136 8 6 .. 7 18 10 393 13 1 11,413 19 Napier High Schools .. 3,183 18 4 .. 1,338 16 6 115 10 0 566 10 0 15 12 6 964 9 2j 167 6 9 186 17 6 68 6 4 209 18 4 .. 6,816 4 5 Gisborne High School .. *2,094 17 5 .. 406 0 :t 67 7 6 SO 14 9 84 15 0 1,111 12 8 341 0 0 216 0 0 .. 5 2 .. 8,100 12 9 Marlborough High School .. 476 17 9 .. .. .. 85 0 0 63 7 6 1.277 IS .. 132 10 8 .. 586 15 6 .. 2,601 12 11 Nelson College .. .. .. 338 0 0 988 S 4 87 11 5 520 0 0 78 6 8 3,133 13 3 21S S 1 1.720 it 0 5,955 H 2 71 7 I .. 13,111 18 1 Greymouth High School .. 1,702 3 1 .. .. 86 17 3 50 0 ol .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 1,839 0 4 Hokitika High School .. 1,640 12 1 .. 36 0 (I 48 0 0 r>0 0 0 .. .. .. .. .. .. 1,774 12 I Rangiora High School .. 209 18 10 .. 189 6 4 .. .. .. 936 19 1 163 0 0 25 14 6 .. 31 6 6 . . 1,556 r> 3 Christchurch BoyK , High 468 1 4 .. 4.33S 13 3 .. .. 8 13 4 713 16 2 8 14 6 839 11 6 .. 15 0 .. 6,378 15 I School Ohristohuroh Girls , High .. .. 486 1 1 147 15 4 .. j 80 1 3 2,865 8 8 ">:> r> 9 264 12 0 .. 4."> 8 7 I.:>(>.-> 0 7 5,097 113 School v Akaroa High School .. 447 16 10 .. 133 0 11 6 It 2 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 587 6 11 Ashburton High School .. .. .. 766 3 3 l>4 2 6 .. .. 1,295 13 1 .. 57 0 6 .. 55 8 4 1.000 14 II 3,239 2 7 Timaru High Schools .. .. .. 2,086 14 4 .. .. I 79 19 9 1.137 l> 5 .. 150 14 4 .. 34 11 3 230 12 2 3,719 18 3 Waimate High School .. 2,798 3 10 .. 354 3 6! 157 0 0 .. .. .. .. .. .. 0 5 6 .. 3,309 12 10 Waitaki High Schools .. J .. .. 1,439 it 6 .. 326 I it 12 17 6 2,560 8 4 .. 816 r> 11 .. 626 14 It S70 2 S 6,550 18 9 Otego High Schools .. | 567 6 it .. 2,843 15 7; 18 11 10 374 11 2 23 7 6 3.521 8 8 6.923 6 0 362 r> 2 .. 207 18 4 605 11 6 15,448 16 Southland High Schools .. 1,563 9 8 .. I 1,643 17 11 .. 249 10 60 4 7f 3,304 3 4 .. 186 13 4 .. 171 4 6 .. 7,178 14 4 Totals .. .. 20,170 19 1 1.614 0 0 28,313 16 6|jl,124 11 5 4,078 15 0 719 10 o! 36,800 10 4 8,211 18 10 10,952 1 ll! 9,513 2 6|[5,819 14 7l 4,682 11 llJ32,001 12 l| 1.614 0 028,313 16 6|1,124 11 5 4,078 15 oj 719 10 o! 36,800 10 4: 8,211 18 io! 10,952 1 l_l! 9,513 2 e|| [5,819 14 7l 4,682 11 111 132,001 12 li B. Secondary School" established under Section 94 of the Education Act. Palmereton North High .. 221 13 3 1,703 9 0 .. .. 148 it 4 86 2 r> l.itoi; 4 11 2.132 6 6 192 8 4 465 3 0 139 17 8 .. ii,!l!H 14 5 Dannevirke High School .. 365 17 4 .. .. .. 301 10 0 42 7 6 966 6 7 .. 68 0 (I .. 14 14 6 .. 1.758 15 II Gore High School .. 136 1 3 .. .. .. 78 10 5 24 7 3 1,097 18 4 1,450 0 0 81 6 8 .. 375 0 0 .. I5.243 3 11 Totals .. .. 723 I I 10 1.703 it 0 .. 528 it it 151 17 2 3,970 it 10 3,582 6 6 341 15 0 465 3 0 529 12 2 .. 11,996 14 3 .. B. Secondur y Schools established under Section 94 of the Education Act. 466 3 0 139 17 81 14 14 61 375 0 0 529 12 2 li,!t!J4 14 ."> 1,758 15 11 :t.243 3 11 I i.'.UMi 14 3 1,703 9 0 j/7O3_ 9 0 148 i> 4 85 2 5 L.906 4 11 2,132 (i 6 ]!12 8 4 301 10 0 42 7 6 966 l> 7 .. 68 0 (I 78 10 5 24 7 3 1,097 18 4 1,450 0 0 81 6 8 528 it 9 151 17 2 3,1)70 it 10 3,582 6 6 341 L6 0 465 3 0 C. Endowed Secondary Schools not coming within the Definition of Section 89 of the Education Act. Wangainii Collegiate School 1,795 6 10 .. 1,735 15 9; 12 1 0 .. .. .. .. 3,209 18 01 7,057 9 11 §18,899 3 9 527 19 8 33,237 14 11 Christ's College Grammar .. 759 5 8 2,875 4 6 311 11 0 .. .. .. .. :U24 9 9 .. 854 10 2 2,386 13 6 10,51114 6 School ■ Totals .. .. 1,795 6 10 759 5 8 4,611 0 3 323 12 0 .. .. .. .. 6.534 7 9 7,057 9 1119,753 13 112,914 13 1 43,749 9 5 C. Endowed Secondary S Schools not coming within the Definition of Section SO of the Etlnciiti io* Act. 518,809 3 it 854 10 2 527 19 8 33,237 14 11 2,386 13 6 10,511 14 6 2,914 13 1 43,749 9 5 1,735 15 !) 12 1 0 769 5 8| 2,875 4 6 311 11 0 759 5 8 4,611 0 3 323 12 0 3,209 18 0: 3,324 it it 6,534 7 9 7,057 9 111 I '• 7,057 9 11 19,753 13 11 • • Grand totals .. 22,689 17 9 4,076 14 8 32,924 16 !)| 1,448 3 5 4.607 4 9 871 7 2 40,771 0 2 11,794 5 4! 17,828 4 8 17,035 15 5 26,103 0 8 7,597 5 o] 187,747 15 9 4,076 14 8 32,924 Iβ 9 1,448 3 5l 4.607 4 9 871 7 ■2 j 40,771 0 2 11,794 5 4:17,828 4 8 17.035 16 5 26,103 I) 8 7,597 5 0 187,747 15 9| I ! Ill 83,168 8s. Id. less £68 10s. 8d. bank balance for technical purposes. \ Including £3,650 loan. i £35 credit balance deducted from debit balance brought forward from 1909. • 1 Deluding 618,900 loan instalment received from AM P. Society. redit balance deducted from clel.it balance bro ngtat forward ft ; [Deluding £16.900 loan instalment : £*"> ci om 1909.
19
E.-6
Table K7.—Expenditure of Secondary Schools for the Year 1910.
School. on Manage- tuX32« let Jan., 1910. ment: Office hn - ln "< s - Dr. Balance on 1st Jan.. 1910. : Rxpendij,. f lure on Printing, I m> 1 Building*. . school snips, instruc- Advertising, pnrnittir« on im,.,-,. r \ccomit Exhibitions, tiou, Cleaning, ESSS™ , Enrlow- Interest. Attoi.ut. prises, exclusive Fuel, Light. ,, _ ul ,!i me - nieius. sundries isalances, .,, f , whii unclassified. :;ist Dec, 1910. ">rai-. Qc Aut Technical 1'lasses (High School Boards which are also Controlling Authorities of Technical ( lassesj. ich ar ontro] [tborit and Salaries. rnaes. exclusive ruei. p__ t Tfflvo mt'Uis. o j- v . Kent, i axes. Building». AUC T imorii ._! I L A L L Endowed Schools included in the Eighth Schedule to the Education Act, 1908. . A. Endowed Schools included in the Eighth Schedule to the Education Act, 1908. £ s. rt. £ s. d. £ s. d. Whangarei High School .. 62 0 5 725 10 0j Auckland Grammar School .. 612 2 4 6,945 0 8; (Boys' and Girls') Thames High School .. .. 42 18 8 670 16 S New Plymouth High School .. 75 0 5 1,456 2 8j Wanganui Girls' College .. 176 9 0 2,854 19 4 Wellington College .. .. 293 3 0 6,735 9 8 Napier High Schools .. .. 149 13 5 2,478 17 4 Gisborne High School .. .. 194 15 11 1,280 12 8 Slarlborough High School .. 62 4 7 1,006 10 0 Nelson College .. 934 13 3 397 Hi 4 3,924 7 8 Greymouth High School .. 10 10 0 Hokitika High School .. .. 16 14 6 Rangiora High School .. .. 19 17 7 820 5 4 Christchurch Boys' High | .. 214 0 4 3.914 ii 2 School Christchurch (iirls' High 2,090 18 7 64 4 6i 2.315 9 0 School Akaroa High School .. .. 1 18 (j Ashburton High School 1,284 8 8 63 11 10 1,156 13 4 Timaru High Schools .. 150 7 9 157 4 10 2.052 5 10 Waimate High School .. .. 38 17 10i Waitaki High Schools .. * 1,077 7 1 234 5 8 2,659 15 0; Otago High Schools . . .. 299 5 9 5,289 5 111 Southland High Schools .. Ill 10 0 3,169 0 0 £ s. d. tool 100I )0l '. '. 934 13 3 .1 rh 2,090 18 7 1,284 8 8 150 7 9 .'.' *l,O77 7 1 9 £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. I £ s. d. £ s. d. 62 0 5 725 10 0j .. 0 12 0 45 12 U 34 6 11 5 17 11 158 12 2 .. 15 17 o] 164 6 11 1,212 16 3 612 2 4 6,945 0 8' .. 75 5 7 I 397 16 1 1,437 14 1 2,895 3 4 182 15 01 132 I Ii 5,550 14 0 18,228 12 1 42 18 8 l>70 16 8| .. .. 47 13 0 67 Ii 5 114 13 0 128 7 8 .. 30 L8 Ii 720 4 II 1,822 18 10 75 0 5 1,456 2 8| 247 5 6 100 1 7 109 7 6 122 18 6 822 2 8 15 13 0 .. 7 13 11 982 11 7 3,938 17 * 176 9 0 2,854 19 4 2,336 2 9 " 67 12 8 66 0 0 109 15 3 2,247 10 10 .. 18 1 6 199 7 1 .. 8,074 18 6 293 3 0 6,735 9 8 .. 77 4 8 115 8 7 876 6 1 2,556 11 2 161 Lβ 5 511 4 10 85 17 4 .. ! 11,413 1 9 149 13 5 2,478 17 4 .. 108 15 2 82 9 1 204 16 I 979 6 0 1,017 16 2 2 6 6 KIT 6 7 I,li84 18 I 6,816 4 6 194 15 11 1,280 12 8 42 8 8 151 3 8 94 7 0 147 2 3 4,512 1 3 1,454 1 0 137 7 6 80 12 0 6 I 0 8,100 12 9 62 4 7 1,006 10 0i .. 29 9 9 S3 17 8 66 19 9 884 0 6 .. 10 6 161 l> 2 306 4 0 2,601 12 11 397 16 4 3,924 7 8 4,493 19 9 371 2 7 438 18 6 315 5 5 887 3 4 93 3 3 500 (1 (I 45 113 709 16 9 13.111 18 1 10 10 0 .. .. .. •• .. .. .. .. 200 (I (I 1,628 10 4 1,839 0 4 16 14 6 .. .. 1 ii 2 7 .. .. .. 130 0 0 1,621 15 0 i .77-4 12 1 19 17 7 820 5 4 .. Hi 13 9 •■ 43 16 8 411 9 0 .. .. 24 16 Ii 225 6 ."> 1,556 5 3 214 II 4 3.914 Ii 2 .. 78 3 3 8 16 4 167 1 3 365 19 7 270 1 11 175 (I 9 l>37 HI !l 547 14 9 6.378 15 1 64 4 el 2.315 It 0 50 0 0 125 18 2 38 8 9 88 19 4 219 0 6 91 17 4 .. 12 16 I .. 5.097 11 3 1 18 6 .. .. 2 18 l> .. 2 I!) 6 2 6 9 2 2 0 .. 100 0 0 475 1 8 587 6 11 63 11 10 1,156 13 4 .. 14 8 Hi 74 2 l> 107 7 2 402 4 3 10 0 0' 68 4 Ii 58 15 .. 3.239 2 7 157 4 10 2.052 5 III .. 79 0 9 63 13 4 140 11 2 1.021 Iβ 7 54 18 0 1 .. .. .. 3,719 18 3 38 17 10i .. .. 151 8 0, 13 3 1 .. .. .. 140 13 3 2,965 1(1 8 3,309 12 10 234 5 2,659 15 0 .. 33 2 3 39 4 9 238 11 5 2,087 1 1 52 9 0 39 1 1 6 89 11 11 .. (i..-,.-,l) 18 9 299 5 9 5 289 5 11 .. 44 13 11 23 7 6 440 12 10 8,817 6 II 329 4 11 151 4 0 52 19 9 .. 15,448 I Ii 111 10 0 3,169 0 0 .. 23 18 11 29 5 0 355 8 1 284 17 8 950 6 11 33 15 0 546 3 7 1.674 !l 2 7,178 14 4 £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ a. d. £ s. < 0 12 0 45 12 U 34 6 11 5 17 11 158 12 2 75 5 7 .. 397 15 1 1,437 14 7 2,895 3 4 182 I.". 47 13 0 67 Ii r> 114 13 0 128 7 8 247 5 6 101) I i 109 7 6 122 18 6 822 2 8 15 13 0 2,336 2 9 ' 67 12 9 66 0 0 109 15 3 2,247 10 10 .. IS 1 77 4 8 115 8 7 876 l> 1 2,556 11 2 161 16 5 511 4 1 108 15 2 82 9 1 204 16 1 979 6 0 1,017 16 2 2 6 42 8 8 151 3 6 94 7 0 147 2 3 4,512 I 3 1.454 1 0 137 7 29 9 9 83 17 8 66 19 9 884 II I! .. 10 4,493 19 9 371 2 7 438 18 6: 315 5 5 887 3 4 93 3 3 r>00 0 :: :: ::• r« 7 :: :: :: 111 13 '■• • ■ 43 16 8 411 9 0 78 3 3 8 16 4 167 1' 3 365 19 7 270 1 11 17."> h 50 0 0 125 18 2 38 8 9 88 19 4 219 0 6 91 17 4 2 18 l> . . 2 I!) 6 2 6 9 2 2 0 14 8 Hi 74 2 l> 107 7 2 402 4 3 10 0 0' 68 4 79 0 9 63 13 4 140 11 2 1.021 Iβ 7 54 18 0 151 S o .. 13 3 I 33 2 3 39 4 9 238 11 5 2,087 11 52 9 0 39 II 44 13 11 23 7 6 440 12 10 8,817 6 II 329 4 11 151 4 23 18 11 29 5 0 355 8 1 284 17 8 950 t> 11 33 15 d. £ s. d. I £ s. d. £ s. d. I 15 17 0] 164 6 11 1,212 16 3 (I 132 I 6 5,660 14 0 18,228 12 1 30 18 l> 7211 4 II 1.822 18 10 7 13 11 982 11 7 3.938 17 4 6 199 7 1 . . 8,074 18 6 10 85 17 4 . . I 11,413 1 9 I) 1(17 (i 7 I,li84 18 I 6,816 4 5 6 80 L2 0 6 1 0 8,100 12 9 8 Lβ] (i 2 306 4 0 2,601 12 II II +5 113 709 16 9 13.111 18 1 200 (I 0 1,628 10 4 1.839 (I 4 130 0 0 1,621 15 0 1.774 12 I 24 16 6 225 (i ."> L.656 S 3 9 637 10 '.i 547 It ii 6,378 15 ! 12 16 I .. 5,097 II 3 100 0 0 475 1 S 587 Ii II Ii 58 I .-> .. 3,239 2 7 3,719 18 3 140 13 3 2,96.-, In X 3,309 12 10 6 89 110 . . 6,550 18 9 0 52 19 9 .. 15.448 I Ii 0 546 3 7 1.674 !l 2 7.178 14 4 £ s. d. £ 8. Totals .. 5,537 15 4 3.298 5 5 49.455 7 3 3,298 5 5 49.455 7 "a 7,169 16 8 1,545 14 0J1359 12 5 3,947 4 10 28,059 3 7 7,685 13 I 1.820 11 7,169 16 S 7 2.S59 2 8 19,263 ."> 3 132.001 12 1 PalmerstonN. High School .. 149 17 9 1,630 16 8; Dannevirke High School .. 1 15 9 933 10 10 Gore High School .. .. 68 14 8 919 8 4 B. Secondary Schools established under Section 94 of the Education Act. 465 3 0 74 14 3 49 3 9 79 15 7 2,589 13 71 22 9 4 38 15 0 104 18 2 378 19 6 5 12 7 88 15 2 71 17 11 1,318 0 0 49 9 II 1.905 19 II 6.994 14 5 7 7 3 271 0 1 J,758 15 111 ii7 19 0 702 16 3 3,243 3 U Totals ..I .. 220 8 10 220 8 2 3,483 15 10 465 3 0 102 16 2176 13 11 256 11 s 4,286 13 11 .. 465 3 0 102 16 2176 13 11 256 11 8 4,286 13 l| 124 Iβ 2\ 2,879 16 3 11,996 14 3! 124 16 2| 2,879 16 3 11,996 14 3 C. Endowe Wanganui Collegiate School .. 525 13 4 3,566 19 0] J Christ's College Grammar 1,959 12 2 289 11 2 3,518 2 0 School C. Endowed Secondary Schools not coming within the Definition of Section 89 of the Edw 3,566 19 0: 9,055 6 1, 87 7 (i 23 0 0 116 18 4 19,862 10 8 3,518 2 0 .. : 822 15 10: .. 312 11 9 1,345 19 6 1,195 9 8 ed Secondary Schools not coming within the Definition of Section 89 of the Education Act. 9,055 6 1, 87 7 6 23 (1 0 116 18 4 19,862 10 8 822 15 10: .. 312 11 9 1,345 19 6 1,195 9 8 46 18 tion Act. 33,237 14 Hi 6 1,020 13 11 .. 10,511 14 6| 1,020 13 II 33,237 14 H 10,511 14 6 46 is 6 l Totals .. 1,959 12 2 815 4 6 7,085 1 0; ! 7,085 1 0: 9,055 6 9,055 6 1 910 3 4. 23 0 0 429 III 1 21,208 10 2J 1,195 9 8 46 18 I 91(1 3 4 23 0 0 429 in 1 21,208 10 2J 1,195 9 8 46 18 6! 1 6 1,020 13 11 .. 43,749 9 5 1,020 13 111 43,749 9 5' Grand totals .. 7,497 7 6 4,333 18 160,024 4 I II 60,024 4 1 16.690 5 9 6.690 5 9 2,558 13 61559 6 4 4,633 6 7 53,554 6 loi 8,881 2 9 1,867 10 2,558 13 61559 It 4. 4,633 6 ' 53,554 6 10 8.881 2 9 I 1,867 10 lj I 1 4,004 12 9 ! 22,143 1 187,747 15 9 4,004 12 9 22,143 1 6 187,747 16 9 • Balance, £1 ,112 7k. Jd.. less £ 3:"> credit balance brought forward from 1909 = £ 1,077 7s. Id.
K-β
TABLE K8.—Summary of School Commissioners' Accounts in respect of Secondary Education Reserves for the Year 1910.
TABLE K9.—Lower Departments of Secondary Schools.
TABLE K10.—List of Secondary Schools incorporated or endowed.
TABLE L1.—District High Schools: Attendance, Staffs, Salaries, etc., in Secondary Departments, 1910.
20
Provincial District. Receipts from ! Paid for Secondary Secondary Reserve, j Education. Vusl«4a frnm ' Pr Receipts from ' Pi econdary Reserve. 'aid for Seconder: Education. Auckland Taranaki Wellington Hawke's Bay Marlborough Nelson Westland Canterbury Otago.. ■ ■ i £ s. d. 728 15 7 509 10 10 2,447 8 5 996 18 0 39 0 0 434 8 6 94 11 6 916 17 6 £ s. d. 544 18 9 400 0 0 800 0 0 867 0 0 65 0 0 520 0 0 100 0 0 901 5 (> Totals for 1910 |— I 6,167 10 4 4,198 4 3 Totals for 1909 6,529 13 8 4,627 15 9
School. Number Proportion of Tntol Teee of Annual Rate of p~..tvBrt fnr Vpm Pupils. Salary of Teachers. | Rcceived ,or YeM - Wanganui Girls' College Wellington College (Boys') Wellington College (Girls') Napier High School (Boys') Napier High School (Girls') Gisbornu High School (Boys') .. Marlborough High School (Boys') Nelson College (Boys') Nelson College (Girls') Christchurch Boys' High School Christchurch Girla' High School Christ's College Grammar School Waitaki Boys' High School 14 21 13 46 39 6 3 12 Iβ 20 10 48 23 £ 8. d. 110 0 0 162 0 0 134 0 0 266 (i 0 205 0 0 45 o 0 24 o 0 158 6 8 100 0 0 167 0 0 103 1!) (I 400 0 0 150 0 0 £ s. d. 123 17 0 203 14 8 111 (> o :!4l 14 i> 271 13 8 42 0 0 25 13 0 115 0 0 146 12 0 167 0 0 103 19 0 433 4 9 162 0 0 Totals .. .. 270 2,024 5 8 2,247 14 I
Name. Act of Incorporation or Institution. Remarks. Whangaroi High School .. • • 1878, No. 63, Local .. Auckland Grammar School .. •• 1899, No. 11, Local. Auckland Girls' Giammar School .. 1906, No. 18, Local. Thames High School 1878, No. 54, Local. New Plymouth High School .. ■ • 1889, No. 2, Local. Wanganui Girls' College .. .. 1878, No. 42, Local .. Wanganui Collegiate School .. .. [Nil Act may be repealed by Gazette notice under Act of 1885, No. 30. Board identical with Education Board. Endowment, Reg. I, fol. 52. See also D.-16, 1866, p. 9. i Scheme of control, Gazette, 1904, Vol. i, p. 903. Palmerston North High School .. .. 1904, No. 20, section 88 | Wellington College and Girls' High School 1887, No. 17, Local. Dannevirke High School .. .. 1904, N-. 20, section 88 Napier High Schools .. .. ■• 1882, No. 11. Local. Oisborno High School j 1885, No. 8, Local .. Marlborough High School .. ■ ■ 1899, No. 27. Local .. Nelson College 1858, No. 38, and 1882, No. 15, Local. Greymouth High School .. .. 1883, No. 21, Local .. Hokitika High School 1883, No. 7, Local .. Rangiora High School .. .. .. 1881, No. 15, Local. Christehurch Boys' High School .. 1878, No. 30, Local .. Christchurch Girls' High School .. "Nil] Scheme ofcontrol, Gazette, 1905, Vol. ii, p. 2407 Scheme of control, Gazette, 1909, Vol.i, p 1110. ! Board identical with Education Board. Not in operation in 1910. I Not in operation in 1910. Under management of Canterbury College. Under management of Canterbury College. Endowment, Gazette, 1878, Vol. i, p. 181. I A department of Christ's College, Canterbury. Christ's College Grammar School .. Canterbury Ordinance, 1855 Akaroa High School .. .. • ■ 1881, No. 16, Local .. ishburton High School .. ■ • 1878, No. 49, Local. Timaru High School 1878, No. 26, Local. Waimate High School .. .. ■ • 1883, No. 19, Local .. Waitaki High School 1878, No. 18, Local. . Otago Boys' and Girls' High Schools .. 1877, No. 52, Local. Gore High School 1904, No. 20, section 88 Southland Boys' and Girls' High Schools 1877, No. 82, Local. Not in operation in 1910. ' Not in operation in 1910. Scheme of control, Gazette, 1908, Vol. ii, p. 1798.
Education District. •S la |i . as s"§s son ■<$ S5 5 a . ,,, , , Number of Teachers Mean ot Average Weekly < e v C hi.Hne HeadKoll of Four Quarters. ( teachfrs) Paid in Salaries st t , Government, at End of Year. M. F. Total. M. F. Total. Auckland Taratiaki Wanganui Wellington Hawke's Bay Nelson Grey Westland North Canterbury South Canterbury Otago Southland 11 1 s 3 4 1 1 8 8 ; 3 300 95 223 356 108 97 41 41 287 127 249 34 177 55 144 i 174 64 47 22 25 187 68 150 15 161 52 113 210 52 71 23 20 187 70 128 24, 338 107 ; 257 384 116 118 15 45 ; 324 138 278 39 j 7 2 7 6 8 1 1 1 8 5 4 I 4 13 ■2 i I 4 j 1 8 3 £ s. d. 15 2,952 18 8 3 I 555 0 0 11 2,095 11 4 19 3,273 9 5 0 8S6 5 0 5 1,020 0 0 2 375 0 0 2 375 0 0 12 2,611 14 9 6 1,124 10 0 13 2,407 1 8 3 553 0 11 £ s. d. 3,021 10 0 555 0 0 2,065 0 0 3,231 0 0 930 0 0 1,020 0 0 375 0 0 375 0 0 2,626 5 1 1,126 3 4 2,335 0 0 550 0 0 Totals for 1910 61 1,958 1,128 ; 1,061 2,180 15 50 95 18,239 11 4 18,259 18 Totals for 1909 62 1,944 ! 1,100 ' 1,063 2,168 43 50 93 1 18,617 12 5 18,103 8 I 43
E.—6.
TABLE L2. Further Details relating to Secondary Departments of District High Schools. Staff and Pupils of Secondary Departments of District High Schools, 1910.
21
Note.—In the colt School, and " A " Assist The salaries set dov Second Schedule of the I Each of the four Nor regulations for training-c ;olumn listant lown i e Educ Jormal g-collei lumn taut wn ii Educ rmul colle| i for "Position on Staff," (7), "M" and "F" distinguish sex, "H" mean in the Secondary Department. n column (8) are in accordance with the rates in the table and paragraph (a) of cation Amendment Act, 1908. 1 Schools, although not a district high school, has a secondary department in aocort ges. s Head of a Part V of the iance with the 1 id School. «f h ID > 2 arc ir i-. ai .r a SIS t. :i 1 Staff. M. ii ii of Average Amount paid in Weekly Roll of Salaries (luring four Quarters, 1910. Year from 5 6 7 1 Keceipts from Nam,, nf Teacher Classification. Position M. F. Total. Government. Name ot LeaUit.1 or Degree. onStaff. 7 Position on Staff. H Statutory Annual Rates of Salary at End of Year. 9 < Jfl Auckland— Aratapu Cambridge Coromandel Hamilton West .. Normal Onehunga 26 18 ■,. 46 35 32 12 16 28 210 0 0 Hockin, Harry .. .. Dl . H.M. Killon, John .. C3 j A.M. 9 12 21 215 0 0 i Walker. William R. C .. B.A., Bl ! H.M. Gavey, Annie L. .. C2 A.F. 16 13 29 220 0 0 ! Tanner, Thomas B. .. Dl H.M. Gatland, Alfred H. .. D2 A.M. 31 26 57 385 0 0 I Worsley, William H. .. Dl H.M. Wilson", Ebenezer .. M.A., Ai A.M. Collins, Edith C B.A., B3 A.F. Hi 21 37 280 0 0 j Cousins, Herbert G. .. M.A., Al H.M. Shrewsbury, Elsie .. M.A., Al A.F. 22 16 38 405 0 0 Mcintosh, William N. .. Dl H.M. Kenny, Arthur A. .. Dl A.M. Patterson, Florence I. .. M.A., B3 A.F. 21 20 41 365 0 0 Murphy, Francis .. 01 H.M. Meredith, Charles .. C2 A.M. Gibbons, Naomi I. .. B.A. A.F. 'J 7 16 215 0 0 Flavell, Dennis R. .. Dl H.M. Dromgool, James C. .. B.Sc, A2 A.M. 11 161 185 0 0 Bowden, Alfred N. .. CI H.M. Taylor, Fanny J. .. B.A., B4 A.F. 14 5 19 210 0 0 Burton, Alfred F. .. Dl H.M. Neve, Frederiok .. M.A.,l,L.B.,Bl A.M. 22 14 36 262 1H 3 Benge, Alfred .. .. Dl H.M. Robertson, May B. .. B.A. A.F. Metcalfe, Marion H. ..| B.A. A.F. H.M. j A.M. ! H.M. i I A.F. H.M. A.M. H.M. A.M. A.F. H.M. A.F. j H.M. A.M. A.F. : H.M. A.M. A.F. H.M. A.M. H.M. A.F. H.M. A.M. H.M. A.F. A.F. £ s. d. 30 0 0 180 0 o 30 0 0 185 0 0 30 0 0 190 0 0 30 0 0 210 0 0 145 0 0 30 0 0* 250 0 0 30 0 I) 210 0 0 165 0 0 30 0 0 200 0 0 135 0 0 30 0 0 185 0 0 30 0 0 155 0 0 30 0 0 180 0 0 30 0 0 180 0 0 121 10 0 Paeroa 10 Pukekohe West .. 13 Tauranga 15 Te Aroha 17 Waihi 34 Taranaki— Stratford 98 55 52 107 555 0 0 Tyrer, Florence A. R. .. Dl H.M. Heatley, Frederick J. .. M.A., M.Sc., A2 A.M. Bollinger. Elsie M. .. M.A. A.F. ; Bowler, Frederick 0. .. B.A. A.M. 56 H.M. I A.M. A.F. A.M. 30 0 0 215 0 0 165 0 0 145 0 0 Wanganui— Bull's 10 Eltham Peilding Hawera Marton 16 47 34 28 i 6 5 11 182 1 8 Gray, Joseph H. .. Dl H.M. Thomas, William W. .. C5 A.M. 8 10 18 180 0 0 Thomas, Taliesin .. Dl H.M. Jackson, Heibert W. .. C4 A.M. 28 27 55 358 16 4 Hill, John D. C. CI H.M. Bates, Frederick A. ..I B2 A.M. Wyatt, Gladys M. .. 03 A.F. 23 18 41 351 0 0 Strack, Conrad A. .. Dl H.M. Strack, Constance T. ..j B.A., B4 A.F. Reid, Jessie B. .. .. B.A., B3 A.F. I 17 14 3li 180 8 4 j Mossman, Edwin .. ; CI H.M. I Lyne, Christopher J. .. B.A., B3 A.M. 10 7 17 241 13 4 Robbie, George A. .. Bl H.M. Martin, Frederiok W. . .. B3 A.M. ! 19 12 31 226 5 0 Thurston, James F. .. Dl H.M. Poole, Samuel J. .. C3 ! A.M. I 33 20 53 375 6 8 Aitken, James .. .. B.A., Bl H.M. Barton, Frazer B. .. B.A., B5 A.M. Gordon, Jessie .. .. B.A. . A.F. 21 23 8 18 H.M. A.M. H.M. A.M. ! H.M. A.M. A.F. i H.M. A.F. ' A.F. H.M. A.M. H.M. A.M. H.M. A.M. H.M. A.M. A.F. ; 30 0 0 150 0 0 30 0 0 150 0 0 30 0 0 180 0 0 145 0 0 30 0 0 180 0 0 145 0 0 30 0 0 150 0 0 30 0 0 200 0 0 30 0 0 200 0 0 30 0 0 180 0 0 145 0 0 17 Patea 14 10 I Taibape 26 19 Wanganui 48 33 Wellington— Carterton 35 25 13 38 349 3 4 Burns, Andrew N. B.A., Bl H.M. Morgan, Frederick J. .. M.Sc, A4 A.M. Morton, Lucy S. .. B.A., B4 A.F. 18 16 34 346 8 3 j Charters, Alexander B. .. M.A., Bl H.M. Kidson, George R. .. 03 i A.M. McLandress, Isabella .. M.A., B2 ' A.F. I y 16 25 210 0 0 : Yeats, Duncan M. .. Dl H.M. Myers, Phoebe .. .. B.A.,B2 : A.F. i 26 18 44 353 14 6 ; Mclntyre, James .. Dl H.M. Rockel, Cecil F. .. Lie. A.M. . Livingstone, Fanny R. .. M.A., B3 A.F. 33 28 61 574 3 4 j JackBon, William H. .. Dl I H.M. Bee, John G. .. .. M.A., Al j A.M. Williams, Ethel B.A., B2 A.F. Ziman, Rachel L. L. .. C4 A.F. 5 28 33 380 0 0 Parkinson, Henry A. .. M.A., Bl H.M. Rowley, Elizabeth M. .. M.A., Al A.F. Wilson, Marion K. .. M.A., Al A.F. 16 33 49 425 0 0 ' Webb, James C.. .. B.A., Bl H.M. Hind, Edith M... .. M.A., A4 A.F. Lanaster, Thomas L. .. D4 , A.M. Neilson, Florence .. M.A., B5 A.F. ! McRae, Rebecca F. .. D5 A.F. H.M. A.M. A.F. H.M. A.M. A.F. H.M. A.F. H.M. A.M. A.F. H.M. A.M. ' A.F. A.F. H.M. A.F. A.F. H.M. ■ A.F. A.M. A.F. A.F. 30 0 0 180 0 0 135 0 0 30 0 0 180 0 0 145 0 0 30 0 0 180 0 0 30 0 0 171 0 0 140 0 0 30 0 0 230 0 o 175 0 0 135 0 0 30 0 0 185 0 0 165 0 0 30 0 0' 140 0 0 120 0 Of 90 0 Of 15 0 Of 35 25 Grey tow n 32 32 18 Hutt 23 23 9 25 Levin 39 39 26 41 Masterton 57 57 33 28 61 Newtown 31 31 28 33 Normal .. 45 18 16 33 19 ! * Also included in Appendix E, E.-2. t Special temporary arrangement.
22
E.—6
Staff and Pupils of Secondary Departments of District High Schools, 1910 — continued.
1 School. a 3 i j 5, , o Meanof Average Amount paid in "Jo Weekly Roll of Salaries during — u S .[FourQuarters. 1910 Year from >«u Receipts from <t<a M. | V. 1'otal. Government. 5 Name of Teacher. stair. 8 Statutory „ 7 Annual Rates ] Classification Position SlalrfVeiir I or Degree, on Staff. M l ' n " ot * Bal - Wellington— contd. Pahiatjia .. 28 12 Petone .. .. 66 30 I Hawke's BayHastings .. 45 27 Waipawa .. 41 21 Woodville .. 22 18 18 30 40 70 21 48 20 44 11 24 230 0 0 Thomas, Joseph .. .. CI H.M. i Baker-Gabb, Mrs. Man .. B A., Bl i A.F. 405 0 0 Foster, William H. L. .. M.A., Bl H.M. Lynskey, James H. CI A.M. Ross, Christina M. .. | B.A., Lie. A.F. 355 0 0 Pegler, Leonard F. .. B.A.. Bl H.M. Atkinson, Thomas S. 03 A.M. Hodgson, Ruth J. .. 02 j A.F. 321 5 0 Watson, John D. .. M.A., Bl H.M. Keane, Jeremiah .. C3 A.M. Smith, Rose M. .. .. 01 A.F. 220 0 0 Stevenson, Andrew .. 01 i H.M. Hoult, William H. .. M.A., A4 A.M. £ s. d. 30 0 0 200 0 0 30 0 0 240 0 t) 135 0 0 30 0 0 180 0 0 145 0 0 30 0 0 190 0 0 135 0 (I 30 0 0 190 n O Nelson — Motueka .. 18 12 Reefton .. .. 22 18 Takaka .. .. 20 9 Westport .. 87 18 10 22 12 25 19 28 80 43 190 0 0 | Griffin, Thomas J. .. CI H.M. Stoddart, Franois .. B.A., Bl A.F. 210 0 0 ! Austin, William S. .. Bl H.M. Ironside, Anne F. .. M.A., Lie. A.F. 220 o 0 i Boyes, William H. .. Dl H.M. Ainsworth, Emma F. .. B.A., B2 A.F. 400 0 0 Harkness, James H. .. B.A., Bl H.M. Gifford, Arthur J. .. M.A.. Al A.M. McElwee, Elizabeth .. D3 ; A.F. 30 0 0 160 0 0 30 0 0 L80 o ii 30 0 0 190 0 0 30 0 0 225 0 0 145 0 0 GreyGrey mouth .. 41: 22] 23 45 375 0 0 Adams, Alan A. .. .. Dl H.M. Talbot, Arthur E.< .. M.A., D2 A.M. Thompson, Marion .. Dl ■ A.F. 30 0 U 200 0 0 145 0 0 Westland — Hokitika .. 41 25 20 15 375 0 0 i Wake, Hugh G. .. .. B.A, Bl H.M. Williams, Henry .. M.A., 01 A.M. Olliver, Margaret F. L. .. if .A., H.Se., A4 A.F. 30 0 0 200 0 0 145 0 0 North Canterbury— Akaroa .. 14 10 Chrietohurch West 156 106 Kaiapoi .. .. 21. 9 Kaikoura Town .. 17 10 Lincoln .. .. 17 7 Lyttelton .. 21 21 Normal .. 12 7 Southbridge .. I 29 17 8 18 63 169 13 22 9 19 13 20 4 25 9 16 18 35 220 0 0 i Hall, Charles .. .. C2 H.M. Gray, Alexander .. B.A., Al A.M. 1.011 9 o Caugbley, John .. .. M.A., Bl H.M. Waller, Francis D. .. B.A., Bl A.M. Irwin, James .. .. CI A.M. Finlayson, Annie 0. .. M.A..A3 A.F. Hansard, George A. .. C3 A.M. Hassall, Edith G. .. B.A., B3 A.F. 210 0 0 Bean, William D. .. Bl H.M. Mayne, Arthur J. .. M.A., B2 A.M. 190 0 0 Allison, Herbert H. .. Dl H.M. Herriott, Elizabeth M. .. M.A. A.M. 190 0 0 Cookson, Arthur .. Dl H.M. Osborn, Mabel E. .. B.A., B3 A.F. 265 5 9 Just, EmileU. .. .. Dl H.M. ; Burley, William E. B.A., B2 A.M. 305 0 0 ! Aschman, Christopher T. .. CI H.M. Mcllwraith, James W. .. M.A., LL.B, A.M. Litt.D., Al 220 0 0 Walker, Joseph W. A. .. CI H.M. Glanville, Gertrude M. .. CI A F. 30 0 II 190 0 0 30 0 0 316 19 4 180 0 ii 170 0 0 190 0 0 140 0 0 80 o o 180 0 0 30 0 0 160 0 0 30 0 0 160 0 0 30 0 0 235 5 9 30 0 0* 275 0 0 30 0 0 190 0 0 21 7 17 South CanterburyPleasant Point .. 27 10 Temuka .. .. 46 26 Waimate 54 82 Otago— Balclutha .. 36 23 Lawrence .. 36 19 Mosgiel .. .. 25 20 Naseby .. .. 12 ; 10 Normal .. .. 36 21 Palmerston .. 30 20 20 30 24 50 26 58 15 38 25 44 8 28 4 14 20 41 14 34 365 8 4 Palmer, George T. .. M.A., Bl H.M. Tait, George A. .. .. 03 A.M. Watt, Alice .. .. B.A., B4 A.F. 374 3 4 McLeod, Murdoch .. B.A., Bl H.M. Giimour, William O. .. 02 A.M. Walton, William .. B.A. A.M. 384 18 4 Pitcaithly, George B.A., Bl H.M. Laing, Thomas M. M. .. B.A., Bl A.M. Metson, James .. .. B5 A.M. 355 0 0 McElrea, William B. E. .. Bl H.M. Robertson, Thomas G. .. 04 A.M. Dare, Olive J. M. .. B2 A.F. 385 0 0 Robertson, John .. B.A., B.Sc.Bl H.M. Strachan, James E. .. M.A., B2 A.M. Patterson, Janet .. M.A., Bl A.F. 220 0 0 Moir, John H. .. .. B.A., Bl H.M. Bressy, Florence F. .. M.A., A2 ; A.F. ; 180 0 0 Jack, James A. .. .. Bl H.M. Jennings, Margaret A. .. B.A., B4 A.F. i 415 0 0 Pinder, Edward.. .. M.A., Al H.M. Moore, John A. .. .. B.A., A2 A.M. Kenyon, Helen M. ; B.A., B3 A.F. 220 0 0 Rutherford, John R. .. M.A., Al H.M. ! Cox, Annie .. .. M.A., A3 A.F. 30 0 0 2011 0 0 135 0 0 30 0 0 200 0 0 135 0 0 30 0 0 231 3 4 135 0 0 30 0 0 180 0 0 145 0 0 30 0 0 210 0 0 145 0 0 30 0 0 190 0 0 30 0 0 150 0 0 30 0 0* 240 0 0 125 0 0 30 0 0 190 0 U * Also included in A; >endix K B.-B.
23
E.—fi.
Staff and Pupils of Secondary Departments of District High Schools, 1910 — continued.
TABLE KL1.—Number and Value of Junior National Scholarships.
Note.—Eight Junior Queen's Scholarships were held in 1910—6 by boys and 2by girls. Six of these (boys) expired at the end of 1910, and the remaining two will expire at the end of 1911 j they are now incorporated with the Junior National Scholarships.
TABLE KL2.—Number and Value of Education Board Scholarships.
I School 2 3 4 a , d Mean of Average Amount paid in g>1 3 Weekly Koll of salaries durins : 1 § » 1910. Year from > *= « I Receipts from j«!<«Sf M. F. |Total. Government. 5 Name of Teacher. Staff. G Classification or Degree. 8 Statutory Annual Rates 7 of Salary Position jat End of Year on Staff. J Hago— con United. Port Chalmers .. 18 Tapanui .. .. 24 9 9 18 182 1 8 12 14 26 220 0 0 I Booth, George P. Sinclair, Agnes .. Mackie, William W. Campbell, Eliza Graham, Walter B. Ferguson, Albert J. £ e. a. B.A., Bl H.M. , 30 0 0 C3 A.P. 150 0 0 CI H.M. 30 0 0 M.A., A2 A.F. 190 0 0 CI H.M. 30 0 0 .. M.A., Bl A.M. 200 0 0 Tokomairiro .. 32 16 19 35 230 0 0 icmthland— Arrow .. .. 9 4 7 11 182 10 0 Blackie, Walter G. Opie, Gwen L. F. Clark, William H. Dale, Margaret P. Hewat, Ebenezer C. Hamilton, Janet A. M.A., A8 H M. 30 0 0 .. U.A., M.Sc. A5 A.P. 150 (I 0 B.A., Bl H.M. 30 0 0 M.A., B4 A.F. 150. 0 0 B.A., Bl H.M. 30 0 0 l>2 A.F. 160 0 0 Lumsden .. 11 6 7 13 180 10 11 Riverton .. .14 5 10 15 190 0 0 Totals, 1910 .. 1,958 I : 1,1281,0612,189 18,239 11 4 .. 18.259 18 5
Education District. Total Number held in December; 1910. Boys. Girls. Total. Receiving Boarding- \ Receiving Travelling- 2 a allowance (included in : allowance (included in j~13 Total Number). Total Number). gS« Boys. ! Girls. [ Total. Boys. ! Girls, j Total. =«t» J I I j L_ I L IS*-a Si M 9*>a ■ " ° S.S3 Auckland Taranaki Wanganui Wellington Hawke's Bay Marlborough Nelson Grey Westland North Canterbury South Canterbury Otago Southland Totals, 1910 Totals, 1909 17 6 23 ..336 8 2 10 8 2 10 ..4 5 9 .... 4 4 ..325 .. 3 .. 3 ..3 .. 3 7 6 13 .. 3 2 5 9 4 13 ..718 75 37 ' 112 | ' 71 «87 108 12 1 13 21 1 .. 1 4 2 .. 2 9 2 1 3 11 2 8 1 4 5 8 ! •■ * 2 2 4 4 2 .. 2 2 1 1 3 4 7 12 1 .. 1 1 .. 1 j 2 3 2 5 12 4 1 5 8 ! i ; 34 j 16 I 49 I 2 1 3 94 36 18 54 1 .. 1 95 21 2 4 2 9 1 8 2* 8 1 4 4 1 2 1 3 12 1 2 3 12 1 8 £ 2 620 2 90 1 209 2* 190 1 240 40 1 170 1 90 3 60 1 340 3 90 1 280 230 18 2,649 13 2,748 £ 620 90 209 190 240 40 170 90 60 340 90 280 230 94 18 95 13 2,649 36 I 18 ; 54 1 1 2,748 . i I i I 1 i • in le at Technical School.
Number held in Di 1910. icember, Kducatiou District. Period of Tenure. Boards' Expenditure on Scholarships in 1910. Annual Value, &c. Boys. Girle. Total. Auckland Taranaki Wanganui 70 13 24 30 6 16 Years. 100 : 3 19 2 40 1,2, or 3 £ S. d. 2,418 6 5 371 18 8 till 19 1 44 at £40, 56 at £10. 9 at £35, 1 at £11 183. 6d., 1 at £10, 8 at £5. 11 at £40, 5 at £23 10s., 9 at £21, 15 at £10. 20 at £40, 1 at £8 5s., 1 at £8 4s., 1 at £8, 1 at £6 10s., 1 at £6 7s. 6d., 8 at £6 5s. 1 at £6 2s. 6d., 51 at £5. 11 at £30, 1 at £12 10s., 13 at £10, 4 at £8 10s., 2 at £7 10s., 32 at £2 10s. 1 at £15, 7 at £10, 1 at £7, 7 at £2. 8 at £40, 10 at £2. 10 at £l 5s. 1 at £26, 5 at £8. 2 at £24, 1 at £8, 4 at £4. 13 at £30, 43 at £10. 5 at £27, 1 at £19, 2 at £12, 2 at £10, 19 at £7. 17 at £40, 51 at £10. 17 at £30, 29 at £5. Wellington 50 35 85 2 1,156 8 0 Hawke's Bay 41 22 63 2 629 16 8 Mailborough Nelson .. Grey Westland North Canterbury South Canterbury 7 12 2 4 B7 18 9 16 4 3 19 16 16 2 28 2 6 2 7 2 50 i or 3 29 i 2 111 17 3 365 0 0 83 10 0 72 0 0 903 5 9 339 6 7 Otago Southland 49 27 : 19 19 68 [ 2 or 3 46 ; 2 or 3 1,217 10 0 656 5 0 Totals, 1910.. 349 214 563 9,232 3 5 Totals, 1909.. 326 207 533 8,693 19 9
E.—6
24
3. REPORTS OF GOVERNING BODIES.
WHANGAREI HIGH SCHOOL. Staff. Mr. B. [iUpton ; Mr. H. E. G. Smith; Miss A. L. M. Woolley; Miss B. Blumhardt; Mr. (i. Woolley; Miss B. Griffiths. 1. Report of the Board of Governors. I have the honour to forward herewith the annual returns in connection with the Whangarei High School for the year ended 31st December, 1910. Duringjthe year the school has made satisfactory progress. The Board of Governors are endeavouring tojestablish a boarding-school in connection with the High School, and for this purpose have secured some 3 acres of land adjoining the High School site in Manse Street. From local contributions promised, and a grant agreed to by the Minister of Education for this purpose, the Board hopes to see the building erected in due time. This will be of great value to those pupils attending the High School who have to reside away from home during their terms at school. Towards the end of May last the Rev. L. L. Cubitt resigned his position as a member of the Board of Governors, on account of his removal from Whangarei. The Board placed on record its appreciation of Mr. Cubitt's long and useful .service in connection with secondary education. The Rev. J. L. Pattullo was appointed by the Auckland Board of Education to succeed the Rev. L. L. Cubiri. J. McKinnon. Secretary. 2. Work ckf the Highest and Lowest Classes. Highest.- —English —Nesfield's English Past and Present ; books set for Senior Civil Service. Latin —Bradley's Arnold ; Bryan's Prose ; Virgil's Aeneid VIII ; Horace, Epistles I and II ; Cicero's De Amicitia ; Roman History. French — Weekley's Prose ; Wellington College Grammar ; set books for Senior Civil Service. Mathematics —Hall and Knight's Trigonometry and Algebra (higher) ; Hall and Stevens's Geometry, as for Junior University Scholarship ; mechanics, Bryan and Briggs; heat, Stewart. Geography—Commercial syllabus for Senior Civil Service. Lowest.- —English- —Nesfield's English Grammar and Composition, Parts I and II ; Temple Reader ; Kingsley's Heroes ; Wordsworth, selections ; Tennyson's Morte d'Arthur ; dictation and essays. History—General introduction : Struggle for Freedom. Latin — Macmillan's First Latin Course French —Siepmann's First Year. Arithmetic—General revision, stocks, mensuration ; algebra— Hall and Knight, to simultaneous equations. Geometry—Hall and Stevens, Part I. Physical measurements —Kerr's First Year. Book-keeping —Thornton's First Year. Drawing—Freehand, brush, from nature ; elementary plane and solid geometry. Manual—Woodwork (boys) ; cookery (girls). ■ J >. General Statement of Accounts foh the Year ended 31st December, 1910. Receipts. £ s. d. Expenditure. £ s. d. Balance at beginning of year .. .. 110 4 5 Management— Receipts from Government— Office salary .. .. .. 55 12 10 For free places .. .. .. H6G 13 4 Other office expenses.. .. .. 5 16 7 For recognized school classes for manual Teachers' salaries and allowances .. 725 10 0 instruction .. .. .. 12 14 6 Prizes.. .. .. .. .. 0 12 0 Endowments— ! Material for classes other than classes for Current income from reserves.. .. 106 7 0 manual instruction .. .. .. 4 6 10 Paid by School Commissioners .. 41 5 0 Printing, stationery, and advertising .. 13 16 7 School fees .. .. .. .. 75 Vi 0 Cleaning, fuel, light, &c. .. .. 16 H 6 Maintenance of classes for manual instruction .. .. .. .. 45 12 11 Fencing, repairs, &c. .. .. .. 17 0 Miscellaneous (rates, &c.) .. .. 4 10 11 Site or buildings .. .. .. 148 12 R Miscellaneous (surveys, &o.) .. .. 919 (> Cricket and tennis grounds (improvements) 12 6 6 Cadet Corp expenses .. .. .. 3 10 0 Bank charges and interest .. .. 0 11 0 Balance at end of year .. .. .. 164 611 £1,212 16 3 £1,212 16 8 Statement of Monetary Assets and Liabilities at 31st December, 1910. Assets. £ s. d. Liabilities. £ s. d. Cash in Bank of New Zealand .. .. 151 12 5 School prizes .. .. .. .. 5 7 4 Cash in hand .. .. .. .. 12 14 6 Printing and advertising .. .. 0 7 0 Outstanding school fees.. .. .. JC> 12 0 Due on school-site .. .. .. 300 0 0 Outstanding rents .. .. .. 44 7 0 Due on site for sohool boarding-house .. 1,000 0 0 Government capitation, free place scholars 291 18 4 *526 19 3 £1,305 14 10 J. McKinnon, Secretary. Examined and found correct. —R. J. Collins, Controller and Auditor-General.
25
E.—6
AUCKLAND GRAMMAR SCHOOL. Staff. Boys' School—Mt. J. W. Tibbs, M.A. ; Mr. J. H. Turner, M.A. ; Mr. H. J. D. Mahon, B.A. ; Mr. F. Heaton, M.A., B.Sc. ; Mr. J. G. Trevithick, M.A. ; Mr. J. Drummond, M.A. ; Rev. J. K. Davis, M.A. ; Mr. ]». Drummoml, B.A. ; Mr. J. D. Dinneen, B.A. ; Mr. F. W. Gamble, M.A. ; Mr. D. A. Watt, B.A. ; Mr. H. W. King ; Mr. G. P. O'Shannassy, Ph.D., B.A. ; Mr. G. T. Maunder, M.Sc. ; Mr. A. B. Jameson ; Mr. K. J. Dellow. Girls' School— Miss E. G. Wallace ; Miss A. C. Morrison, M.A. ; Miss F. E. A. Grellet; Miss J. Moore, 8.A., M.Sc. ; Miss W. Picken, M.A. ; Miss F. V. J. Jacobson, M.A. ; Miss E. M. Griffin, M.A. ; Miss F. E. Macdonald, B.A. ; Miss M. A. Dive, B.A. ; Miss D. R. Robertson, M.A. ; Miss E. M. Johnston, M.A. ; Miss E. M. Pickering, B.A. ; Miss E. R. Dickinson, B.A. ; Miss M. McLean, B.A. ; Mr. K. Watkins ; Mrs. S. Heap ; Miss K. Grellet; Miss E. Whitelaw. 1. Report of the Board op Governors. Auckland Grammar School (Boys). Progress c/ School. —The year 1910 has been a very marked year in the history of the school, in consequence ot the large increase in the attendance of schoolboys. The school commenced in 1869 with an attendance of under 100 ; the number now nearly reaches 500. This large increase is mainly attributable to the free places of the educational system, under which parents are relieved from payment of school fees at secondary schools, such fees being paid by the Government. The change effected m.iy be shown by stating that the paying pupils numbered, in 1910, 35, and the non-paying pupils 456. Distinctions. —W. M. Jones and R. F. Ellis won Junior Scholarships of the University ; and C. C. Marsack and K. MacCormick were awarded and J. M. McKenzie and C. E. Clayton declined Senior National Scholarships. Forty others passed the entrance examinations of the University. Among old boys, K. Sisam won the Rhodes Scholarship ; S. W. Ziman, a former Rhodes Scholar, graduated B.A. at Oxford with first-class honours in mathematics, and passed the Indian Civil Service Examination ; J. F. Brown graduated M.B. and Ch.B with first-class honours, and C. B. Tudehope with secondclass honours, at Edinburgh ; J. F. S. Northcroft graduated B.Sc. at the University of California ; P. S. Vickerman graduated as F.R.C.S. of London. Cadet Corps. —The establishment at the end of 1910 was 465. The old girls of the school have given a King's and regimental colours to the battalion. These were made in London under the direction of Colonel Sir Arthur Hammond, V.C., X.C.8., D.5.0., from designs approved by the Hon. Mr. George Fowlds when Acting Minister of Defence. The colours were presented to the battalion by Field-Marshal Viscount Kitchener at the review in the Auckland Domain on the 2nd March. The School. —There were 491 boys on the roll during the first term of 1910, of whom 456 boys held free places and for whom the Government paid at the rate of £4 Is. 9d. a term for each pupil. Prizes. —The Hm. J. G. Findlay, LL.D., Attorney-General, kindly presented the prizes to the boys at their annual distribution in the Choral Hall on the 15th December, 1910. Sixty-five prizes were given to the boys ; their total cost was £44 13s. sd. Two prizes were again given by Mr. J. P. Hooton for English essays, and one for practical chemistry by Mr. P. M. Mackay, J.P. New School. —Before concluding this report, I deem it right to state that an urgent necessity has arisen both for a larger school building and a convenient playground, and I have no doubt that with the kindly co-operation of the Government these two matters will be speedily and satisfactorily arranged in the interest of the schoolboys and their parents. Auckland Girls , Grammar School. Headmistress. —On the 24th June the headmistress, Miss A. W. Whitelaw, M.A., T.C.D., retired from the service of the Board to take up the position of headmistress of Wycombe Abbey School, England ; and Miss E. G. Wallace, senior mistress, was appointed to temporary charge. Miss Blanche Butler, B.Sc, London, vice-principal of the Liverpool College for Girls, was selected out of 107 applicants. Mistresses. —The staff was increased in February, 1910, by the appointments of Miss E. R. Dickinson, 8.A., Miss E. M. Johnston, M.A., and Miss E. M. Pickering, B.A. In September the vacancy caused by the retirement of Miss Vernon Harcourt was filled by Miss J. Moore, 8.A., M.Sc. A year's leave of absence was granted at the end of 1910 to Miss Jacobsen to enable her to obtain further experience in English schools. Distinctions. —At the examinations in December two girls passed with credit the Junior Scholarship Examination of the University, and fifteen matriculated. Seventeen passed the Civil Service Junior Examination, four with credit; six passed the Senior District Scholarship Examination under the Auckland Education Board, and fifty-nine gained Senior Free Places. Library. —ln September a school library was opened with about 350 volumes, which were chiefly presented by old girls of the school. Grounds. —During the year the formation of the grounds has been proceeded with, and a level playground of nearly three-quarters of an acre has been drained, levelled, and grassed. The embankment along the northern boundary has been completed to the same level as the road, and the gully filled in to the same level, providing space for tennis-courts to be laid out when the ground consolidates. The fences on the Hjme Street and Smith Street boundaries have been erected, thus completing the fencing of the site at a cost of £620. Prizes. —The girls' prizes were distributed by the Hon. Dr. Findlay on the 15th December, 1910. There were sixty-six prizes, costing £30 12s. 2d. Increase of Pupils. —There has been a considerable increase in the number of schoolgirls, the number having risen from 287 in 1909 to 350 in 1910. G. Maurice O'Rorke, M.A., LL.D., Chairman.
4—E. 6.
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2. Work of the Highest and Lowest Classes. Highest. — Boys , School: English—Shakespeare, The Tempest, and A Midsummer Night's Dream ; Milton, Paradise Lost, Books I and II ; Chaucer, Prologue, Golden Treasury ; Lamb, Oxford Plain Texts ; Addison, Coverley Papers ; Mandeville to Euskin (World's Classics). Latin-—Livy, XXI ; Virgil, Aeneid, IX ; Horace, Epodes and Ars Poetica ; Sallust, Catiline ; Cicero, Select Orations and De Amicitia ; Smith's History of Rome ; Bradley's Arnold ; Sargent's Latin Prose. French —Wall's Concise French Grammar ; Victor Hugo, Les Miserables ; Le Cent Meilleurs Poems (Gervan and Gray). Mathematics—Baker and Bourne's Geometry ; Todhunter and Loney's Algebra ; Hall and Knight's Trigonometry; Ward's Trigonometry Exercises. Science —Edser's Heat for Advanced Students; Shenstone's Chemistry. Girls' School: Mathematics—Baker and Bourne's Geometry ; Borchardt's Trigonometry, Parts I and II ; Borchardt's Algebra, Part II ; Todhunter and Loney's Algebra ; Jones and Cheyne's Algebraic Examples ; Ward's Exercises in Trigonometry. Science—Heat, Glazebrook ; mechanics, Jessop, Loney ; botany, Scott's Flowering Plants, Scott's Flowerless Plants. English— The Merchant of Venice ; Chaucer's Prologue and Man of Law's Tale ; Fowler's Selected Essays ; Selections from Tennyson ; Historical Grammar ; Golden Treasury. History—Outlines of European History. Roman History—Wilkins's Roman Antiquities; Shuckburgh's Short Roman History. Geography — Colonies and Colonial Federation (Payne). French—Rey's Composition; Le Pficheui d'lslande ; Le Baron de Fourchevif. Latin—Bradley's Arnold ; Sergeant's Latin Prose Composition ; Livy, XXII ; Horace, Odes, Book I ; Virgil, Aeneid, Book I; Cicero, Select Oration. Lowest. — Boys , School: English —Nesfield's Outlines ; Temple Reader ; Scott, Lay of the Last Minstrel; Lamb, The Adventures of Ulysses. Latin—Postgate's Shilling Primer ; Elementa Latina ; Invasion of Britain. French —Bell's French Course, Part I; Janan's French Reading-book. Mathematics —Loney r,nd Greville's Shilling Arithmetic ; Longmans' School Algebra ; Baker and Bourne's Geometry. Geography—Longmans' Geographical Series, The World! Girls , School: Mathematics— Borchardt's Junior Arithmetic ; Borchardt's Junior Algebra ; Baker and Bourne's Geometry. English- —Nesfield's Outlines ; World of Books ; Lay of the Last Minstrel ; Hiawatha. History— Arabella Buckley. French —Contes et Legendes. Latin—Ora Maritima ; Scalae Primae ; Limen ; Caesar, Invasion of Britain. Geography —No text-book ; lessons given from notes. 3. General Statement of Accounts for the Year ended 31st December, 1910. Receipts. & 8. i. Expenditure. £ s. d. Balance at beginning of year .. .. 1,732 14 7 Secretary's expenses .. .. 182 0 0 Government capitation for free places .. 8,190 111 ! Commission, &c, tooollector. &c. .. 365 12 5 Current income from reserves .. .. 5,277 2 6 I Other expenses .. .. .. 64 911 Maungaru 192 19 2 Teachers' salariesPaid by School Commissioners .. .. 637 14 0 Masters .. .. .. .. 4,415 8 8 School fees .. .. .. .. 722 15 0 Mistresses .. .. .. .. 2,529 12 0 Other receipts— Election expenses .. .. .. 0 19 6 Sale of old buildings .. .. 54 0 0 School requisites— Pire insurance, Devonport property .. 1,222 0 0 Boys .. .. .. .. (>7 7 5 Interest on Auckl.nd City Council De- Girls .. .. .. .. 132 11 3 bentures .. .. .. .. 199 0 0 : ScholarshipsInterest on deposit in Post-Office Savings- Boys .. .. .. .. 44 13 5 Bank .. .. .. .. 0 4 11 Girls .. .. .. .. 30 12 2 Printing and advertising — Boys .. .. .. .. 28 10 6 Girls .. .. .. .. 41 9 9 Cleaning, fuel, light, &c. — Boys .. .. .. .. 42 0 0 Girls .. .. .. . . 66 18 2 Stationery allowance — Boys ' .. .. .. .. 10 12 0 Girls .. .. .. .. 8 0 0 Insurance — Boys' school .. .. .. 23 7 5 Girls' school .. .. .. 15 5 4 Site, buildings, furniture, &c— From Government grants — Ordinary property .. .. .. .. 66 2 5 Prom current revenue— Boys .. .. .. .. 480 6 0 Girls .. .. .. .. 918 15 10 Property .. .. .. .. 654 18 2 Bates on property .. .. .. 409 18 1 Cleaning, property .. .. .. 18 18 0 Interest on girls' school building .. 102 15 0 Interest on loans to property .. .. 80 0 0 New buildings .. ■ .. .. 1,745 6 8 Members' travelling-expenses .. .. 12 0 0 Wellington conference .. .. 41 2 0 Sports—Boys' school .. .. .. 36 0 0 Girls' sohool .. .. .. 2 0 0 Teacher's passage to London .. .. 40 0 0 Balance at end of year .. .. .. 5,550 14 0 £18,2-28 12 1 £18,228 12 1
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John Williamson Scholarship Trust Account. Capital Account. f s. d. £ s. d. Balance, Ist January, 1910 .. .. 1,300 0 0 Balance, 31st December, 1910— Deposit in Bant of New Zealand—Public buildings debentures .. .. 200 0 0 Auckland Gas Company shares.. .. 220 0 0 Property, Symonds Street, Auckland .. 700 0 0 Auckland Savings-bank deposit .. 80 0 0 Post-Office Savings-bank deposit .. 100 0 0 £1,300 0 0 £1,300 0 0 Income Account. £ s. d. : £ s. d. Balance, Ist January, 1910 .. .. 248 12 9 Scholarship .. .. .. .. 10 0 0 Rent .. .. .. .. .. 62 10 0 Bank of New Zealand, commission .. 0 0 9 Interest on debentures, Public Trustee .. 11 13 8 Insurance .. .. .. .. 18 0 lni'Tcst, Auckland Gas Company .. 19 6 1 Repairs .. .. .. .. 15 9 5 Interest on deposit, Auckland Savings-bank 312 8 Balance, 31st December, 1910 .. .. 322 11 7 Interest on deposit, Post-Office Savings-Bank 3 14 7 £349 9 9 £349 !) 9 Contractors , Deposit Account. £ s. d. £ s. d Balance, Ist January, 1910 .. .. 10 0 0 Refunded .. .. .. .. 97 0 0 Deposits received .. .. .. 102 0 0 Balance, 31st December, 1910 .. .. 15 0 0 £112 0 0 £112 0 0 Statement of Balances, 31st December, 1910. Accounts. £ c. d. Bank. Credit, Contractors' Deposit Account 15 0 0 £ a. d. „ John Williamson Income Account .. 322 11 7 Auckland City Council debentures .. 5,000 0 0 „ .General Account .. .. 5,550 14 0 In Bank of New „ John Williamson Capital Account on Zealand ..£1,139 6 6 current account .. .. 200 0 0 Less unpresented cheqnes .. 78 5 0 £1,061 1 6 In Auckland Savings-bank .. 13 19 6 In Post-offioe Savings-bank .. 13 4 7 ■ 1,088 5 7 £6,088 5 7 £6,088 5 7 Statement of Monetary Assets and Liabilities at 31st December, 1910. Assets. £ s. d. Liabilities. £ a. d . Bank balances, — Contractor's Deposit Account .. .. 15 0 0 In Bank of New Zealand.. £1,139 6 6 | Loan from Auckland Diocesan Pension Board, Less John Williamson de- under Auckland Grammar School Act, posit, Bank of New Zea- 1899, section 27, due 1906 .. .. 1,000 0 0 land .. .. 200 0 0 Loan from C. F. Jahn, Esq., under Auck939 6 6 land Grammar School Act, 1899, section 27, Deposit in Post-office Savings-bank .. 113 4 7 due 1919 .. .. .. .. 500 0 0 ~ Auckland Savings-bank .. 93 19 6 Unpresented cheques .. .. .. 78 5 0 Fees outstanding .. .. • • 2,873 0 8 Rents outstanding— Ground 693 16 8 Weekly .. 38 19 6 John Williamson Trust .. .. .. 1,100 0 0 City Council debentures .. .. 5,000 0 0 £10,852 7 5 * £1,693 5 0 Rent Account Balance. £ s. d. I £ 8. d. Arrears, 1909 .. •• •• •■ 620 6 0 Collected .. .. .. .. 5,470 1 8 Charges 1910 .. .. •• •• 5,605 19 10 Williamson .. .. .. .. 62 10 0 Williamson 62 10 0 Arrears, 1910 fj732 16 2 Written off .. .. .. .. jf. 23 B>XO £6,288 15 10 £6,288 15 10 W. Wallace Kidd, Secretary. Examined and found correct, except that the following payment lias no authority of law, and is therefore disallowed : Travelling-expenses, Wellington conference, £il 2s.—H. J. Collins, Controller and Auditor-General.
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THAMES HIGH SCHOOL. Staff. Mr. R. E. Rudman, M.A., B.Sc. ; Mr. C. A. Stewart, M.A. ; Miss M. Foy. 1. Work op the Highest and Lowest Classes. Hv/hest. —Latin—Via Latina (whole book) ; Allen's Latin Grammar ; Caesar, Book VI; Aeneid, IX ; selections from Ovid's Metamorphoses. English —Nesfield's Manual ; Meiklejohn's Art of Writing English; Shakespeare's Hamlet; Scott's Quentin Durward; general reading of the novels of Charles Dickens. French —Macmillan's Second and Third French Course ; Jules Verne, Au Pole en Ballon ; Do Musset's Merle Blanc ; specimens of modern French prose (Berthou). Science —Chemistry, matriculation syllabus, with common salts and qualitative analysis. Mathematics—Geometry, Hall and Stevens, Books I-IV ; algebra, Hall and Knight, to quadratics, with simpler logarithms ; Lock's arithmetic to matriculation standard ; Loney's Trigonometry. Book-keeping —Exercises from Nixon's Book-keeping. Lowest. —Latin —Macmillan's Shorter Latin Course, Part I ; Scalae Primae. English —Nesfield's Manual of English Grammar, selected parts ; Tennyson's Mortc d'Arthur, Lady of Shallott ; Washington Irving's Rip van Winkle, &c. French —Dent's First French Book. Science—Physical measurements (based on MoSat's Practical Physics). Geometry —Hall and Stevens, Book I ; algebra —Baker and Bourne, to simultaneous equations ; arithmetic —Loney and Greville, whole book. Geography —Europe and British possessions. History—l6BB-1800. Book-keeping —Thornton's First Lessons. 2. General Statement of Accounts for the Year ended 31st December, 1910. Receipts. £ s. d. Expenditure. £ s. d. Balance at beginning of year .. .. 402 10 4 Management— Government capitation— Offioe salary .. .. .. .. 30 0 0 For free places .. .. .. 528 0 2 Other office expenses .. .. .. 6 0 0 For recognized school classes for manual Teachers' salaries and allowances .. 670 16 8 instruction .. .. .. 14 19 8 Material for classes .. .. .. 38 16 5 Rents.. .. .. .. .. 611 5 1 Printing, stationery, and advertising .. 3 8 6 Goldfields revenue .. .. .'. 74 15 8 Cleaning, fuel, light, &c. .. .. 25 1 6 Paid by School Commissioners .. .. 67 6 8 Maintenance of classes for manual inSchool fees .. .. .. .. 99 8 9 struction .. .. .. . . 47 13 0 Interest on current account .. .. 14 13 0 Purchases and new works .. .. 102 12 10 Rent .. .. .. .. .. 919 0 Miscellaneous (rates, &c.) .. .. 12 0 2 Endowments, Sales Account— Legal expenses .. .. .. 20 14 2 Buildings .. .. .. .. 68 17 6 Management, &c. .. .. .. 38 16 0 Other expenditure— Cadet uniforms .. .. .. 4 0 0 Miscellaneous .. .. .. 4 2 0 Legal expenses .. .. .. 6 18 8 Sohool Library .. .. .. 7 15 0 Capitation, technical classfs .. .. 15 1 6 Balance at end of year .. .. .. 720 4 11 £1,822 18 10 £1,822 18 10 Henky Lowe, Chairman. Jas. Kbbnick, Secretary. Examined and found correct.—R. J. Colt,ins, Controller and Auditor-General. Statement of Monetary Assets and Liabilities at 31st December, 1910. £ s. d. Balance credit Bank of New Zealand .. .. .. .. 47 10 10 Bulanoe credit Post Office Savings Bank .. .. .. .. 719 17 1 Jas. Kernick, Secretary. » •
NEW PLYMOUTH HIGH SCHOOL. Staff. Mr. E. Pridham, M.A. ; Miss C. D. Grant, M.A. ; Miss G. A. Drew, M.A. ; Mr. A. R. Ryder, M.A.; Mr. H. H. Ward ; Mr. G. H. Wills ; Mr. Lints. 1. Work of the Highest and Lowest Classes. Highest. —Arithmetic—General, Junior University Scholarship Standard. Algebra—Hall and Knight's Higher Algebra, to end of permutations and combinations. Geometry—Hall and Stevens, Books I-VI inclusive. Trigonometry —Lock, to chapter 19. Mechanics—Briggs and Bryan, Matriculation Mechanics, the whole ; Briggs and Bryan, Hydrostatics ; Loney's Mechanics. English— Nesfield's Grammar; Tutorial English ; Morris and Skeat's Specimens of Early English ; Henry V ; Samson Agonistes; Miscellaneous Specimens of Literature ; The King's English ; Greenough and
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Kittredge, Words and their Ways in English Speech. Latin —-Parts of Ramsay, Books I and II; Bradloy's Arnold; Aenoid, Book I ; Horace, Epistles, Book I; Horace, Odes, Book I (half) ; Caesar, Book VII; Cicero, Do Officiis, Book III; selections from Livy. History- —Gray's Roman History; Shuckburgh's Roman History ; Primer of Roman. History ; Primer of Roman Antiquities. French— Siepmann's Grammar ; Wellington College Grammar ; Chardenal's Advanced Course ; Pellissier's Unseens ; Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme ; Taine's Voyagojaux Pyrenees ; Half-hours with French , Authors. Botany —Parts of Strasburger ; Dendy and Lucas ; Lawson ; Thompson. Lowest. —Arithmetic—G.C.M., L.C.M. ; metric system ; practice ; vulgar and decimal fractions ; mensuration of rectangular and solid figures ; simple and compound interest ; simple and compound proportion; discount, profit and loss; problems and contracted multiplication. Algebra—Borchardt, examples 1 to 20 inclusive, and easy graph problems. Geometry —Hall and Stevens, theorems 1-29, problems 1-15, riders to end of page 59. Latin —Scott and Jones, Part I, the whole (omitting page 66 and 133-135, and vocabularies 118 and 119). French—Methode Naturelle, lessons 1-48 inclusive ; verbs avoir, etre, first conjugation regular verbs, and verbs found in the lessons generally. English Grammar —Nesfield's Manual of Grammar and Composition, Chapters 2 to 10 ; punctuation, correction of sentences, parsing, analysis, and Seventh Standard cards. Composition —Essay and precis writing, paraphrasing. Literature — Macaulay's Horatius and Lake Regillus ; Dickens's Cricket on the Hearth and Christmas Carol. Botany (girls) —Gillies's Plant Life in Australasia, pages 1 to end ; natural orders, Compositae, Rosaceae, Liliaceae, Ranunculaceae, Cruciferae, Myrtaceae. Chemistry (boys) —Newth's Chemistry ; states of matter, chemical action, hydrogen, oxygen, chlorine, water ; Boyle and Gay, Lussac laws, atomic theory, air, nitrogen, nitric acid, ozone, and carbon. Drawing —Drawing in light and shade from flat examples of rigid forms, and from models and casts, as laid down in section 21 (a) 6of Technical School Regulations. Cookery—Technical School course for first half of year. Dressmaking—Technical School course for second half of year. Physical Drill. 2. General Statement of Accounts for the Year ended 31st December, 1910. Receipts. £ b. d. | Expenditure. £ s. d. Balance at beginning of year .. .. 1,217 C 4 ■ Management— Government grant— Office salary .. .. .. .. 60 0 0 For sites, building, furniture, &c. .. 336 18 6 Other office expenses .. .. .. 12 5 2 Government capitation — Other expenses of management .. 2 15 3 For free places .. .. .. 534 12 2 ! Teachers' salaries and allowances .. 1,456 2 8 For recognized school classes for manual Boarding-school Account — instruction .. .. .. 93 7 6 Fees .. .. .. .. 40 19 0 Current income from reserves .. .. 967 10 4 Furnishing .. .. .. .. 164 6 6 Interest on moneys invested and on unpaid Rent .. .. .. .. 42 0 0 purchase-money .. .. .. 46 1 6 Examiners' fees .. .. .. 68 15 0 Paid by School Commissioners .. .. 400 0 0 PrizesSchool fees .. .. .. .. 135 9 0 School .. .. .. .. 26 6 7 _~,.. f 40 19 0 Sports .. .. .. .. 500 Boarding-school fees (164 6 6 Printing, stationery, and advertising .. 45 15 6 Refund, insurance .. .. .. 0 7 10 Cleaning, fuel, light, &c. (caretaker, £6712e.) 77 3 0 Refund, science material .. .. 1 18 8 Government grant —Science-room .. 336 18 6 New lawn .. .. .. .. 35 2 0 Soience building .. .. .. 196 4 1 Science building equipment .. .. 176 2 4 Fencing, repairs, &c. .. .. .. 40 11 5 Rates, &c. .. .. .. .. 34 16 3 New flag .. .. .. .. 2 8 1 Reserves .. .. .. .. 15 13 0 Taranaki Education Board — Towards salaries of instructors, Technical School .. .. .. .. 30 0 0 Capitation on technical classes .. 79 7 6 Advance cadets (since refunded) .. .. 4 0 0 Opening science-room, tea .. .. 3 13 11 Balance at end of year .. .. .. 982 11 7 £3,938 17 4 £3,938 17 4 N. K. MacDiarmid, Chairman. Walter Bewley, Secretary. Examined and found correct, except that the'payment of £3 13s. lid., "Opening scienceroom, tea," is without authority of law, and is therefore disallowed.—R. J. Collins, Controller and Auditor-General. Statement of Monetary Assets and Liabilities at 31st December, 1910. Assets. Liabilities. £ s. d. £ s. d. Fees unpaid .. .. .. .. 13 13 0 Unpresented cheques .. .. .. 13 17 2 Rents unpaid .. .. .. .. 65 0 3 Overpaid rents .. .. .. 0 0 7 Cash in banks .. .. .. .. 996 8 9 £1,075 2 0 £13 17 9 N. K. MacDiarmid, Chairman. Walter Bewley, Secretary.
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WANGANUI GIRLS' COLLEGE. Staff. Miss M. I. Fraser, M.A. ; Miss S. E. Gifford, M.A. ; Miss J. Knapp, B.A. ; Miss J. R. Currio, M.A. ; Miss A. Blennerhassett, B.A. ; Miss E. M. Mclntosh, M.A. ; Miss J. 0. Abemethy, M.A. ; Mies F. J. Grant, B.A. ; Miss V. H. Bayly ; Miss J. Cherrett; Miss J. W. Gow, L.A.8., A.T.C.L. ; Mr. D. Seaward ; Miss M. Browne ; Mr. F. L. Peck; Miss G. Mcßeth ; Miss E. L. Croucher; Miss C. C. H. Rockel. 1. Work of the Highest and Lowest Classes. Highest. —English —As for teacher's C certificate. Mathematics, Latin, French, mechanics, mental science, education, German —As for B.A. degree. (Note —A selection of subjects is made to suit individual needs.) Swimming ; breathing exercises ; extension exercises. Lowest. —Arithmetic —Simple and compound rules. English—Robinson Crusoe ; Lays of Ancient Rome ; simple parsing and analysis ; spelling and dictation. Geography —Most noteworthy features of earth's surface. History—Britannia History Readers, Book I. French —Chardcnal, Book I (part). Needlework ; swimming ; breathing exercises ; extension exercises. 2. General Statement of Accounts fok the Year ended 31st December, 1910. Receipts. £ s. d. Expenditure. £ s. d. Balance at beginning of year .. .. 958 5 4 ManagementGovernment capitation for recognized school Office salaries.. .. .. .. 150 0 0 classes for manual instruction .. .. 20 15 0 Other office expenses .. .. .. 26 9 0 Subsidy on voluntary contributions, second- Teachers'salaries and allowances .. .. 2,854 19 4 ary schools .. .. .. •■ 30 0 0 Boarding-school account .. .. .. 2,336 2 9 Current income from reserves .. .. 354 13 6 Examinations— Interest on money invested and on unpaid Examiners' fees .. .. .. 15 15 0 purchase-money .. .. .. 80 0 0 Other expenses .. .. .. 5 10 Paid by School Commissioners .. .. 151 6 8 Prizes .. .. .. .. .. 46 16 9 School fees .. .. .. •• 2,823 15 4 Material for classes other than classes for Boarding-school fees .. .. .. 3,283 17 6 manual instruction .. .. .. 13 18 9 Books, &c, sold and other refunds .. 7 11 8 Printing, stationery, and advertising .. 76 11 9 Voluntary contributions on account of Cleaning, fuel, light, &o. .. .. .. 19 4 9 general purposes of the school .. .. 30 0 0 Maintenance of classes for manual instruoChurch sittings .. .. .. 47 16 6 tion .. .. .. .. .. 65 0 0 Contractor's deposit .. .. .. 70 0 0 Purchases and new works .. .. 1,870 1 7 Dr. balance at end of year .. .. 216 17 0 Fencing, repairs, &c. .. .. .. 176 10 1 Caretaker and grounds .. .. .. 70 411 Miscellaneous (rates, &c.) .. .. 130 14 3 Interest on current account .. .. 18 1 6 Contractor's deposit .. .. .. 70 0 0 Insurance .. .. .. .. 36 8 7 Bank charge .. .. .. .. 015 0 Fees refunded .. .. .. .. 9 8 0 Church sittings .. .. .. .. 52 8 0 Part address to Miss Fraser .. .. 30 7 6 £8,074 18 6 £8,074 18 6 Examined and found correct, except that the payment of £30 7s. 6d., part cost of an address to Miss Fraser, is without authority of law, and is therefore disallowed. —R. J. Collins, Controller and Auditor-General. Statement of Monetary Assets and Liabilities, 31st December, 1910. Assets. £ s. d. Liabilities. £ s. d. Cashinhand .. .... .. 0 0 2 Bank balance .. .. .. .. 1,724 18 5 Bent arrears .. .. .. ■■ 15 0 0 Outstanding cheques .. .. .. 91 18 9 Oustanding fees'.'. .. .. ■• 274 6 7 Sundry accounts .. .. .. 15 0 9 Amount on mortgage .. .. .. 1,600 0 0 Assembly hall—Due to contractors .. 369 18 9 £1,889 6 9 £2,201 16 8 Fred Pirani, Chairman. W. J. Carson, Secretary. WANGANUI COLLEGIATE SCHOOL. Staff. Rev J L Dove, M.A. ; Mr. J. E. Bannister, M.A. ; Mr. F. L. Peck ; Mr. G. F. McGrath, M.A. ; Rev. C. Price' MA- Mr J Allen B A • Mr. J. A. Neame, B.A. ; Mr. B. D. Ashcroft, B.A. ; Mr. H. M. Butterworth ; Mr. C. HCrombie, M.A. ; Mr. H. E. Sturge, M.A. ; Mr. A. P. Hodges, B.A. ; Mr. C. T. Cox ; Mr. L. J. Watkins. 1. Work of the Highest and Lowest Classes. Highest.—Vγ to University Scholarship standard. Divinity—Bible. Latin—Cicero, Second Philippic ; Catullus ; Latin translation at sight ; Bradley's Composition. French—Tartarin de Tarascon ; Bourgeois Gentilhomme ; Le Cid, Selections from French Poetry ; Duhamel's Prose. Pellissier's Unseens (senior). English—Autocrat at the Breakfast Table ; Paradise Lost ; Hale's Longer
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English Poems ; Chaucer ; King Lear ; Nesfield's English Past and Present. Mathematics—Arithmetic, Pendlcbury ; algebra, Baker and Bourne ; geometry, Baker and Bourne ; trigonometry, Borchardt and Perrott. Chemistry—Tutorial and practical. Heat—Notes and practical. Lowest.— Latin—Scott's First Latin course. Divinity—Bible and catechism. French—Rossmann and Schmidt, Part I ; Jack's Language Series. Arithmetic—Pendlebury. Algebra—Baker and Bourne. Geometry—Baker and Bourne. Physical measurements—Drawing. English—Kingsley's Heroes ; Southey's Nelson; Laureata ; Nesfield's Elementary Grammar. History—Meiklejohn ; Carmina Britanniae. Geography —Oxford Preliminary. 2. General Statement of Accounts for the Year ended 31st December, 1910. Receipts. £ s. d. Expenditure. £ s. d. Balance in hand and in bank at beginning Managemento f year . .. •• 1,795 610 Office salaries .. .. .. 188 10 10 Current income'from reserves .. .. 1,735 15 9 Other office expenses 105 15 4 Interest on money* invested and on unpaid Other expenses of management .. 281 7 2 purchase-money .. .. .. 12 1 0 Teachers'salanes and allowances .. 3 18110 0 School fees .. 2,141 0 0 Medical officer .. .. .. .. 107 5 0 Boarding-school fees 7,057 9 11 Boarding-school Account .. .. 6,568 13 10 Boys' extras 1,994 3 9 Music-teachers 380 9 0 Sundry school fees 606 15 0 Prizes .. .•••-. / • 87 7 G Music fees 402 3 0 Material for classes other than classes for Loan-instalment* from k'. M.P. Society .'.' 16,900 0 0 manual instruction .. .. 67 16 1 Sale of old house .. .... 5 0 0 Printing stationery, and advertising .. 49 2 3 Dr. balance at end of year .. .. 527 19 8 Boys extras .. .. .. 2,879 7 3 Maintenance of classes for manual instruction.. .. .. .. .. 23 0 0 Purchases and new works .. .. 145 4 11 Fencing, repairs, &c. .. .. .. 383 12 4 Miscellaneous (rates, &c.) .. .. 199 011 New buildings,. .. .. .. 19,134 12 6 £33,237 14 11 £33,237 14 11 A. G. Bignell, Chairman. J. P. Williamson, Secretary. Audited and found to be correct.—W. Rodwell, F.1.A.N.Z., Auditor. Statement of Monetary Assets and Liabilities, 31st December, 1910. Assets. £ 8. d. Liabilities. £ s. d. £ s. d. Bents outstanding and due at date .. 572 19 2 Bank .. .. .. .. 513 12 2 Boys'accounts outstanding .. .. 1,128 16 1 ' Plus unpresented cheques .. 14 7 6 Boys' extras paid but not yet charged .. 227 13 1 527 19 8 Prize fund .. .. .. .. 126 14 0 ! Sundry creditors .. .. 88 111 Interestjon loan accrued to date .. 222 011 £2,056 2 7 J £838 2 6
PALMERSTON NORTH HIGH SCHOOL. Staff. Mr. J. E. Vernon, M.A., B.Sc. ; Mr. F. Foote, 8.A., B.Sc. ; Mr. J. Murray, M.A. ; Mr. W. P. Anderson, B.A. ; Miss E. M. B. Lynch, M.A. ; Miss M. Ronaldson, 8.A., B.Sc. ; Miss M. P. Arnott, B.A. ; Mr. G. H. Elliott; Mr. E. Dymock ; Miss M. Watson. 1. Report of the Board of Governors. In accordance with custom, I have much pleasure in giving a report on the working of the school during the year in which I have had the honour to hold the position of Chairman. The work of the school has been carried on under difficulties, owing to the total loss of the building by fire during the first quarter. These difficulties would have been considerably intensified had it not been that the new Technical School was available. But for this, the school-work would have had to be carried on in detached buildings. In spite, however, that one building contained all the pupils, the work has somewhat suffered as compared with the previous year. We may, however, feel proud that, notwithstanding the inconvenience, the work of the year is not below the average of New Zealand. And the teachers, under the able guidance of the Rector, may well be congratulated on the result. When the school was destroyed the Minister of Education was approached and pressed for a sufficient grant to enable the new erection to be of incombustible material, and he recommended the Cabinet to grant the sum of £2,600. which, together with the £1,400 insurance-money, brought the total amount available up to £4,000. However, when tenders were called on a handsome plan supplied by Mr. J. De Clere, and approved by the Department, it was found that the lowest was in the vicinity of £5,000, and to this had to be added the architect's fees and the salary of the clerk of works. Another attempt was therefore made to induce the Minister to give an additional grant to supply the deficiency, but the strongest argument failed to elicit a favourable response to the urgent application for the full amount required. The Minister held that the large assembly-hall in the centre of the building was not a necessity in a high school, and it could only be considered a luxury, though a useful one. He held
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that the demands for educational buildings throughout the Dominion were of so pressing a nature that only actual necessities could be provided by the Government. The members composing the deputation were equally positive that the building classed as a luxury was a necessity, and its deletion would, while detracting from the usefulness of the building, also greatly mar the architecture of the design. Eventually, a compromise was arrived at, the Minister undertaking to find <mi additional £850, which would suffice to erect the part of the building required by the Department, and the deputation, on behalf of the Bop.rd, agreeing to find the money for that part stated to be a luxury. lam satisfied that the assembly-room is a really useful part of the building. The necessity of finding a sum equal to about £600 to complete the building having been pointed out to the Mayoress, that lady kindly consented to organize a movement to supply the Board with the deficiency, and she hopes to complete this good work during the course of the present year. The thanks of the Board are due to Mrs. Nash for her kindly efforts, and I trust the citizens, for whose children the building luis been so thoroughly equipped, will assist by every means in their power. The new building will be ready for occupation during the third week in February, and it is proposed to open it on the 16th instant, if the Minister of Education can be present to perform the ceremony. The contractors are Messrs. Sollitt Bros., who also secured the contract for furnishing. The excellence of their workmanship is apparent to the most casual observer. The new year may therefore be expected to add new laurels to the school; and I believe it will be a year to reflect the greatest credit on teachers and scholars alike. The attendance during the past year has constituted a record, but there is every indication that it will be eclipsed by the attendance during the coming year. The average attendance showed an increase of seventeen over the previous year, and the income from these enabled an additional teacher to be engaged. The increased attendance during the coming year is expected to require the appointment of still another teacher, and this is a matter which will require the Board's immediate attention. In the meantime Mr. Opie is filling the position temporarily. At the end of the last term Miss Lynch, headmistress, resigned, and Miss Ironside has been appointed in her stead, her testimonials being of the most satisfactory nature, and her educational attainments such as to satisfy all requirements. I believe that the choice of the Rector will be amply justified. At the end of the year the Rev. Archdeacon Harper found it necessary to resign, owing to his removal to Wellington, and the annual election failed to secure a member to replace him. The thanks of the Board are due to the reverend gentleman for his excellent work as a governor. While the results of the past year are not quite up to the high standard of the previous year, owing to the circumstances already mentioned, I feel sure that the principles inculcated and the moral lessons taught are fully equal to the highest standard, and of this the Board and the teachers may be justly proud, as the foundations laid during this critical period of the [pupil's life are those on which the superstructure will eventually be erected. Another matter for congratulation is the fact that the educational advantages of a high-school training are beginning to be appreciated by the 'parents, and they are showing a decided tendency towards the extension of the school period. The change effected during the previous year to have separate class-rooms for boys and girls in the lower forms has been continued as far as possible, and the result has exceeded anticipations. The new school is so arranged and furnished as to allow the Rector a chance of extending this principle. The boarding-school has amply justified its existence, and the Rector deserves the greatest praise for his foresight in establishing it. As soon as possible the Board will consider the equipment of the gymnasium, which has already been approved. The playing-grounds are in excellent order, and the footballground in particular has been drier than ever before. The gardens are also being restored to their original beauty, and in a few weeks no trace of the devastation wrought by the fire and the cartage of material will be visible. The financial aspect, apart from the requirements for extra buildings, is healthy, the increased capitation of last year provided by the Department to assist unendowed secondary schools being responsible for this most gratifying position. The balance in hand at the end of the financial year for purely educational purposes is small, being mostly made up of insurance-moneys payable on account of contract for erecting the new school. I have purposely refrained from dealing with the Technical School, as during the past year, for the first time in its history, the Chairman of the Board has not been the Chairman of the Committee in charge of this important branch of education. The experiment of appointing a separate Chairman has proved so eminently satisfactory that it is well worth further consideration. The report of the Technical School Committee will, therefore, appear separately. In conclusion, I desire to thank the members of the Board for their loyal assistance and hearty co-operation during my occupancy of the chair. I retire after a year of office feeling sure that every member of the Board has given me that hearty and unselfish co-operation which goes to make the position of Chairman such a pleasant one. W. H. Collingwood, Chairman. 2. Work of the Highest and Lowest Classes. Highest. —English—Anglo-Saxon Primer (Sweet) ; Middle English Reader, Part II (Morris and Skeat); Morris' Grammar, chapters i-vn ; Shelley, Prometheus Unbound : Milton, Samson Agonistes ; Carlyle, Sartor Resartus ; Shakespeare, Tempest ; Palgrave, Golden Treasury ; Nesfield's English Grammar, Past and Present; essays. Mathematics —Arithmetic, New School Arithmetic (Pendlebury); algebra,! Baker and Bourne's Algebra, Parts I and II ; geometry, Baker and Bourne's Geometry, Books I-VI1; trigonometry, Elementary Trigonometry (Pendlebury). Latin—Caesar, De Bello Gallico, Book VII ; Horace, Epistles, Book I; Matriculation Selections (London University, Tutorial College) Dies Romani (Arnold); Arnold's Latin Prose Composition. French —-Wellington College French
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Grammar ; Spiers's Rapid French Exercises ; Weekley ; French Prose Composition ; essays ; translation ; Dent's French Readers (selections from). Science —Electricity and Magnetism (Poyser and Allanach); Heat, Second Stage Heat (R. Wallace Stewart). Hygiene (Reynolds). Lowest. —English—Nesfield's Outline of English Grammar, Parts I-IV ; Nesfield's Junior Course of English Composition ; Great Authors, Second Period ; Meiklejohn's Spelling-book. Geography— Longmans', Book 11, The World, Europe, and British Empire. History —Warner's Brief Survey of British History. Arithmetic—Zealandia, Standard VI. Algebra—Baker and Bourne, pages 1-144. Geometry—Baker and Bourne, Books I and 11. French —Siepmann's Primary French Course, Part I. Latin —Macmillan's Shorter Latin Course, First Part. Science —Physical measurements. Agriculture. Shorthand—Pitman's Teacher. Book-keeping—Thornton's First Lessons in Book-keeping. 3. General Statement of Accounts foe the Year ended 31st December, 1910. Receipts. £ s. d. Expenditure. £ s. d. Balance at beginning of year .. .. 221 13 3 Management— Government grants— Office salary—Seoretary, £30 ; Caretaker, For sites, building, furniture, &o. (general £112 .. .. .. 142 0 0 purposes) .. .. .. .. 2,070 0 0 Other office expenses —Postages and office For buildings, furniture, fittings, and ap- rent .. .. .. .. 7 17 9 paratus for recognized school classes for j Teachers' salaries and allowances.. .. 1,630 16 8 manual instruction .. .. .. 12 6 6 Boarding-school Account .. .. 465 3 0 Science class .. .. .. .. 50 0 0 Scholarships .. .. ■ .. .. 40 0 0 Government capitation— Prizes .. .. .. .. .. 34 14 3 For free places .. .. .. 1,906 4 11 Material for olasses other than classes for For recognized school classes for manual manual instruction .. .. .. 14 911 instruction .. .. .. .. 85 2 5 Printing, stationery, advertising, and books 77 17 10 Paid by School Commissioners .. .. 148 9 4 Cleaning, fuel, light, &o. .. .. 117 9 School fees .. .. .. .. 192 8 4 Maintenance of classes for manual instruc-Boarding-school fees .. .. .. 465 3 0 tion .. .. .. .. .. 27 10 5 Interest on current account (Manson Site, buildings, furniture, &o. (Governlegacy, £10 10s.; on fixed deposit, £1010s.) 21 0 0 ment grant) .. .. .. .. 2,070 0 0 Voluntary contributions— Purchases and new works— On account of general purposes of the Architect's fees .. .. .. 238 8 6 school .. .. .. .. 717 6 On buildings and furniture .. .. 256 14 9 On account of recognized school classes Miscellaneous (rates, &c.) .. .. 24 10 4 for manual instruction .. .. 87 11 2 Sports material.. .. .. .. 35 0 0 Insurance on building destroyed .. .. 1,400 0 0 Refund, Wanganui Education Board (overInsurance on furniture and apparatus .. 282 17 6 charge manual capitation, 1909) .. 21 13 4 Net proceeds sale of fire debris .. .. 20 11 6 Balance at end of year .. .. .. 1,905 19 11 Refund, exchange on insurance cheques .. 2 2 0 Net proceeds elocutionary competition .. 21 7 0 £6,994 14 5 £6,994 14 5 W. H. Collingwood, Chairman. William Hunter, Secretary. General Statement of Monetary Assets and Liabilities at 31st December, 1910. Liabilities. £ s. d. Assets. £ s. d. Balance of contract, new school .. .. 3,065 0 0 Cr. balance, bank .. .. .. 1,905 19 11 Balance, Architect, new sohool .. .. 321 15 0 Canitation on account of 1910, due by Balance, Clerk of Works, new school .. 40 0 0 Government .. .. .. 247 18 6 Furniture and fittings accounts .. .. 282 0 0 Grant balance on account of new school .. 1,555 0 0 Cr. Balance .. .. .. .. 0 3 5 £3,708 18 5 £3,708 18 6 William Huntek, Secretary.
WELLINGTON COLLEGE. Staff. Boys , College.— -Mr. J. P. Firth, B.A. ; Mr. A. Heine, B.A. ; Mr. A. C. Gifford, M.A. ; Mr. G. G. S. Robison, M.A.; Mr. T. Brodie, B.A. ; Mr. F. M. Renner, M.A. ; Mr. W. J. Martyn, Jtf.A. ; Mr. H. B. Tomlinson, B.A. ; Mr. E. Caradue, B.Sc. ; Mr. O. Williams, M.A. ; Mr. D. Matheson, B.A. ; Mr. M. H. Dixon ; Mr. H. A. Smithson ; Mr. W. A. Alexander, M.A. ; Mr. H. W. Monaghan, M.A. ; Mr. J. G. Castle, B.A. ; Mr. M. H. Oram, M.A. ; Mr. A. H. Robinson ; Mr. B. Dovey; Mr. J. Ellis; Mr. G. R. Pitkethloy. Girls , College. —Miss M. McLean, M.A. ; Miss I. Ecclesfield, 8.A.; Miss A. M. Batham, B.A. ; Miss E. A. Newman, M.A. ; Miss V. L. Dall, B.A. ; Miss R. M. Collins, B.A. ; Miss M. M. Rigg, M.A., M.Sc. ; Miss H. Birss; Miss L. Christensen, M.Sc. ; Miss M. Salmond, B.A. ; Miss E. R. Ward, M.A. ; Miss A. E. Currie, M.A. ; Mr. L. F. Watkins; Mr. J. W. M. Harrison ; Dr. E. Gunn ; Miss K. Lawson ; Miss I. Gooder; Miss Pryor; Misa I. Reade. 1. Work of the Highest and Lowest Classes. Highest. — Boys' College : English—Chaucer's Prologue (Macmillan); Hamlet (Deighton); Epoch of Spenser ; Arnold's Prose Books ; De Coverley Papers ; selections from Macaulay, Burke, Napier's Peninsular War, Bacon, Barrow, Boswell, Lamb, Malory ; six standard novels to be read ; Words and their Ways (Greenough and Hettridge) ; Nesfield's Manual of Historical Language ; history of English, accidence, prefixes, suffixes, Grimm's law, &c.; figures of speech, essay work, precis and abstract, synonyms, history of English vowel sounds. Latin —Cicero, In Catilinam ; Virgil, Book VI; Horace, Odes, I; Bradley's Aids; Horton's Roman History; Antiquities; sight translation. French — Daudet's Les Lettres de mon Moulin ; George Sand, La Mare au Diable ; Moliere, Les Femmes Savantes ; Wellington College French Grammar ; Rey's French Composition. Mathematics —Arithmetic, Algebra, Geometry, as for Junior University Scholarship. Science—Poyser's Advanced Magnetism and Electricity ; Shenstone's Inorganic Chemistry. Girls' College : English—Nesfield's Historical English and Derivation; Longmans' Handbook of English Literature, Parts IV and V ; Chaucer's
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Prologue ; Warwick; Shakespeare, Twelfth Night ; Carlyle's Heroes ; Spenser's Faerie Queene, Book I; Nichol's Composition ; Wanderings in Syria ; Captain Cook's Second Voyage. Latin- —Annals of Tacitus, Book I; Odes of Horace, Book III; Caesar's Gallic War, Book I; Aeneid, Book I, De Amicitia ; Bradley's Latin Prose ; Horton's Roman History ; Stedman's Latin Examination Papers ; Rivington's Unseens, XI and XII; Primer, Roman Antiquities ; Res Romanae. French —Wellington College Grammar ; Rapid French Exercises ; Prose and Idioms ; Le Petit Chose ; Le Misanthrope (Moliere). Mathematics—Baker and Bourne's Geometry ; Hall and Knight's Algebra ; Workman's Arithmetic. Botany—Dendy and Lucas ; Aitken ; Thomson's Botany. Physics—Draper's Heat; Problems in Heat. Lowest. — Boys , College : Geography—The world —continents with (a) countries and capitals, (b) chief features, mountains, rivers, &c, (c) longitude, latitude, seasons, day and night, zones of climate, tides, trade winds, (d) New Zealand and Australia fairly fully. Arithmetic — Chapters vi-xiv. Alegbra—Baker and Bourne, VII-XIV. Geometry—Godfrey and Siddon's, to page 132, Part I. Latin-—lnglis and Prettyman, to page 100. French—Siepmann—Primary French Course, to page 100. English—Outlines of English Grammar, easy parts ; letter-writing ; Macaulay's Armada, Ivry, &c. History —Simple studies in English history. Girls , College: English —Nesfield's Outlines ; Black's Picture Lessons, Book 111 ; Gray's Elegy, Traveller; Irving's Rip Van Winkle, The Chimes ; Excelsior Reader, Book VI. French—Methode Naturelle ; Siepmann, Book I. History — H : ghroads of English History, Book IV. Geography —The Round World. Arithmetic —Pendlebury's New Arithmetic. Geometry—Hall and Stevens, Practical Geometry. Botany —Plant Book for Schools. Nature-study —-Eyes and No E} r es, Books II and 111. 2. General Statement op Accounts for the Year ended 31st December, 1910. Receipts. £ s. d. Expenditure. £ s. d. Balance at beginning of year .. .. 596 12 2 Management— Government capitation— Office Ralaries.. .. .. .. 250 0 0 For free places .. .. .. 4,039 4 3 Other office expenses .. .. .. 34 0 6 For recognized school classes for manual Teachers'salaries and allowances .. 6,735 9 8 instruction .. .. .. 70 7 11 Prizes .. .. .. .. 77 4 8 Current income from reserves .. .. 3,668 13 0 Material for classes other than classes for Paid by School Commissioners .. .. 500 4 0 manual instruction .. .. .. 319 4 School fees .. .. .. .. 2,136 8 6 Printing, stationery, and advertising .. 317 6 1 Books, Ac, sold, and other refunds .. 113 0 Cleaning, fuel, light, &o. .. .. 555 0 8 Donations for prizes .. .. .. 6 4 0 Books .. .. .. .. .. 19 4 0 Discount .. .. .. .. 0 1 10 Maintenance of classes for manual instrucDr. balance at end of year .. .. 393 13 1 tion, including salaries of special teachers (£B9 35.) .. .. .. .. 115 8 7 Sites, buildings, furniture, &o.— Purchases and new works .. .. 348 8 3 Repayment of loan for building .. 562 810 Fencing, repairs, &o. .. .. .. 1,126 11 2 Interest .. .. .. 510 9 10 Miscellaneous (rates, &c.) .. .. 79 6 5 Buildings, equipment, &c, for manual instruction.. .. .. .. 439 16 6 Interest on ourrent account and bank charge 0 15 0 Interest on cost of reclaimed land .. 104 14 6 Rates .. .. .. .. .. 57 1 11 Commission and exchange .. .. 18 0 Grant to Games Fund .. .. .. 66 13 4 Legal expenses .. .. .. .. 7 14 6 £11,413 1 9 £11,413 1 9 A. de B. Brandon, Chairman. Chas. P. Powles, Secretary. Examined and found correct. — R. J. Collins, Controller and Auditor-General. Statement of Monetary Assets and Liabilities at 31st December, 1910. Liabilities. £ s. d. Assets. £ s. d. Unpresenten , oheques .. .. .. 459 11 6 Cash in bank, current accouut .. .. 65 18 5 Sundry creditors — £ s. d. Due by Scholarships Acoounc .. .. 12 14 0 Rents paid in advance ..259 13 10 Sin dry debtors— £ s. d. On op?n ac-ount— Fees (Wellington College) 1,113 9 6 Wellington College .. ..44 4 5 Fees (Girls' College) .. 64114 3 Girls' College .. .. 30 0 6 Rents .. .. 171 19 7 333 18 9 Rates .. .. 7 6 6 1,934 9 10 £793 10 8 £2,013 2 3 Chas. P. Powles, Secretary. GISBORNE HIGH SCHOOL. Staff. Mr. A. R. Gatland, B.A. ; Mr. F. J. Wilkes, M.A. ; Mr. H. H. Cornish, M.A. ; Miss L. Wilcox; Mr. W. A. G. Penlington, B.A. ; Miss E. D. Haselden, M.A. ; Miss M. Harding; Miss M. Higgins; Mr. J. H. Levey. 1. Report op the Board op Governors. The year completes the second year of the High School as an established endowed secondary school. A regular staff of four male teachers and three female teachers has been engaged during the year. The work done during the year has been excellent. The school roll closed with an attendance of sixtyeight boys and fifty-five girls.
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A school costing £4,833 17s. Id. was completed during the year, and occupied in April. A schoolhouse and Principal's residence has also been built in brick, to accommodate twenty-five boys. It stands upon its own grounds of three acres in extent, apart from but contiguous to the school. The estimated attendance for the first term in 1911 is 140. The resources of the Board have been strained to the utmost to complete the buildings and to provide equipment and furniture. Grants of £300 in aid of the school buildings, and £200 for the equipment-of the science-room, will just enable the Board to cover its obligations, but will leave no margin for much necessary work which imperatively requires attention. It is difficult to foresee the number of pupils who will present themselves for secondary education in any year. The district is so large and is being so rapidly developed that it is certain that very considerable additional accommodation will be required within the next few years. If such proves to be the case, it will be a matter for serious consideration whether that accommodation should not be provided by the establishment of a separate school for girls. Having this contingency in view, arrangements for a suitable site should be considered. At the public examinations held by the New Zealand University and by the Education Department at the end of the year, four pupils passed Matriculation and allied examinations, and one gained Matriculation on the Junior University Scholarship papers ; four pupils passed the Junior Civil Service Examination, three gained Senior Board Scholarships, one gained a Junior Board Scholarship, sixteen gained Senior Free Places, and two gained Junior Free Places. J. W. Nolan, Chairman. W. Morgan, Secretary. 2. Work ov the Highest and Lowest Classes. Highest. —English —Nesfield's English Grammar, Past and Present; Milton, shorter poems ; Lamb, Essays of Elia ; Chaucer, Prologue. Latin —Ovid, Metamorphoses; Horace, Odes, I; Virgil, Aeneid, V ; Caesar, Gallic War, V; Eoman History and Antiquities. French—Macmillan's Second French Course ; Weekly's French Grammar ; Berthou's Selections of French Verse ; Le Tour dv Monde (Jules Verne). Mathematics —Hall and Knight's Algebra ; Hall and Stevens's Geometry ; Hall and Knight's Trigonometry ; Jones and Cheyne's Algebraical Exercises. Mechanics—Loney's Dynamics, Statics, Hydrostatics. Heat —Glazebrook's Heat. History and geography. Lowest.- —General course : English —Nesfield's Manual ; Tennyson, selections ; Charles Kingsley, Hereward the Wake. Latin —Via Latina. French —Macmillan's First French Course. Arithmetic —Goyen's Arithmetic and Mensuration. Algebra—Hall and Knight's Algebra, to simultaneous equations. Geometry —Hall and Stevens's New School Geometry, Parts I and 11. Geography—Canada, Australia, New Zealand ; and physical geography. Physical Measurements —Mainly Gregory's Exer-cise-book. Physiology —Coleman's and Furneaux's. History and civics—No text-book. Commercial course : English, arithmetic, and physical measurements, as in general course. Book-keeping—■ Thornton's First Lessons. Shorthand —Pitman's Instructor. Commercial geography-—No text-book. Geometrical drawing. History and civics—No text-book. Agricultural course : English, arithmetic, physical measurements, geometrical drawing, book-keeping, as above. Special subjects—-Agriculture and dairy-work. 3. General Statement of Accounts for the Year ended 31st December, 1910. Receivtf. £ s. d. £ 6. d. Expenditure. £, s. d. Balance at beginning of year 2,163 8 1 Management— Less bank balance for tech- Office salary .. .. .. .. 75 0 0 nical purposes .. .. 68 10 8 Other office expenses .. .. .. 4 6 10 2,094 17 5 Other expenses of management .. 29 9 4 Government grants— Legal expenses .. .. .. 85 19 9 For tites, buildings,furniture, &c. (general Teachers'salaries and allowances .. 1,280 12 8 purposes) .. .. .. .. 300 0 0 Boarding School Account .. .. 42 8 8 For buildings, furniture, fittings, and Boarding allowances . .. .. 150 0 0 apparatus for recognized school classes Prizes .. .. .. .. 13 6 for manual instruction .. .. 41 0 0 Material for classes other than olasses for Government capitation— manual instruction .. .. .. 112 9 For free places .. .. .. 1,111 12 8 Printing, stationery, and advertising .. 41 6 7 For recognized school classes for manual Cleaning, fuel, light, &c. (including careinstruction .. .. .. 84 15 0 taker's salary) .. .. .. 104 2 11 Current income from reserves .. .. 406 0 3 Maintenance of classes for manual instruoInterent on moneys invested and on un- tion .. .. .. .. 94 7 0 paid purohasemoney .. .. .. 67 7 6 Site, buildings, furniture, &c. (Government Paid by Sohool Commissioners .. .. 80 14 9 grant) .. .. .. .. 300 0 0 School fees .. .. .. .. 216 0 0 Manual instruction (Government grant) .. 30 4 4 Books, &c, sold and other refunds .. 6 0 6 Purchases and new works .. .. 480 9 1 Loans .. .. .. .. 3,650 0 0 Fencing, repairs, &c. .. .. .. 25 15 4 Hawke's Bay Education Board—Balance Miscellaneous (rates, rent, &c.) .. .. 25 12 6 on account of classes .. .. .. 42 4 8 Interest on current account .. .. 0 10 0 Endowments, Sales AccountSite or buildings .. .. .. 1,450 0 0 Miscellaneous (surveys, &o.) .. .. 4 10 On buildings, out of loans .. .. 3,650 0 0 Insurance .. .. .. .. 12 4 6 Interest .. .. .. .. 136 17 6 Repayment on account of loan .. .. 68 7 6 Balance at end of year .. .. .. 6 10 £8,100 12 9 £8,100 12 !) J. W. Nolan, Chairman. W. Morgan, Secretary. Examined and found correct.—R. J. Colt.ins, Controller and Auditor-General.
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General Statement of Monetary Assets and Liabilities on the 21st December, 1910. Assets. £ s. d. Liabilities. £ s. d. Wool on hand (teotanical) .. .. .. 10 0 0 Smith, G., extras on schoolhouse .. .. 70 0 0 Graham, architect, commission .. .. 70 1 0 Overdraft, Union Bank of Australia .. 274 0 9 £10 0 0 ! £414 1 9 W. Morgan, Secretary.
NAPIER HIGH SCHOOL. Staff. Hoys , School— •Mγ. A. S. M. Poison, B.A. ; Mr. E. W. Andrews, B.A. ; Mr. W. Kerr, B.A. ; Mr. A. W. Short, B.A. ; Mr. W. P. P. Gordon. B.A. ; Mr. H. V. Phillips ; Mr. J. Mcßae; Mr. H. J. Clemancc. Girls' School— Miss V. M. Greig, M.A., B.Sc. ; Miss E. H. Gunn, BA. ; Miss J. 0. Gillies; Miss D. A. Gillam. M.A. ; Miss H. K. Dalrvmple, B.A. ; Miss T. C. Greig ; Miss M. J. Antill; Sergeant-major McNair. 1. Report of the Board of Governors. The Board of Governors have to report that the attendance at the schools has been well sustained, and that satisfactory progress continues to be made. The new laboratories in the boys' school have proved very useful, virtually all the pupils in the upper school doing individual practical work in science. Swimming has received much encouragement. Nearly every boy can swim, and a large proportion have received certificates for distances ranging from 220 yards to one mile. A very successful bazaar was organized in the girls' school to provide a playground-improvement fund. The amount raised, together with the Government subsidy, has enabled the governors to make much better provision for games, two new tennis-courts and a croquet-lawn having been laid down. The junior departments have well justified their existence, the roll number being 46 in the boye' school and 40 in the girls' school. To keep pace with the steady expansion of the junior department two new class-rooms have been erected in connection with the girls' school, an adjacent residence previously acquired having proved inadequate for the purpose. The following examination results were gained during the year : — Boys : University Junior Scholarship Examination—2 qualified for Matriculation and Solicitora' General Knowledge ; Matriculation, Solicitors' General Knowledge, and Medical Preliminary, 2 passed ; Matriculation, 1 passed; Senior Civil Service, 3 passed the whole examination and 1 passed in three subjects ; Junior Civil Sendee, 8 passed, 3 with credit; Education Board Senior Scholarship, 1 secured first place, and 5 others qualified ; Senior Free Place (in addition to foregoing), 15 under Regulation 7 (c), and 3by examination ; Education Board Junior Scholarship, 2 won scholarships; Junior Free Place Examination, 1 passed, and 4 extended under Regulation 5 (1) ; Proficiency Examination, 2 passed. Girls : University Junior Scholarship, 1 passed with credit; Matriculation and Solicitors' General Knowledge, 3 passed ; Junior Civil Service, 4 passed ; Education Board Senior Scholarship, 6 qualified, 1 with credit; Senior Free Place (in addition to foregoing), 10 under Regulation 7 (c) and sby examination ; Education Board Junior Scholarship, 1 qualified ; Junior Free Place and Proficiency, 4 passed. T. C. Moore, Chairman. David Sidey, Secretary. 2. Work of the Highest and Lowest Classes. Highest. — Boys' School: English —Shakespeare, Twelfth Night and Macbeth ; Seeley's Expansion of England; Arnold, Prose Books ; Palgrave's Golden Treasury; Wyatt's English Literature; Nichol and McCormick's Exercises in Composition ; Nesfield's Manual of English Grammar; Low'e Historical English. Latin —Caesar, 8.G., Book VII; Horace, Epistles, Book I; Longmans', Part III; Bradley's Arnold; Abbott's Latin Prose through English Idiom ; Kennedy's Revised Latin Primer ; unseen passages ; Horton's History of the Romans ; Creighton's Rome ; Wilkins's Antiquities. French —Le Petit Chose (Daudet) ; Le Misanthrope (Moliere) ; Irregular French Verbs (Thirion); Bue's Idioms ; Blouet's French Composition ; Tutorial French Grammar (accidents and syntax) ; phonetic transcript; unseen passages. Mathematics—Geometry (Godfrey and Siddons) ; solid geometry (Davison) ; algebra (Hall and Knight's Elementary and Bryan and Briggs' Middle Algebra), trigonometry (Pendlebury). Physics —Glazebrook's Heat. Mechanics and hydrostatics (Tutorial Series)- —All the foregoing to University Junior Scholarship Standard. Chemistry—Jago. Arithmetic —Pendlebury. History —Tout and York, Powell and Andrews' Notes. Geography—Longmans' Series, Books II and V; Meiklejohn's British Colonies and Dependencies. Zoology—Furneaux's Animal Physiology ; Huxley's Elementary Physiology. All to Matriculation standard. Precis-writing (Evan Jacobs) to Senior Civil Service standard. Girls' School: English—Composition, and Nesfield Grammar Past and Present (whole book). English literature—Chaucer, Prologue and Knighte's Tale, Spenser, Faerie Queene, Book I; Milton, Shorter Poems and Samson Agonistes ; Shakespeare, Hamlet and The Tempest; Macaulay, Essay on Warren Hastings; Tennyson, the Princess, and selected shorter poems ; Dickens, Our Mutual Friend, to chapter xvii. Tennyson epoch English literature—Browning, Tennyson, Dickens, Thackeray, Eliot, Bronte, Carlyle. French — Weekly, Matriculation French Course, to end; Wellington College French Grammar, to end (Eve and de Baudiss); Victor Hugo's
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Hernani; Les Francais en Voyage (Wolff) ; Specimens, Modem French Verse (Berthou) ; phonetics (Siepmann), to end; prose, &c. Latin —Caesar, Gaelic War, Book VII, chapters i-xxxvii; Horace, Epistles, Book I, Epistles I-VII; Bradley Arnold, Latin Prose Composition, to page 200 ; Kennedy, Latin Primer; prose, &c.; Wilkins's Primer, Rome, to page 89 ; Wilkins's Roman Antiquities, to page 97. Mathematics—Goyen, Higher Arithmetic ; Baker and Bourne, Algebra, to end of permutations and combinations, page 403 ; Godfrey and Siddons, Books I-IV ; Solid Geometry, as for Junior University Scholarship (Hall and Stevens) ; Trigonometry (Borchardt and Perrott) Junior University Scholarship Syllabus. Applied Mathematics, as for Junior University Scholarship. Statics and and Dynamics, Loney; Hydrostatics —Briggs and Bryan. Science—Botany, Dendy and Lucas ; Second-stage Botany (Lowson) ; syllabus for Junior University Scholarship. Heat —Jones's Elementary Heat, to end. Lowest. — Boys , School: English—Outline of English Grammar (Nesfield), to page 97 ; oral exercises in English composition (selections) ; In the World of Books (Arnold) ; Deeds that Won the Empire (Fitchett). Latin —Longmans', Part I (whole) ; Scalae Primae, to chapter xv. French —Methode Naturelle, Vol. I, to lesson 38. Mathematics-—Geometry, Godfrey and Siddons, to p. 97 ; Baker and Bourne's First Algebra, to p. 83 ; Pendlebury's Shilling Arithmetic (whole). Science—Elementary physical measurements, as for Civil Service Junior. History- —Tout, Book 11, to page 187. Geography —Imperial Geography, Standards V and VI; Southern Cross Geographical Reader, Standards V and VI. Shorthand—Pitman's Phonographic Teacher (whole). Book-keeping—Pitman's Primer of bookkeeping (whole) ; Pitman's Counting House Routine (First year) (whole). Drawing—Freehand. Lowest.- — Girls' School: English—Marsh's Literary Composition, to page 237 ; Nesfield, Manual of English Grammar, to end of parts of speech ; parsing, analysis, prosody, figures of speech, composition. English History—Tout, British History, Part I, pages 106-205 (two terms' work). Latin—■ Primae Scalae, exercises 1-18 (inclusive) ; grammar, the declensions, conjugations, and deponents, irregular verbs, pronouns, prepositions, &c. ; easy sentences for prose and translation. French —• Hogben, Methode Naturelle, Part I, to page 71 ; sight translation, selected, and French Without Tears, Part I. Mathematics—Pendlebury, New School Arithmetic, to page 236 ; Baker and Bourne, Elementary Algebra, to end of simple equations ; long multiplication and long division ; Godfrey and Siddons, Book I, to end theorem iii, and a few riders ; practical work. Science —Botany, the flower, fruit, root, stem-leaves, chief orders for Junior Civil Service ; physiology, Murche, elementary course, to page 118 (omitting pages 83-101). 8. Gknekal Statement of Accounts for the Year ended 31st December, 1910. Receipts. £ s. d. | Expenditure. £ s. d. Balance at beginning of year .. .. 3,183 18 4 Management— Government grant for buildings, furniture, Office salaries .. .. .. 110 0 0 fittings, and apparatus for recognized Other office expenses .. .. .. 25 18 3 school classes for manual instruction .. 167 6 9 i Other expenses of management (legal) .. 13 15 2 Government capitation— Teachers'salaries and allowanoes .. -2,478 17 4 For free places .. .. .. 964 i) 2 Scholarships .. .. .. .. 80 0 0 For recognized school classes for manual Prizes .. .. .. .. .. 28 15 2 instruction .. .. .. .. 15 12 6 Printing, stationery, and advertising .. 33 9 3 Current income from reserves .. .. 375 1 6 i Cleaning, fuel, light, &c, including janitor'e From property not a reserve .. .. 963 15 0J salary .. .. .. .. 171 610 Interest on moneys invested and on unpaid j Books and stationery for sale to pupils and purchaee-money .. .. .. 115 10 0i other temporary advances .. .. 107 6 7 Paid by School Commissioners .. .. 565 10 0 ! Maintenance of classes for manual instruction School fees .. .. .. .. 186 17 6 j (including teacher's salary for cooking) .. 82 9 1 Boarding-school fees .. .. .. 68 5 4 | Purchases and new works .. .. 296 13 8 Books, &0., sold and other refunds .. 109 2 6 Fencing, repairs, &c. .. .. .. 80 10 3 Voluntary contributions on account of Miscellaneous (rates, &c.) .. .. 106 4 6 general purposes of the school .. .. 80 13 5 Buildings, equipment, &c, for manual inCustoms refund.. .. .. .. 10 0 struotion .. .. .. .. 17 0 0 Cooked food sold .. .. .. 4 4 0 Interest on current account .. .. 2 6 6 For use of pianos .. .. .. 14 2 5 Purchase of other lands .. .. .. 1,017 16 2 Dancing class gas .. .. .. 0 16 0 Furniture, painting, &c. .. .. .. 478 17 7 Balance at end of year .. .. .. 1,684 18 1 £6,816 4 5 £6,816 4 5 T. C. Mooke, Chairman. David Sidey, Secretary. Examined and found oorreot. H. J. Collins, Controller and Auditor-General. Napiek High Schools.—Junior Schools, 1910. £ s. d. £ a. d. Balance Ist January, 1910 .. .. 252 4 9 Salaries .. .. .. 480 11 8 School fees .. .. .. 613 7 8 School requisites .. .. .. 20 16 6 School requisites .. .. .. 30 4 9 Gas .. .. .. .. 7 9 6 Library case .. .. .. .. 4 0 0 Bank charges .. .. .. .. 010 0 Cleaning .. .. .. .. 2 0 0 Beidy and Jennings .. .. .. 300 0 0 Balance .. .. .. .. 80 9 6 £895 17 2 £895 17 2 T. C. Moore, Chairman. David Sidey, Secretary.
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DANNEVIRKE HIGH SCHOOL. SttlfJ. Mr. J. M. Simmers, M.A. ; Miss .1. R. Hair, M.A. ; Miss J. MoLeod, M.A. ; Mr. H. T. M. Fathers, M.A. ; Mr. R. Gardiner ; Miss A. S. Vcrnon. 1. Report op the Board of Governors. The Governors of the Dannevirke High School have the honour to report that the school continues to be conducted in a very efficient manner. The total number enrolled during the past year was 96, and the highest roll number was 93. Of these, 45 new pupils were admitted and 12 left. Considering the large number that left at the close of the , previous year, these numbers must be regarded as highly satisfactory. The attendance of most of the pupils has been very good. The average attendance for the wholojyear has been 81-7. This is 93 per cent, of the average weekly roll. The usual classical and mathematical subjects have been taught. Chemistry now forms the principal science both for boys and girls. A class in elementary agriculture for the boys was commenced. More advanced work, and work of a more practical character, will be undertaken next year, and an effort will be made to combine with it instruction in the essentials of dairying. The physical education of the pupils has c< osisted of gymnastic exercises for the girls, and military drill and exercises for the boys. The formation of a cadet corps, has, unfortunately, been delayed owing to the fact that suitable carbines were not obtainable. Our candidates for the various public examinations again distinguished themselves. The following are the numbers : 1 gained a Senior National Scholarship ; 1 gained a credit pass in the Junior University Scholarship Examination ; 2 passed Matriculation and Solicitors' General Knowledge ; 3 passed partial C Teachers' Examination; 3 passed Civil Service Senior Examination; 11 passed Civil Service Junior Examination (3 with credit) ; 2 passed Senior Free Place Examination ; 2 gained Education Board Senior Scholarships (first and fifth places) : 11 passed Education Board Senior Scholarship Examination, and thus qualified ; 3 gained Junior Board Scholarships. The pupils have taken a keen interest in the school games, and have showed a high degree of proficiency in football, cricket, hockey, and tennis. Miss G. F. Gibson, M.A., who for two years rendered excellent services on the teaching staff of the school, resigned, and Miss Janet McLeod, M.A.. was appointed to the vacant position. The Board desires to express its high appreciation of the devoted and efficient manner in which the. Principal and staff have discharged their duties. In anticipation of the school's future requirements, the Board embraced the opportunity of securing an acre of land adjoining the school grounds. A. Grant, Chairman. T. Macallan, Hon. Secretary. 2. Work of the Highest and Lowest Classes. Highest. —English —Nesfield's Past and Present Grammar; Shakespeare's Macbeth, and Twelfth Night. Latin —Horace's Epistle II : Caesar's Book II; Bradley's Arnold; Allen's Latin Grammar. French —Le Verre d'Eau ; Charles XII ; Wellington College Grammar. Mathematics —Hall and Stevens's Geometry, Books I—VI ; Baker and Bourne's Algebra ; Lock's Trigonometry ; Pendlebury's Arithmetic. Mechanics —Loney's Mechanics and Hydrostatics. Heat—Glazebrook's Heat. Physiology —Furneaux's Human Physiology. Lowest. —English—Nesfield's Outlines ; Scott's Ivanhoe ; selections from Wordsworth. Geography —Longmans' No. 3 ; British Empire ; physical geography. History —Ransome's History of England. Arithmetic —Pendlebury's Arithmetic, to page 283 ; general work. Algebra—Hall and Knight's Algebra for Beginners. Geometry—Hall and Stevens's School Geometry, Parts I and 11, with practical introduction. Latin—Via Latina, to page 81. French—Chardenal, I ; Hogben's Mcthode Naturelle. Chemistry —Practical work in connection with solids generally ; Roscoe and Lunt's Inorganic Chemistry for Beginners. Book-keeping—Thornton's First Lessons. 3. General Statement of Accounts for the Year knded 31st December, 1910. Receipts. £ s. d. Expenditure. £ s. d. Balance at beginning of year .. .. 365 17 4 Office expenses .. .. .. .. 115 9 Government capitation— Teachers' salaries and allowances .. .. 933 10 10 For free places .. .. '.. %1 16 7 Prizes .. .. .. .. .. -22 9 4 For recognized sohool classes for manual Material for classes other than olasses for instruction .. .. .. .. 12 7 6 manual instruction .. .. .. 17 12 5 Subsidy on voluntary contributions, Printing, stationery, and advertising .. 27 3 7 secondary schools .. .. .. 410 0 Cleaning, fuel, light, &c. .. .. .. 60 2 2 Paid by School Commissioners .. .. 301 10 0 Maintenance of classes for manual instrucSchool fees .. .. .. .. 68 0 0 tion .. .. .. .. 38 15 0 Voluntary contributions — Purchases and new works .. .. 360 18 5 On account of general purposes of the Fencing, repairs, &c. .. .. .. 18 1 1 school .. .. .. • ■ 7 15 0 Temporary advance to Technical School .. 7 7 3 From Hawke's Bay Education Board, for Balance at end of year .. .. .. 271 0 1 oookery (cleaning) .. .. .. 6 19 6 £1,758 15 11 £1,758 15 11 A. Grant, Chairman. T. Macallan, Secretary. Statement of Monetary Assets and Liabilities at 31st December, 1910. Assets. £ s. d. Liabilities. i; s. d. Cash, Bank of New Zealand .. .. 193 12 11 Unpresented cheques .. .. .. 23 1-2 11 Cash, Poßt-office Savings-bank .. .. 010 7 Cash in band .. .. .. .. 100 9 6 £204 13 0 628 12 11 Thomas Macallan, Secretary.
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MARLBOROUGH 111011 SCHOOL. Staff. Mr. J. limes, M.A., LL.D. : MY. J. H. Colliding, B.A. : Miss M. ('. Roes, M.A. ; Miae E. M. Allen. M.A. ; Mies \V. Ham ; Mr. P. Blirk. 1. Report of the Board of Governors. I have the honour to submit the following report of the Marlborough High School for the year ending 31st December, 1910 : — The number of new pupils enrolled at the beginning of the year was 50, 31 being girls and 19 boys. The total roll number was 126. On the external examinations, 17 passed the Senior Free Place Examination, 3 the Civil Service Junior with credit, 1 obtained a partial pass and 1 a full pass for the Civil Service Senior, and two passed the first year's terms examination of Victoria College. The curriculum comprises English, Latin, French, pure mathematics, heat, botany, physical measurements, history, and geography. In the lower forms book-keeping, cookery, and woodwork are also taken. It is proposed to add agricultural science next year. This is rendered possible by the appointment of an additional teacher. In addition to the Principal, the staff comprises four qualified teachers, all holding the M.A. degree. The gymnasium erected and equipped last year has been systematically and regularly used. The success achieved by several of the old pupils is very gratifying, more especially that of one who gained the Ettles Scholarship at Edinburgh. The growth of the school has made the buildings unsuitable for effective working, and extensive Iterations and additions are in progress which will bring about a great and much-needed improvement. These include the erection and equipment of a science-room, the use of which the Board of Governors propose to allow to the Education Board for the purpose of Saturday classes for teachers. R. McCalltjm, Chairman. 2. Work of the Highest and Lowest Classes. Highest. —English —Nesfield, English Grammar Past and Present, chapter 21-25 ; Nesfield's Aids ; Wilson's Literature ; Chaucer's Prologue ; Carlyle's Sartor Resartus ; Milton's Samson Agonistes ; composition and essay-writing. Latin—Bradley's Arnold's Latin Prose Composition ; Ramsay's Latin Prose, Vol. II; Caesar, Gallic War, Book VII ; Horace, Epistles, Book I ; Shuckburgh's History of Rome; Antiquities. French—Wellington College French Grammar; Berthou and Onions's Advanced French Composition; Daudet's Petit Chose; Victor Hugo's Hernani; Moliere's Le Misanthrope. Mathematics — Pendlebury's Arithmetic; Pendlebury's Trigonometry ; Hall and Stevens's Geometry ; Baker and Bourne's Algebra. Heat—Glazebrook's Heat; Jones's Examples in Physics. Botany—Dendy and Lucas's Botany. Lowest. —English —Nesfield's Outlines ; Meiklejohn's Spelling ; Nesfield's Junior Composition ; Scott's Lady of the Lake and Tales of a Grandfather. Geography—Arnold's Handbooks, Nos. 2, 4, 5. History—Tout's History, up to Tudor Period. Arithmetic—Pendlebury's New School Arithmetic, up to proportion. Algebra —Baker and Bourne, to the end of simple problems. Geometry—Hall and Stevens's, Part I. Latin —Bell's Illustrated Latin Course, Parts I and II; Bell's Scalae Primae, about half. French—Dent's First French Book. Botany—Elementary work. Physics—Gregory's Exercise-book. Book-keeping — Bolton's Book-keeping, Parts I and 11. Woodwork (for boys). Cookery and needlework (for girls). 3. General Statement of Accounts for the Year ended 31st December, 1910. Receipts. £ s. d. Expenditure. £ s. d. Balance at beginning of year .. .. 476 17 9 Management— Government capitation— Office salary .. .. .. .. 52 0 0 For free places .. .. .. 1,277 1 8 Other office expenses .. .. .. 5 011 For recognized school classes for manual Other expenses of management .. 5 3 8 instruction .. .. .. 63 7 6 Teachers'salaries and allowances .. 1,006 10 0 Statutory grant, 1910-11 .. .. 400 0 0 i Superannuanon: Amount deducted 1909, Paid by School Commissioners .. .. 65 0 0 paid Public Trustee 1910 .. .. 0 12 0 School fees .. .. .. .. 132 10 6 I Scholarships .. .. .. .. 20 0 0 Books, &c, sold and other refunds .. 136 18 5 j Prizes .. .. .. .. 99 9 Interest on current account .. .. 14 17 1 I Printing, stationery, and advertising .. 7 10 6 Voluntary contributions on account of ! Cleaning, fuel, light, &c. .. .. 59 ;) 3 general purposes of the school .. .. 5 0 0' JBooks and stationery for pale to pupils, and Contractors' deposits .. .. .. 30 0 0 other temporary advances .. .. 140 0 3 Maintenance of classes for manual instruction .. .. .. .. .. 83 17 8 Purchases and new works .. .. 854 A 10 Fencing, repairs, &o. .. .. .. 114 2 Miscellaneous (rates, &c.) .. .. 8 12 6 Hefund of deposit .. .. .. 10 0 0 Intereet on current acoount .. .. 10 6 Interest on Nosworthy bequest .. .. 115 0 Hire of hall for lecture, &c. .. .. 4 3 5 Miscellaneous .. .. .. .. 5 5 6 Balance at end of year .. .. .. 306 4 0 £2,601 12 11 £2,601 12 11 R. McCallum, Chairman. E. Hylton, Secretary. Examined and found correct, except that a sum of £500, bequeathed for the foundation of the Wrigley Scholarship, lias been unlawfully used for other purposes. Note. —This exception has been taken on the balance-sheets of the years 1907, 1908, and 1909.— R. J. Collins, Controller and Auditor-General,
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Statement of Monetary Assets and Liabilities at 31st December, 1910. Assets. jg g jj Liabilities. t s d Oredit balanoe at 31st December, 1310 .. 306 4 0 Builder's deposit .. .. .. 30 0 0 Grants from Government— Prizes .. .. .. .. 576 Capitation on free places .. .. 414 11 8 Additions to buildings .. .. .. 1,227 14 10 For additions to building .. .. 500 0 0 Manual and technical classes .. .. 26 5 0 Capitation, manual and technical classes " 50 5 0 Furniture, fittings, and apparatus for new fciencetoom .. .. .. 300 0 0 £1,271 0 8 £1,589 7 4
NELSON COLLEGE. Staff. Boys , College. —Mr. H. L. Fowler, M.A. ; Mr. G. J. Lancaster, M.A. ; Mr. C. H. Broad, B.A. ; Mr. J. G. McKay, B.A. ; Mr. J. C. Pope, M.A. ; Mr. C. H. McKay; Mr. A. E. Broekett; Mr. H. P. Kidson, M.A. ; Mr. H. D. Skinner; Mr. W. S. Hampson ; Mr. F. F. Huddleston. OirW College. —Miss M. Lorimer, M.A. ; Miss F. M. Kirton, M.A. ; Miss M. McEaehen, M.A. ; Miss A. Eastwood, M.A. ; Miss A. O'Callaghan, B.A. ; Miss E. Baxter, M.A. ; Misß B. Nicholson, B.A. ; Miss E. F. Chisholm j Miss B. Greenwood ; Miss M. Igglesden. 1. Report of the Board of Governors. The average number of boys in attendance was 204, being a slight increase ; 148 of the pupils held free places, 90 junior and 58 senior. The boarding department continues to make good progress, the total number of boarders for the year being 103. The average number at the Girls' College was 171 —a record. The Governors desire to thank the donors of a horse roller and mowing-machine, by the use of which the playground at the Boys' College has been brought into a much better condition. They also desire to thank the Old Girls' Association for their donation towards the formation of a reference library. The shooting team, without being able to repeat their success of the previous year, did very well, taking the second place in the New Zealand secondary schools competition, one point behind the winners. In the shooting for the Prince of Wales' Cup, open to all schools of the Empire, they stood sixth, being beaten by only one school in Australasia. The equipment of the Girls' College was improved by the addition of a roomy and airy building, containing suitable accommodation for practical and demonstration lessons in cookery. A camera club was formed at the Girls' College, and a dark room provided. The girls' hockey club was able to enter two teams for the matches, and the junior team was successful in winning the challenge cup. Early in the year Mr. James Blair, who has been Secretary for the past eight years, resigned, and his place was filled by the appointment of Mr. R. Catley. The Staff. —Boys' College : Mr. A. E. Brockett has taken charge of the preparatory department, in succession to Mr. M. Skelton. Mr. J. C. Pope, 8.A., fills the vacancy caused by the departure of Mr. W. Moyes for King's College. Mr. H. P. Kidson, M.A., and Mr. H. Skinner also joined the staff during the year. Girls' College : Miss O'Callaghan, M.A., and Miss Nicholson, 8.A., resigned at the end of the year. Miss Farrow, M.A., of Canterbury College, and Miss Hind, M.A., of Victoria College, were appointed to fill the vacancies. The results of the public examinations were very satisfactory. Boys' College : L. Bell and J. O'Connell gained Senior National Scholarships on entrance to the University. One boy qualified for Matriculation on the scholarship papers, and ten others passed the Matriculation (Solicitors' General Knowledge) Examination, two of them the Medical Preliminary also. Forty-five passed the Junior Civil Service Examination. Nine boys passed the terms examinations of Victoria College, five the first year, three the second, and one the third. Girls' College :A. Fell, S. Derrick, and R. Walker passed first year's terms. Rona Karsten passed the Senior Civil Service Examination, heading the list for the Dominion. Fifteen girls passed Matriculation or Matriculation and Solicitors' General Knowledge, a highly gratifying result. Seventeen girls passed the Junior Civil Service Examination, Edith Woods heading the Nelson list. In addition, twenty gained the Senior Free Place, and eight gained extension under clause 5 (1). 2. Work of the Highest and Lowest Classes. Highest. — Boys , College : As for Junior University Scholarships in English, Latin, French, mathematics, and science (chemistry and mechanics), and for the B.A. degree in English and Latin. English —Macbeth ; Samson Agonistes ; Prometheus Unbound ; Sartor Resartus ; Selected English Essays (Macmillan) ; Golden Treasury; Brooke's Primer of English Literature ; Nesfield's English, Past and Present. Latin—Selections from Ovid ; Dies Romani; Livy, Book XXII; Bradley's Arnold ; Bryan's Latin Prose Exercises ; Bradley's Aids ; Res Romanae ; Horace, Epistles, I; Caesar, 8.G., VII. French —Le Tour dv Monde ; Half-hours ; Blouet's Composition ; Wellington French Grammar ; Dent's Phonetic French Reader. Mathematics —Murray's Higher Arithmetic ; Lachlan and Fletcher's Trigonometry ; Barnard and Child's Senior Geometry; C. Smith's Algebra (Macmillan). Science—
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Loney's Statics and Dynamics; Shenstone's Chemistry. Qirls' College: English —Junior University Scholarship work, and work for first year's terms. Victoria College. Books used : Nesfield's Historical English and Derivation; Sartor ResartUß ; Prometheus Unbound; Samson Agonistes; Hales's Longer English Poems ; Chaucer's Prologue ; Faerie Queene, Book I; Paradise Lost, Book I; Milton's sonnets and shorter poems ; extracts from Wordsworth, Tennyson, Matthew Arnold ; Sweet's AngloSaxon Primer; Morris and Skeet's Specimens of Early English. French — Wellington College Grammar; Spiers's Rapid French Exercises ; Siepmann's Primary French Course (first term) ; Bue's French Idioms ; Le Petit Chose ; Hernani ;Le Misanthrope ; Longmans' Advanced Unseens. Latin —Bradley's Arnold's Prose Composition ; Allen's Elementary Latin Grammar ; Bradley's Aid to Latin Prose : Selections from Blackie's Senior Unseens ; Wilkins's Antiquities ; Merivale and Puller's Roman History ; Gallic; War, VII ; Horace's Epistles, I. Mathematics —Pendlebury's Trigonometry ; Todhunter and Loney's Algebra ; Hall and Knight's Algebra ; Baker and Bourne's Geometry ; Loney's Elements of Statics and Dynamics ; Loney's Elements of Hydrostatics. Botany —Lowson's Second Stage Botany. Lowest. — Boys , College: English —Scott's Talisman ; Poems of English Heroism ; Nesfield's Manual of English Grammar; civics, the Citizen Reader. History —Longmans' Historical Series. I. Geography— Meiklejohn's New Geography, Part I. Latin— Elements Latina ; Scalae Pr.'mae. French —Siepmann's Primary French Course, I. Arithmetic'—Workman's, to stocks. Algebra—Baker and Bourne's, Part I, to simple equations. Geometry—Eggar's Practical Exercises. Science —Physic;.! measurements. Girls' College : First year of Civil Service work. English-—Nesfield's Manual; Jn the World of Books ; The Old Curiosity Shop. Geography— Longmans', Book 111. History —No book. Latin—Scott and Jones's First Latin Course ; Scott and Jones's Second Latin Course (part) ; Scott and Jones's Grammar. French-— Siepmann, Part T. Mathematics —Workman's Tutorial Arithmetic ; Baker and Bourne's Elementary Geometry ; Hal] and Knight's Elementary Algebra. Physiology—Furneaux's. Botany —Laurie's. ■i. Statement of Receipts and Expenditure fok the Year ending 31st December, 1910. Endowment, Account. Receipts. & s. d. Expenditure. £ s. d. Rents .. .. .. .. .. 9SB 8 4 Rates and taxes .. .. .. 12 510 Interest.. .. .. .. 87 11 5 Legal expenses .. .. .. 0 16 10 School Commissioners .. .. .. 520 0 0 Insurances .. .. .. .. 513 0 Printing and advertising .. .. 11 9 8 Stationery .. .. .. .. 0 5 3 R. pairs .. .. .. .. 0 6 9 Govf mors' and auditors'fees .. .. 35 16 8 Secretary .. .. .. .. 83 11 6 Office-r.nt .. .. .. .. 25 0 0 Office-cleaning and gns .. .. 8 11 10 Inerest on bank overdraft .. .. 22 13 3 Telephone and letter box .. .. 6 0 0 Clearing noxious weeds .. .. 3 16 0 B-ink etiarge .. .. .. .. 0 10 0 Petty cash, postages, and sundries .. 20 4 6 Boys' College. Boarding fees .. .. .. .. 4,519 16 2 House expenses .. .. .. 3,190 5 1 Tuition fees .. .. .. .. 1,019 11 0 Tv tion expenses .. .. .. 2,353 8 4 Government capitation, free places .. 1.584 11 0 Scholarships— Donations .. .. .. .. 43 0 0 Endowed .. .. .. .. 77 6 8 Subsidy on donation* .. .. .. MS 0 0 Foundation.. .. .. .. 13 0 0 Hawke's Bay Old Boys' Association, for District High School .. .. 80 0 0 prize .. .. .. .. 10 10 0 Governors'and auditors'fees .. .. 37 6 8 Woodwork class .. .. .. 714 0 Stationery .. .. .. .. 45 15 4 Refund .. .. .. .. 1 10 10 Prizes ... .. .. .. 18 9 4 Hawke's Bay Old Boys' prize .. .. 10 10 0 Simmons prize, 1907 .. .. .. 6 0 0 Andrews Memorial prizo .. .. 5 0 0 Swimming cup .. .. .. 2 0 0 Printing and advertising .. .. 48 0 11 Gas .. .. .. .. .. 128 6 11 Rives and taxes .. .. .. 65 14 3 Repairs .. .. .. .. 233 9 11 Insurance .. .. .. .. 40 6 2 Grounds .. .. .. .. 27 15 6 I nterent on mortgage .. .. .. 500 0 0 Scientific and chemical apparatus and chemicals .. .. .. .. 25 8 2 Magazine .. .. .. .. 15 0 0 I Telephone .. .. .. .. 6 0 0 Asphalt tennis-court .. .. 52 10 9 Horse roller .. .. .. .. 46 17 9 Horse mower .. .. .. .. 35 6 3 Sports .. .. .. .. 20 0 0 Museum .. .. .. .. 4 10 6 Mimmax fire-extinguisher .. .. 6 10 0 Secretary .. .. .. .. 83 12 7 ■ Sundries .. .. .. .. 0 19 5 Carried forward .. .. 8,820 12 9 Carried forward .. .. 7,416 11 7
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Receipts. £ s. d. Expenditure. £ s. d. Brought forward .. .. 8.820 12 9 Brought forward .. .. 7,416 11 7 Girls' College. Boarding fees .. .. .. .. 1,435 18 0 | House expenses .. .. .. 1,303 14 8 Tuition .. .. .. .. 700 18 0 j Tuition .. .. .. .. 1,570 19 4 Government capitation— ' Scholarships - Free plaoes.. .. .. .. 1,496 2 3 Endowed .. .. .. .. 03 6 8 Manual instruction .. .. .. 70 12 6 : Foundation.. .. .. .. 19 0 0 Donation .. .. .. .. 1500 District High School .. .. 40 0 0 Subsidy donation .. .. .. 15 0 0 Governors' and auditors fees .. .. 37 6 8 Refund .. .. .. .. L 6 8 I Stationery .. .. .. .. 24 11 8 Prizes .. .. .. .. il IS 3 ! Printing and advertising .. .. 3D 5 2 J Gas .. .. .. .. .. 58 17 1 Rates and taxes .. .. .. 9 18 6 Repairs .. .. .. .. 55 0 8 Insurance .. .. .. .. 26 12 4 Telephone and letter-box .. .. 6 0 0 Grounds .. .. .. .. 11 19 0 Magazine .. .. .. .. 8 8 0 Sports .. .. .. .. 4 0 0 Botany slides .. .. .. .. 18 0 Drainage .. .. .. .. 143 7 :■! Minimax fire-extinguisher .. .. 610 0 Secretary .. .. .. .. 83 12 7 Sundries .. .. .. .. 2 8 10 Capital Account. Payment on account of mortgages .. 338 0 0 - Furniture— Government grant, cookery-room .. 218 8 4 Boys' College .. .. .. 87 1 4 Girls' College .. .. .. 7 2 0 Cookery-room, Girls' College .. .. 438 18 6 Bank overdraft, 31st December, 1909 .. 934 13 3 • Balance in bank. 31st December, 1910 .. .. £119 6 ll Less unpaid oheque .. 9 10 0 109 16 9 Cash on deposit at oall .. .. fiOO 0 0 Total (of four acoounts) .. £13,111 18 1 Total (of four accounts) .. £13,111 18 1 I hereby certify that I have examined the foregoing accounts, and compared them with the several vouchers relating thereto, and have found them correct. —P. A. Bamkord, F.P.M.A.Z., Auditor. Statement of Loans on Mortgaye Account at 31st December, lUU). A. Mortgage owing to Nelson College. £ h. d. £ s. d. Amount outstanding on loan at 31st He- Repayments on account of mortgage .. 338 0 0 eember, 1909 .. .. .. 1,608 0 0 Balance outstanding on loan at 31st December, 1910 .. .. .. 1,270 0 0 £1,608 0 0 ; £1,608 0 0 B. Mortgage owing by Ne.hon College. i a. d. £ s. d. Amount borrowed on mortgage at Silt He- Amount outstanding on Mortgage at 31st eember. 1909 .. .. .. 10,000 0 0 December, 1910 .. .. .. 10,00!) 0 0 £10,000 0 0 £10,000 0 0 1 hereby certify that 1 have examined the above accounts and have found the same correct, and have duly examined all deeds of mortgage and other securities, and have found the same in full force and virtue. — l\ A. Bampokd, F.P.M.A.Z, Auditor. Statement of Monetary Assets and Liabilities of Nelson College on 31st December, 1910. Assets. t s. d. ; Ijiabilities. £ s. d Interest due .. .. .. .. 8 3 10 Governors' fees .. .. .. 100 0 0 Rents due .. .. .. .. 119 15 0 Fees due .. .. .. .. 25 7 4 Capitation, free pupils.. .. .. 1,003 10 11 Advances to boarders .. .. .. 184 4 7 Cash in bank .. .. .. .. 109 16 9 Cash on deposit .. .. .. 600 0 0 £2,050 18 5 fclOO 0 0 —— i . ~ — R. Catley, Secretary.
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GREYMOUTH HIGH SCHOOL. General Statement of Accounts fob the Yeak ended 31st December, 1910. Beceipts. £ a. d. Expenditure. £ a. d. Balance, 31st December, 1909 .. .. 1,702 3 1 Secretary's salary .. .. .. 10 0 0 West!and School Commissioners.. .. 50 0 0 Bank charges .. .. .. .. 0 10 0 Interest .. .. .. .. 86 17 3 Grant to Education Board for purpose of secondary education .. .. .. '200 0 0 Balance, 31st December, 1910— National Bank .. .. .. 18 1 10 Post Office Savings-Bank .. .. 220 8 6 Grey Borough debentures .. .. 1,390 0 0 £1,889 0 i £1,839 0 4 Statement, of Monetary Assets and Liabilities. Asset*. U s. d. Liabilites. National Bank .. .. .. .. 18 1 10 Post-Office Savings-Bank .. ... 220 8 6 Grey Borough debentures .. .. 1,390 0 0 Nil. £1,628 L 0 i W. H. Kettle, Chairman. P. F. Daniel, Secretary. Examined and found correct. —X J. Collins, Controller and Auditor-General.
HOKITIKA HIGH SCHOOL. Genekal Statement of Accounts fok the Yeab ended 31st Decembeb, 1910. Receipts. £ s. A. Expenditure. t g. d. Balance at beginning of year .. .. 1,640 12 1 Management— Current income from reserves .. .. 36 0 0 Office salary .. .. .. .. 15 15 0 Interest on moneys invested and on unpaid Other office expenses .. .. .. 0 19 6 purchase-money .. .. .. 48 0 0 Teachers' salaries and allowances (grant lo Paid by School Commissioners .. .. 50 0 0 Westland Education Board) .. .. 130 0 0 i Fencing, repairs, &c. .. .. .. 4 19 7 J Miscellaneous (rates, &c.) .. .. 13 0 Balance at end of year .. .. .. 1,621 15 0 £1,774 12 1 £1,774 12 1 Examined and found correct, except that the Hokitika debentures in which school funds are invested is nol one of the securities in which the governors are authorized by law to invest such school funds. —R. J. Collins, Controller and Auditor-General. Statement, of Monetary Assets and Liabilities for the Year ending 31st December, 1910. Assets. £ s. d. Liabilities. £ c. d. Credit balance in Bank of New Zealand, cur- Office salary due (one quarter) .. .. 318 9 rent account .. .. .. 113 15 0 Fixed deposits, Bank of New Zealand .. 1,200 0 0 Fixed deposit, Hokitika Savings-bank .. 200 0 0 Current Account, Hokitika Savings-bank .. 8 0 0 Hokitika Borough debentures .. .. 100 0 0 Interest due on debentures .. .. 2 10 0 Interest due on fixed deposits .. .. 18 0 0 Rent due, Government House .. .. 5 5 0 £1,647 10 0 £3 18 9 H. L. Michel, Chairman. Chas. Kirk, Secretary.
RANGIORA HIGH SCHOOL. Staff. Mr. T. R. Cresswell, M.A. ; Miss E. King, M.A. : .Miss 1. M. Keith, M.A. ; Mr. S. A. Clark, B.A. ; Miss Gillies Mr. Lewis : Sergeant-major Healey. 1. Report of the Board of Governors. The past year's successes have again exemplified the soundness of the methods pursued in this school. There has also been a very satisfactory increase in the attendance, so much so that it became necessary to engage an assistant master. The school staff is now enabled to give more attention to
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the teaching of science ; and the new brick science-room and class-room are being equipped with the latest and best scientific apparatus. Agricultural science, theoretical and practical, is being taught to those scholars who intend to follow the farmers' occupation. For the practical work in this connection the Board has leased a piece of land near the school. On the scholastic side the school has done well. This is shown by the large percentage of successful pupils in the various examinations. The school was inspected by the secondary schools Inspector during the year, and his report says, " The methods of teaching were, in general, very satisfactory. . . . There appeared to be a good spirit of work, and a really fine tone." The school cadets have again proved that their reputation for drill, marksmanship, and enthusiasm was well deserved. The large playing-grounds attached to the school give unusual opportunities for school sports and pastimes, in which the Principal and staff take much interest. The inauguration of the school boardinghouse has proved a very successful step ; and, as the tariff is low, it has brought boarding pupils to the school from the further ends of the North Canterbury railways. During the year provision was made for teaching certain technical subjects, and the school is now in a position to provide wider facilities for scholars. Robert Ball. Chairman. 2. Work of the Highest and Lowest Classes. Highest. —English —Morris and Skeat's Specimens of Early English ; Morris's Outlines of Accidence ; Hamlet ; Merchant of Venice ; Milton's shorter poems ; Hales's Longer English Poems ; selections from Buskin, Carlyle. and Tennyson. Latin —Kennedy's Primer; Bradley's Arnold; Clement Bryan's Caesarian Prose ; Aeneid, II; selections from Horace's Satires ; Livy, Book II; Cicero, In Verrem Actio Secunda. &c. French —Hossfeld's Manual; Pierre Lotis, Pecheur d'lslande ; Molieres Le Misanthrope; Victor Hugo's Quatre-vingt-treize. Mathematics—Arithmetic generally ; geometry, Baker and Bourne ; trigonometry, Hall and Stevens's, to solution of triangles ; algebra, Baker and Bourne, to binomial theorem. Mechanics —Loney's, to Junior Scholarship standard. Heat—Glazebrook, to Junior Scholarship standard. Botany—Evans's Botany, notes, to Matriculation standard. Lowest. —English—Nesfield's Manual, easier portions. Latin—Longmans' First Latin Course, pages 1-50. French—Chardenal, Part I. Arithmetic —Pendlebury, pages 1-228, 269-294. Algebra —Baker and Bourne, pages 1-80. Geometry —Baker and Bourne, pages 1-80. Botany- —Elementary Botany (Charlotte Laurie), Parts I and 111. 3. General Statement of Accounts for the Yeah ended 31st December, 1910. Receipts. £ s. d : Expenditure. £ s. d. Balance in hand and in bank at beginning Management— of year .. .. .. .. 209 18 10 \ Office expenses .. .. .. 3 12 7 Government crant for sites, building, furni- Other expenses of management .. 15 15 0 ture, &c. (general purposes) .. .. 163 0 0 Teachi rs' salaries and allowances .. 820 5 4 Government capitation for free places .. 936 19 1 Expenses cf examination .. .. 3 3 0 Government grant for conveyance of j Prizes .. .. .. .. 710 9 children to schools .. .. 5 6 6 Material for classes other than classes for Current income from reserves .. .. 189 6 4 manual instruction .. .. .. 14 10 0 School fees .. .. .. .. 25 14 6 ; Printing, stationery, and advertising .. 513 0 Kent of school boardinghouse .. .. 26 0 0 : Cleaning, fu»d, light, &o. .. .. 38 3 8 Situ, buildings, furniture, &c. (Government grants) .. .. .. 163 0 0 Purchases and new works .. .. 191 2 6 Pi-ncing, repairs, &c. .. .. 10 2 6 Miscellaneous (rates, &c.) .. .. 22 4 0 ; Bank interest on building loan .. .. 25 0 0 Conveyance of pupils to school .. .. 5 6 6 Contribution to sports fund (school) .. 5 0 0 lli.nk charges .. .. .. .. 010 0 i Balance at, end of year .. .. .. 225 6 5 £1,556 5 3 £1,556 5 3 Bobert Ball, Chairman. C. I. Jennings, Treasurer. Examined and found correct, excepl that the payment of £10 10s. and £o ss. as honoraria to Messrs. Ball and Jennings respectively, who as members of the Board are virtually invested with a fiduciary character, are disallowed as contravening the established rule of law that trustees shall not benefit from theii relation to thoir trust. They cannot lawfully make payments to themselves lor or in respect of their personal labour and services. Note. —A similar exception has been taken on each balance-sheet since 1908. —R. J. Collins, Controller and Auditor-General. Statement of Monetary Assets and Liabilities as at 81st December, 1910. Assets. £ s. d. Liabilities. 6 s. d. Unpaid fees, third term, 1910 .. .. 22 1 0 ! Sundry small accounts .. .. .. 2 111 Capitation, third term, 1910 .. .. 275 00 ! Bank, credit balance .. .. .. 225 6 5 £522 7 5 £2 1 11 Robert Ball, Chairman. [. -Iknnings, Treasurer.
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OHRISTCHURCH BOYS' HIGH SCHOOL. Staff. Mr. C. E. Bevan-Brovm. ii.A. ; Mr. B. K. S. Lawrenoe, B.A. : Mr. U. Walton, 15.A. ; Mr. K. M. Lainji, M.A.' B.Se. ; Mr. A. Merton ; Mr. T. H. Jaokson, B.A. ; Mr. T. W. Cane, M.A. ; Mr. R. J. Thompson, B.A. : Mr. \V. Witt' M.A.; Mr. J. Cook; Mr. L. Q. Whitehead ; Captain Farthing; Menu. Malaqain j Mr. T. S. Tankard; Mise Digby. 1. Report of Headmaster. The school roll at the end of the year was 212, inoluding 20 in the preparatory class. In December, 1910, the school had in candidates for Junior University Scholarships. 25 for Matriculation, 39 for Education Board, junior Civil Service, or Senior Free Place Examinations : thus 74 boys of the upper school have reoently been sitting for external examinations. The results of the outside examinations in December last were that of 9 candidates. 4 won Senior National Scholarships and were also awarded Gammack Scholarships by the Board of Education. The last-named body, however, intend in future to prohibit the holders of any other scholarship from holding a Gammack Scholarship. Two boys also obtained places on the credit list. Two boys won Senior {Education Board Scholarships, and 34 out of 42 candidates passed the Junior Civil or Senior Free Place Examinations. Of 27 candidates for Matriculation, 15 boys passed, including 4 for Medical Preliminary, and 1 for Engineering Preliminary. The institution of form prefects has been good, and we hope to see the system developed. The cadet corps numbers 180, and. has had a successful camp. The school workshop has been added to, and will now accommodate the full number of 24. In science many boys have taken pride in their note-books and practical work. There has been a successful life-saving class and 30 certificates have been awarded. Among distinctions won by old boys are the following : H. G. Denham. M.Sc., the holder of an 1851 Exhibition Science Scholarship, obtained the degree of D.He, at Liverpool, and of Ph.D. at the University of Heidelberg. L. H. Harrison obtained his M.Sc, with tirst-class honours, at Manchester University. C. M. Stubbs obtained his M.A. here, with double first-class honours in mathematics and chemistry; and also the 1851 Exhibition Scholarship. D. B. Macleod obtained his M.A. with firstclass honours in chemistry. Four won College exhibitions, and H. Rands the Sir George Grey Scholarship. Mr. W. B. Robinson, at Guy's Hospital, London, distinguished himself at the Intermediate for the London degree in medicine, and the Primary Fellowship Examination of the Royal College of Surgeons. Two other old boys, after sitting for degrees here, are proceeding to Cambridge. Mr. Sidney Clark, after useful work here, resigned in April to take up an appointment at Rangiora High School. He has been succeeded in the preparatory class by Mr. L. G. Whitehead. Mr. A. Watt has resigned in order to go to France. He has been an able and successful master. Mr. T. Cane has been appointed assistant in Latin and English at Canterbury College, but will retain his important classes in 1911. The Headmaster will be absent on leave in 1911, and Mr. B. K. S. Lawrence will be acting headmaster. There were 82 junior and 48 Senior Free Place holders in 1910. C. E. Bevan-Brown. 2. Work of the Highest and Lowest Classes. Highest. —Latin—Livy, Book XXII (Blackie's Illustrated Classics) without Vocabulary. Horace, Selections, Satires, and Epistles (Macmillan's Elementary Classics) ; Virgil, Georgic IV (Macmillan), Myths and Legends of Ancient Rome ; Bradley's Arnold ; Bradley's Aids to Latin Prose ; Kennedy's Revised Latin Primer ; Gepp and Haigh's Latin Dictionary ; Robinson's First History of the Romans ; Rivington's Class Book of Latin, Unseen, Book VII; Everyman's Library Atlas of Ancient Geography. English—Richard II (Pitt Press) ; The Squire's Tale, Chaucer (Macmillan) ; Lamb's Schooldays and other Essays (Blackie) ; Bacon's Essays (Blackie) ; Froissart's Chronicle, Vol. 11, Reign of Richard II (Blackie) ; Palgrave's Golden Treasury ; Nesfield's Aids to the Study and Composition of English ; Nesfield's Historical English; English Literature, Laing (Collins and Sons). French —Le Cid, Corneille (Macmillan). Advanced French Composition, Duhamel (Rivington's) ; Tartarin de Tarascon (Siepinann) ; Longmans' Advanced French Unseen (Bertenshaw) ; French Grammar, Moriarty (SoiM ). Mathematics- -Borchardt and Perrott's Trigonometry ; Baker and Bourne's Algebra (Bell) ; Elements of Mechanics of Solids and Fluids (Arnold) ; Hall and Stevens's School Geometry, Parts Ito VI (Macmillan) ; Hogben's Trigonometry Tables; Pendlebury's Arithmetic; Ward's Trigonometry Papers (Bell and Sons). Science—Advanced Inorganic Chemistry, theoretical; Synopsis of Non-metallic Chemistry, Briggs (University Tutorial Series). Gymnastics. Lowest. —Latin —Collar and Daniell's Beginner's Latin Book ; Shorter Latin Primer (for revision oi verbs). English —Deeds that Won the Empire (first series) ; Lyra Heroica (The Revenge, &c.) ; Nesfield's Outlines ; parsing note* ; dictation, composition, parsing, analysis (four forms of predicate and easy subordinate clauses) ; also one of 6d. editions in Lower IV list to be read at home per term. History- —First Book of British History (Tout); Longmans' Historical Series for Schools, Book I. Geography—Southern Cross Series, Geography, Standard VI. French —Siepmann's First French Course. Mathematics —Pendlebury's New School Arithmetic (Bell and Sons) ; Hall and Stevens's School Geometry, Parts I and 11., with lessons in experimental and practical geometry. Art — Same as Lower 111, but more advanced, and with addition of elementary model-drawing. Writing. Gymnasium. Siugiug- -Novello's School Songs.
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3. General, Statement op Accounts kok thk Yeah ended 31st Deoembkk. 1910. Receipts. £ s. d. Expenditure. £ s. d. Balance at beginning of year .. .. 468 1 4 Management— Government grant for buildings, furniture, Office salaries .. .. .. 200 0 0 Stiings, and apparatus for recognizod Other expenses of management .. 14 0 4 school elaeses for manual instruction .. 814 6 Teachers' saluries— Government capitation— Main school .. .. .. .. 3,747 6 2 For free places .. .. .. 713 16 2 Preparatory department .. .. 167 0 0 For recognized school classes for manual Examinations— instiuction .. .. .. 8 13 4 Examiners'fees .. .. .. 5 0 0 Current income from reserves .. .. 4,338 13 3 Other expenses .. .. .. 11 9 6 School fees— Scholarships (bursaries) .. .. 45 0 0 Main school .. .. .. .. 672 11 6 Prizes .. .. .. .. 16 13 9 Preparatory department .. .. 167 0 0 Printing, stationery, books, and advertising 101 18 5 Contributions from pupils for instruction i Cleaning, fuel, light, &c. .. .. 65 2 10 in life saving .. .. .. 1 5 0 Maintenance of classes for manual instruction .. .. .. .. .. 816 1 Site, buildings, furniture, &c. — Manual instruction (Government grants) 191 16 3 Purchases and new works, repairs, &c. 66 16 8 Miscellaneous (insurance and keeping grounds in order) .. .. .. 43 15 6 Interest on Buildings Loan Account of £5,000 .. .. £200 0 0 Less credit of interest on current account .. .. 24 19 3 — 175 0 'J Other expenditure— Contribution to Buildings Loan Account towards extinction of debt on school buildings .. .. .. .. 500 0 0 Grants to Sports Fund and cadet corps.. 85 0 0 Expenses connected with endowments .. 270 1 11 Kent of playground .. .. .. 63 11 2 Grant to school library .. .. 18 17 10 Sundries .. .. .. .. 33 12 11 Balance at end of year .. .. .. 547 14 9 £6,378 15 1 £6,378 15 1 I. C. Adams.. Chairman. Geo. H. Mason, Registrar and Treasurer. Examined and found correct, —R. J. Collins, Controller and Auditor-General. Statement of Monetary Assets and Liabilities at Hist December, 1910. Assets. t r. d. Liabilities. Credit balance at bank .. .. 543 10 5" Excluding £4 is. 4d., bank balance, preparatory department. Geo. H. Mason, Registrar.
CHRISTCHURCH GIRLS' HIGH SCHOOL. Staff. Miss M. V. Gibson, M.A. ; Miss ( . K. Henderson, B.A. : Mis- M. Bell-Hay ; Miss F. Sheard, M.A.. B.So. ; Miss K. Gresson, M.A. ; Miss L. Bing, B.A. j Mrs. Longton, M.A.; Miss E. T. Crosby, 8.A.; Miss E. Greenstreet, 8.A. ; Miss A. 1,. Wilson. M.A. : Mise M. Wills: Miss ('. M. Farrow, M.A. : Captain Farthing; Miss .V. Qard'ner; Miss A. Rennie ; Miss H. Smith; .Mrs. S. Mayne; Miss Webster; Miss A. Partridge; Mr, T. S. Tankard. 1. Report of thk Lady Pmncipai.. The school roll again marked a record number, rising from 226 at the close of 1909 to 255 for the first term of 1910, second term 250, third term 238. I]he drop in numbers in the third term is unusualljlarge, and both last year and this there have been indications of an undesirable tendency on the part of some parents to allow their children to take up Junior I ,, ice Places, but to throw them up- —for no very adequate reason—before the completion of the two-years course, [n 1909, of 17 pupils who left during the year. 18 resigned their Junior Free Places during their first year. In 1910, out of a total of 21 who left during tin , year, 15 were Junior Free Place scholars. 7 still in their first year. This is in marked contrast to the Senior Free Place scholars, only 2 of whom resigned during the year, one to take up a pupil-teachership, and one after an attendance of nearly six years. The number of Senior Free scholars staying for a fourth year or even longer, also shows a satisfactory increase. In all 64 Senior Free scholars attended. 165 Junior Free scholars, 3 pupils held school free places, and 26 paid fees. 12 of these being in the preparatory class. The general health of the pupils was very good, and the average attendance for the year is 228 out of an average roll of 248. In January Miss M, Barkas, M.A., resigned her )i<isiti<>n mi the teaching staff to take up a more remunerative post at the Christchurch Technical College. Her place was filled by Miss A. 1. Wilson, M.A., a past pupil of the school. Miss Bell-Hay was absent on leave for the year, and Miss Margaret
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Farrow. M.A.. another past pupil, acted as relieving assistant teacher. Miss Farrow has now received a permanent position on the staff of the Nelson Girls" College. The dressmaking classes were taken by Miss I. Webster*, late headmistress of the Training School Eor Teachers. Wakefield, Yorkshire. The inclusion of two classes in regular school hours led to a very satisfactory increase in the number "I pupils taking this subjeot. There have also been two cookery classes held on Mondays in addition to the Saturday class. A special teacher. Miss Alice Partridge*, was appointed at the beginning of the year to teach plain needlework, and Mrs. S. Mayne has filled the vacancy left by Miss Mabel Wauchop's resignation as teacher of swimming. At the Secondary Schools Conference, which was held in Wellington in May, the school was represented by the Lady Principal and two assistants, Miss L. Bing, 8.A.. and Miss G. Greenstreet, B.A. The death of His late Majesty King Edward VII occurred during the May school holidays: but as many of the pupils as could be collected—about a hundred —attended the memorial service in Cranmer Square on 20th May, and representatives of the teaching staff also attended the memorial service in tin; Christchuroh Cathedral on the evening of that day. No candidate from the school sat for the .Junior University Scholarship Examination of December, 1909. This failure bo present a candidate is almost unprecedented in the history of the school, and had certainly not happened for the past twenty-eight years. It was due mainly to the unusually small number in the Sixth Form in 1909 through the large demand that year for additional pupil-teachers in the primary schools, and partly to the temporary indisposition of the one candidate whose name had been entered lor the examination. Twenty-five pupils passed the Matriculation Examination, and I I the Junior Civil Service Examination, <>l whom 7 obtained credit. Thirty-six pupils were awarded Senior Free Places, and one a Junior Free Place. Three gained Education Board Senior Scholarships. In October, 1910. the school was visited by Dr. Anderson and Mr. Gill. M.A.. who inspected the general working of all the classes, and held an examination for Senior Free Places. Fifty-three were presented, of whom. 43 passed the preliminary test, and 5 of the othei subsequently succeeded in the regular Senior Free Place Examination held in December. At the December, 1910, University examination, Ada Fairbairn took first place on the credit list of the Junior University Scholarship Examination, thereby winning a Gammack Scholarship. Elizabeth Harvey and Eileen Fairbairn were placed in the credit list. Twenty-two pupils passed the Matriculation Examination. Eight pupils passed the Junior Civil Service Examination, 5 being placed in the credit list. One pupil was presented for tin' Junior Free Place examination, and was successful. The preparatory class was examined by Mr. T. S. Foster. M.A.. senior Inspector of the North Canterbury Education Board : the 2 pupils in the highest division received proficiency certificates. The following past pupils of the school have won distinctions during the year : Laura Christen sen. degree of M.Sc, with first-class honours in electricity and magnetism ; Margaret Farrow, degree of M.A., with second-class honours in botany ; Mary Barkas, degree of M.Sc. second-class honours in chemistry and research scholarship, Victoria College ; Irene Wilson, degree of M.A.. third-class honours in Latin and English ; Gwen Opie. degrees of B.Sc. and M.Sc. ; Alice Candy, degree of 8.A., and senior scholarship in economics; Edith Jackson, degree of B.A. and senior scholarship in heat, light, and sound ; Helen Leversedge. degree of B.A. and senior scholarship in French ; Ida Mann. Gladys Marriott, and Florence Williams, degree of B.A. ; Marjorie Turnbull, exhibition in French. Canterbury College. Jessie Scott has also completed her medical course at Edinburgh. M. V. Gibson, Lady Principal. 2. Work of the Highest and Lowest Classes. Highest. —Form VI, Upper-All work as for Junior University Scholarship Examination. Subjects : Mathematics (Arithmetic, algebra, geometry plane and solid, trigonometry) ; English (Grammar, composition, literature,) ; Latin ; French ; Roman history ; German (as alternative with science) ; natural science (botany) ; physical science (heat). Latin —Virgil. Aeneid. Book 111 (Macmillan's Elementary Classics) ; Horace, Odes. Book I. (Macmillan's Elementary Classics) ; Cicero, Pro Lege Manilia (Blackie's Illustrated Latin Series) ; Livy, Second Macedonian War (Blackie's Illustrated Latin Series) ; Ovid in Exile (Arnold's Latin Texts) ; Kennedy's Revised Latin Primer ; Bradley's Latin Prose Composition ; Walter's Hints and Helps to Latin Prose. English—Shakespeare, Henry IV, Part II (Deighton) : A Book of Comparative Poetry (Macpherson) ; English Odes (Marsh) ; Lobban's English Essays (Blackie) ; Chaucer's Selections (Bilderdeck) ; Nesfield's Past and Present; Nesfield's Aids to Study and Composition. French — Moh'ere, Lβ Bourgeois Gentilhomme (Hachette) ; Nouvelles Contemporaries (Rivington) ; La Petite F»dette (Rivington) ; English Colloquialisms and French Equivalents (Hachette) ; Spiers, Graduated Course of Translation into French Prose ; Spiers. Rapid French Exercises ; Siepmann's Short French Grammar ; Gasc's French Dictionary. Science— Glazebrook's Heat ; Lowson's Second Stage Botany (U. B. Clive) ; Human Physiology. First Stage (Meachen) ; Biology. First Stage (Furneaux). Mathematics—Baker and Bourne's Elementary Algebra, Part II ; Hell and Knight's Algebra ; Loney's Trigonometry. Part I ; Hall and Stevens's Geometry Parts I-VI. Lowest. —Form IV. Junior —First-year course for Junior Free Place pupils. Subjects : Mathematics (arithmetic, elementary algebra, elementary geometry) ; English (grammar, composition, literature) ; Latin ; French ; English history ; geography ; science (elementary botany and elementary physiology, and laws of health) : drawing ; sewing. Cookery may be taken as an alternative with Latin ; extra spelling, dictation, letter-writing, may be taken as alternative with geometry. Text-
* These teachers were paid by the Ohristchureh Technical College.
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books used : Latin —First Latin Reader (Beresford) ; Longmans' Latin Course. English—The Water Babies (abridged). (Kingslcy) : The Ancient Mariner and Select Ballads (Coleridge) ; Rambles in Bookland ; Arnold Stomach's English Literature ; Nesfield's Outlines of English Grammar. French — Dent's New First French Book : Francais pour les Tout Petits ; Sound and Sentence Practice. Science —First Studies in Plant-life in Australasia; Hill's Physiology; Nabarro's Laws of Health. Mathematics —Hall and Knight's Algebra ; Hall and Stevens's Geometry. 8. General Statement of Accounts fob the Year ended 31st December, 1910. Receipts. £ s. d. Expenditure. £ s. d Government grant for buildings, furniture, By Overdraft or Dr. balance at beginning of fittings, and apparatus for recognized jear .. .. .. .. .. 2,090 18 7 school classes for manual instruction .. 53 5 9 Management— Government capitation— Office salaries.. .. .. .. 60 0 0 For free places .. .. .. 2,655 6 8 Other expenses of management.. .. 4 4 6 For recognized school classes for manual Teachers' salaries— instruction.. .. .. .. 80 1 3 Main scho< 1 .. .. .. .. 2,211 10 0 Current income from reserves .. .. 486 1 1 Preparatory department .. .. 103 19 0 Interest on moneys invested and on unpaid Boarding school Account (grant in aid to purchase-money .. .. .. 147 15 4 hoardiig-house) .. .. .. 50 0 0 School fees— Examination expenses (prize-distribution, Main school .. .. .. .. 160 13 0; speech-night) .. .. .. 9 3 6 Preparatory department .. .. 103 19 0 Scholarships and exhibitions .. .. 91 13 4 Voluntary contributions on account of gene- Prizes .. .. .. .. .. 25 1 4 rid purposes of the school .. .. 6 6 0' Printing, stationery, books, and advertising 53 19 4 Proceeds from cooking-class .. .. 39 2 7 CI aning, fuel, light, &a... .. .. 35 0 0 Dr. balance at end of year .. .. 1,365 0 7 Maintenance of classes for manual instruction .. .. .. .. .. 38 8 9 Site, buildings, furniture, &o.— Purchases and new works .. .. 42 3 2 Repairs, &c. .. .. .. 102 011 Miscellaneous (insurance) .. .. 21 1 5 Buildings, equipment, &c, for manual instruction .. .. .. .. 53 15 0 Expenses connected with endowments .. 41 17 4 Compensation for dwelling erected on Reserve 2208 .. .. .. .. .. 50 0 0 Sundries .. .. .. .. 12 15 1 £5,097 11 3 £5,097 11 3 I. C. Adams, Chairman. Geo. H. Mason, Registrar and Treasurer. Examined and found correct. —R. J. Collins, Controller and Auditor-General. Statement of Monetary Assets and Liabilities as at 31st December, 1910 Assets. Liabilities. £ s. d. Emily S. Foster Memorial Fund (held in trust) .. .. .. .. 66 11 6 [ H. Macmillan Brown Memorial Fund (held in trust) .. .. .. .. 98 8 4 Nil. Overdraft at bank .. .. .. 1,365 0 7 £1,530 0 5 Geo. H. Mason, Registrar. CHRIST'S COLLEGE GRAMMAR SCHOOL. Staff. Rev. C. H. Moreland, M.A. ; Rev. Canon F. A. Hare, M.A. >-Mr. E. G. Hogg, M.A. ; Mr. A. E. Flower, M.A., M.Sc; Mi-. K. Jenkins, M.A. ; Mr. J. Monteath, B.A. ; Mr. .). X. Ransom, B.A. ; Mr. H. Hudson, B.A. ; Mr. H. B. Lusk, M.A., LL.B. ; Mr. P. F. Turner: Mr. ('.. H. Merton, B.A. ; Mr. X. McK. Gibson, B.A. ; Mr. A. .1. Morton : Mr. .J. M. Madden : Captain Farthing. 1. Work of the Highest and Lowest Classes. Highest. —Work as for Junior Scholarships at the University of New Zealand. Lowest. —Form 111 : Latin —Collar and Darnell, The Shorter Latin Primer ; French—Dent's French Book; Maernillan's Progressive French Qourse ; First Year Lectures Faciles. English— History, Warner's ; geography, Longmans'. Part I ; grammar and composition. Longmans' Lyra Heroica ; reading, The Water Babies, Steps to Literature, Book II ; atlas, Home and Abroad. Divinity —St. Matthew's (Rivington) ; Catechism (Maclear). Mathematics—-Set CI and C2—Arithmetic (Pendlebury) ; set B2 —Arithmetic (Pendlebury) ; algebra. Hall and Knight's, and Longmans' Junior School ; geometry, Hall and Stevens's, Parts I and 11. Grammar—Longmans' Grammar and Composition, to page 86. Geography- --Southern Cross. I and 11. Divinity—Ainslie's Lessons on the
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Gospel; Church Catechism (Mrs. Francis). History —Blackwood's Series ; Short Stories from English History. Arithmetic—Zeahuidui. I, 11, and 111. Writing—Public Service Copy-book, Nos. 2-8. Reading —Imperial Reader No. 3 ; Princess Reader, 111, pages 1-80. Repetition : Loss of Royal George ; Casabianca,; Alexander Selkirk ; and part of John Gilpin. 2. General Statement of Accounts fob the Yeak ended 15th May, 1910. Receipts. £ s. d. Expenditure. £ s. d. Price of land sold (Capital Aooount) .. 50 0 0 Dr. balance at beginning of year .. .. 1,959 12 2 Loan on mortgage repaid .. .. 709 5 8 Offioe salaries and expenses of management 289 11 2 Current inoome from land .. .. 2,087 15 2 Teachers'salaries and allowances .. .. 3,518 2 0 Current inoome from scholarships endow- Examinations— ments .. .. .. .. 787 9 4 Examiners' fees .. .. .. 51 7 5 Interest on moneys invested and on unpaid Other expenses .. .. .. 3 7 9 purchase-money .. .. .. 273 9 6 Scholarships .. .. .. .. 714 19 6 Interest on moneys invested. Sinking Fund Prizes .. .. .. .. .. 53 1 2 Account .. .. . . .. 38 1 6 Material for classes other than classes for School fees .. .. .. .. 3,324 9 9 manual instruction .. .. .. 36 14 4 Books, &c, sold, and other refunds .. 26 17 0 Printing, stationery, and advertising .. 86 4 4 Voluntary contributions on acoount of Cleaning, fuel, light, &c. .. .. 226 7 5 general purposes of the school .. .. 205 14 11 New works .. .. .. .. 942 15 11 Depreciation and sinking funds transfer Fencing, repairs, &c. .. .. .. 298 210 (see contra) .. .. .. .. 621 18 8 Miscellaneous (rates, insurances, &c.) .. 80 3 8 Dr. balance at end of year .. . i , 886 18 5 Interest on ourrent account .. .. 46 18 6 Endowments, Sales Account— Proceeds invested (inoluding £400 sinking fund) .. .. .. .. 1,109 5 8 Expenses connected with land estate .. 86 4 0 Expenses oonneoted with school chapel .. 24 17 1 Grant, Boys' Games Fund .. .. 309 10 1 Grant, Boys' Cadet Fund .. .. 52 11 3 Depreciation and sinking funds (see contra) 621 18 3 £10,511 14 6 £W,511"14 6 C. Chkistchukch, Warden. W. Guise Bbittan, Bursar. Audited and found correct. — Akmand MoKellak, F.I.A.N.Z. Statement of Monetary A&sets and Liabilities at 31st January, 1911. Assets. Liabilities. Cash balances due by Union Bank of Debit balances due to Union Bank of Australia.— £ s. d. Australia and to sundry depositors— £ s. ii. Porter's Lodge Account .. .. 100 0 0 General Estate Capital Account .. 3 611 Depreciation fund .. .. .. 214 2 Buildings Account .. .. . 2,548 1 3 College House sinking fund .. 50 0 0 Somes Inoome Aocount .. .. 11l 16 9 Buller and Reay capital .. .. 5 7 2 Somes Buildings Account .. . . 285 9 0 Buller and Reay Reserve Account .. 45 0 0 Hulsean Chiohele Buildings Aocount .. 202 8 0 Rowley income .. .. .. 75 8 4 Jackson Trust Income Aocount .. 65 11 1 Rowley capital .. .. .. 10 11 0 Jackson Trust Capital Account .. 1,344 14 9 Dudley income .. .. .. 22 7 3 Tancred income .. .. .. 015 11 Balfour income .. .. .. 0 1 11 Robert Rhodes endowment .. .. 56 5 8 Lyndale income .. .. .. 15 9 4 £384 0 9 £4,561 7 9 W. Guise Bbittan, Bursar of Christ's College. AKAROA HIGH SCHOOL. Genekal Statement of Accounts fob the Year ended 31st Decembeb, 1910. h Receipts. £ s. d. I Expenditure. £ s. d. Balance at beginning of year .. .. 447 16 10 Inspection of reserves .. .. .. 2 2 0 Current income from reserves .. .. 133 011 Prizes .. .. .. .. 218 6 Intereet on fixed depooits .. .. .. 6 9 2 Printing, stationery, aud advertising .. 219 6 Drain-pipes .. .. .. .. 2 6 9 Grant to North Canterbury Board of Education .. .. .. .. ioo 0 0 Cheque-book and bank charges . . .. 0 15 0 Deed-box .. .. .. 13 6 Balance at end of year .. .. .. 475 1 8 £587 6 11 £587~61l Etienne E. Lelievre, Chairman. G. W. Thomas, Secretary. Examined and found correct. —R. J. Collins, Controller and Auditor-General,
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Statement of Monetary Assets and Liabilities at Hist December, 1910. Assets. £ 8. d. Liabilities. Fixed deposits .. .. .. .. 454 0 6 Current account .. .. .. 21 1 2 Nil. £475 1 8 G. W. Thomas, Secretary ASHBURTON HIGH SCHOOL. Staff. Mr. W. F. Wallers. lI.A. : Mr. E. 'I. N'uiris. M.A. ; Mr. \. 1!. It. Amese, M.A. : Miss .!•'. E. Kewhaw, M.A. : Miss M. M. Steven, 8.A., B.So. 1. Report ok the Board of Governors. The personnel of the Board is as follows : Mr. Joshua Tucker (Chairman), His Worship the Mayor (Henry Davis, Esq.). and Messrs. C. Reid, S. S. Chapman, J. C. N. Grigg, W, B. Denshire, and W. H. Collins. The Board held twelve meetings, the average attendance being five. The total enrolment of new pupils during the year was L3O (67 boys and 63 girls), the number of new pupils entering being 55 (30 boys and 25 girls). The number of fee-paying pupils was 8. There were i:i attendance 3 scholarship-holders (1 Education Board. 2 Junior National). Tin , average attendance for the year was 112. Owing to the increased attendance, the staff was strengthened by the appointment of Mr. A. H. R. Amess, M.A., as second assistant master. Instruction in typewriting was provided for pupils taking commercial subjects, and the classes in woodwork, dressmaking, and cookery were maintained as formerly. Of 6 candidates presented from the school for the Cookery Examination of the City and Guilds of London Institute, 5 obtained first-cTass passes and 1 a second-class pass. In order to provide practical experimental work in agriculture, the Board has had a portion of the gully in the school-grounds filled up, thus giving a section of close on a quarter of an acre, which it is hoped in the future will be further enlarged. The removal of trees, levelling, and fencing undertaken last year were this year completed, and the grounds are now in perfect order. Mr. T. H. Gill, Inspector of Secondary Schools, visited the school in June. The following are the examination results : 1 Junior Free Place extended for a third year ; Senior Free Places, 7 ; Junior Civil Service (with credit) 3 ; Junior Civil Service, 8 ; Matriculation, 7 ; Matriculation on Junior University Scholarship papers, 1 ; passed Junior University Scholarship with credit, 1. Joshua Tucker, Chairman. 2. Work ok the Highest and Lowest Classes. Hiyhesl. —English —Samson Agonistes ; Faerie Queene, Cantos I and II; Macaulay's Chatham : Chaucer's Prologue and portion of Man of Lawe's Tale; selections from Piers Plowman; English literature lives and works of prominent authors from 449 to 1850, with extracts from works : Nesfields Aids to English Grammar and Composition ; Williams's Composition ; Historical English Grammar. Latin — Caesar de Bello Gallico, Book VII, and extracts from De Bello Civili ; Horace's Epistles. Book I ; Matriculation selections from Latin authors (Cicero, Virgil, and Livy) ; Longmans , Latin Prose ; Spragge's Latin Prose ; Roman History, and Antiquities. French —Weekly's Matriculation French Course, and Weekly's Tutorial French Composit inn ; Perret's French Reader : unseens ; phonetics. Heat — Glazebrook, Chapters i-xii, excluding xi. Botany —As for Junior University Scholarship ; Dendy and Lucas's Botany. Mathematics —Arithmetic, whole of Goyen's Higher Arithmetic ; algebra. Hall and Knight, pages 160-328, permutations and combinations ; geometry, Baker and Bourne, to end of Book VII ; trigonometry, Bridgett and Hyslop, to page 217, end of solution of triangles. Lowest. —English —Macaulay's Lays of Ancient Rome ; selections from Longfellow ; Mrs. (Tatty's Parables from Nature ; Nesfield's Aids to English Composition, pages 1-110 ; punctuation, analysis, parsing, paraphrasing, prosody, figures of speech. Latin-—Longmans' Latin Course, pages 1-87 ; Ora Maritime. French —Siepmann's French Course, Part I, whole book. Arithmetic—Goyen's Higher Arithmetic, pages 1-121 and 306-355. Algebra —Baker and Bourne, pages 1-114. Geometry -Baker and Bourne, Book Ito proposition 13, with easy exercises ; Practical Geometry. Agriculture —Kirk's Elementary Agriculture (subject treated as for Junior Civil Service). Botany—Evans's Botany, pages 1—122 and 160-184. Book-keeping—Grierson's Book-keeping. Shorthand—Gregg's Handbook. Typewriting. Woodwork, cooking, dressmaking, according to Department's syllabus.
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3. General Statement ok Accounts for the Year ended 31st December, 1910. Receipts. £ s. d. Expenditure. £ s. d. Government capitation— Dr. balance at beginning of year .. .. 1,284 8 8 For free places .. .. .. 1,241 19 9 Management— For recognized school classes for manual Office salary .. .. .. .. 60 0 0 instruction .. .. .. .. 64 2 6 Other office expenses .. .. .. 311 10 Subsidy on voluntary contributions— Teachers'salaries and allowances.. .. 1,156 13 4 secondary schools .. .. .. 53 13 4 Prizes .. .. .. .. .. 14 8 11 Current income from reserves .. .. 766 3 3 Material for classes other than classes for School fees .. .. .. .. 57 0 6 manual instruction .. .. .. 21 15 5 Books, &c, sold and other refunds .. 015 0 | Printing, stationery, and advertising .. 36 15 0 Voluntary contributions on accouut of Cleaning, fuel, light, <feo. .. .. 70 12 2 general purposes of the school .. .. 53 13 4 Maintenance of classes for manual instruction 64 2 (i Summer School Conference—for use of Site, building, furniture, &c. (Government school .. .. .. .. 100; grant) .. .. .. 329 11 1 Dr. balance at end of year .. .. 1,000 14 11 • Fencing, repairs, &c. .. .. .. 25 2 2 Miscellaneous (rates, &c.) .. .. 47 11 0 Interest on current account .. .. 68 4 6 Subsidy to teohnical classes .. .. 10 0 0 Water-supply .. .. .. .. 716 0 Inspection of reserves .. .. .. 10 0 0 j Honours Board .. .. .. .. 28 10 0 '■'V -2 7 £3,239 2 7 Joshua Tucker. Chairman. John Davison, Secretary. Examined and found correct. —R. J. Collins, Controller and Auditor-General. Statement of Monetary Assets and Liabilities, Year ending December, 1910. Assets. £ g. d. Liabilities. ii s. d. Rents of reserves (outstanding) .. .. 33 0 0 Dr. balance due bank .. .. .. 1,000 Ull Capitation due from Education Department (third term) .. .. .. .. 382 15 11 £415 15 11 £1,000 14 11 John Davison, Secretary.
TIMARU HIGH school. Staff. Hoys' School.— Mr. (J. A. Simmers. M.A. ; Mr. R. H. Rockel, M.A. ; Mr. VV. H. P. Munro, M.A. ; Mr. A. Q. Johnson, B.Sc. ; Mr. R. Giant. Oirlt' School.— Miss P.. M. Watt, M.A. ; Miss .1. Mnlholland, M.A. j Miss K. .1. \V. Hodges, M.A. ; Miss E. Reid; Miss E. L. Wilson. 1. Work of the Highest and Lowest Classes. Highest.- Boys: Latin — Tutorial Latin Composition; Tutorial Latin Grammar ; Stedman's Latin Examination Papers ; Shuckburgh's History of Rome ; Tutorial Selections from Latin Authors ; Blackio's Intermediate Unseens ; Amy Dictionary. English—-Ni col's English Composition ; Nesfield's Historical English ; B. Skent's Historical English ; Sielye's Colonial Expansion ; Carlyle's Heroes and Hero-VVorship (selections) ; Wordsworth Epoch (Stobart) ; Twelfth Night, Macbeth. French— Tutorial French Composition: Tutorial French Grammar; Tutorial French Unseens; Matriculation French course in grammar and composition ; Poemes Choisis ; Hernani (V. Hugo) ; Lβ Misanthrope (Moliere) ;Le Petit Chose (A. Daudet); Cinq Mars (Siepmann's edition). Mathematics- -As for Junior University Scholarship ; Hall and Stevens's Geometry ; Tutorial Advanced Algebra ; Borchardt and Perrott's New Trigonometry. Mechanics and Electricity, as for Junior University Scholarship ; Loney's Elements of Statics and Dynamics ; Hadley's Manual of Electricity mid Magnetism. Oirh : English —Nesfield's English Grammar, Past and Present; Nesfield's Manual of English Grammar and Com position ; Wordsworth's Ode on Intimations of Immortality : Shelley's Adonais ; Spenser's Selections ; Browning's Saul and Rabbi Ben Ezra ; Selections from Gibbon, Burke, and Boswell's Life of Johnson ; selections from Seventeenth Century Prose ; Chaucer's Prologue ; Ruskin's Sesame and Lilies. Latin —Bryan's Latin Prose Exercises; Arnold's Latin Prose Composition; Latin Dictionary; Allan's Elementary Latin Grammar ; Matriculation Selections from Latin Authors ; Discemenda Latina ; Horace, Odes. Book III,; Macmillan's Third Latin Course ; Caesar, Book VII. French —Matriculation French Course ; Barlet and Mason's Advanced Reader ; French Vocabularies for Repetition ; Bue's Idioms; Bo'ielle's French Poetry ; Macmillan's French Composition, Second Course. History — Creighton's History Primer, Rome ; Wilkins's Primer of Roman Antiquities. Mathematics —Goyen's Advanced Arithmetic and Elementary Algebra ; Baker and Bourne's Algebra, Part I ; Borchardt and Perrott's Trigonometry, Part I ; Hall and Stevens's School Geometry, Parts I and 11, with introductory course, 111 and IV, V and VI. Botany—Study of Botany (Dendy and Lucas) ; Lowson's Second-stage Botany ; Youman's Botany. Mechanics —Loney's Mechanics and Hydrostatics for Beginners. Geography. Scripture. Lowest. — Boys : French—Siepmann Part I. English—Nesfield's Outline of English Grammar ; Lamb's Tales from Shakespeare ; English Poetry for the Young (Blackie). Geography—Lyde's Man
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on the Earth ; Longmans' Elementary Physical Geography, Part V ; Bosworth's Short Geography of the World (Macmillan). Geometry —Hall and Stevens, Parts I and 11. Algebra—Blackie's Elementary Modern Algebra. Arithmetic —Goyen. Science —Exercises in Practical Physics (Gregory and Simmons), Sections 1-47, 66-91. Girls : English —Nesfield's Outline of English Grammar ; Oral Exercises in English Composition ;E. S. Wood's Word-building and Spelling, VI; Tellers of Tales ; English Poetry for the Young ; Dramatic Scenes from English Literature. Latin —Bell's Scalae Primae ; Bell's Concise Latin Course, Part I; Bell's Latin Course, Part I. French—First Steps in Colloquial French ; Le Livre dcs Jeux. History —Nelson's Highroads of History, IV. Mathematics —Standard Vl—Arithmetic, New Southern Cross ; Blackie's Elementary Modern Algebra ; Hall and Stevens's School Geometry, I and 11, with introductory course. Botany—Youman's Botany. Geography— New Century Geographical Reader, VI. 2. General Statement of Accounts for the Yeah enijED 31st December, 1910. Receipts. £ s. d. Expenditure. £ s. d. Government capitation— Dr. balance at beginning of year .. .. 150 7 9 For free places .. .. .. 1,137 6 .5 Management— For recognized school classes for manual Office salary .. .. .. .. 100 0 0 instruction .. .. .. .. 79 19 9 Other office expenses .. .. .. 25 10 1 Current income from reserves .. .. 2,086 14 1 Other expenses of management .. 74 18 0 School fees .. .. .. .. 150 14 4 Teachers'salaries and allowances.. .. 2,052 510 Interest. Rectory furniture .. .. 32 6 3 Scholarships .. .. .. .. 40 0 0 Sale of hay, &c... .. .. .. 2 5 0 Prizes .. .. .. .. .. 39 0 9 Dr. balanoe at end of year .. .. 230 12 2 Printing, stationery, and advertising .. 32 10 7 Cleaning, fuel, light, &o. .. .. .. 108 0 7 Maintenance of classes for manual instruction .. .. .. .. .. 63 13 4 Purohases and new works .. .. 943 15 0 Fencing, repairs, &c. .. .. .. 18 19 3 Miscellaneous (rates, &c.) .. .. 41 11 10 Buildings, equipment, &c, for manual instruction .. .. .. .. 17 10 6 Rent of telephones .. .. .. 11 14 9 £3,719 18 3 £3,719 18 3 Wμ. B. Howell, Chairman. A. Bell, Secretary. Examined and found correct. —R. J. Collins, Controller and Auditor-General. Statement of Monetary Assets and Liabilities as at 31st December, 1910. Assets. £ c. d. Liabilities. £ s. d. Outstanding rents .. .. .. 568 0 1 Dr. balance in bank .. .. .. 151 7 2 Due from Government— Unpreeented cheques .. .. .. 79 5 0 Capitation for free places, third term .. 365 0 4 Outstanding accounts (estimated) .. 60 0 0 Capitation for technical classes.. 80 7 6 £1,013 7 11 £290 12 2 A. Bell, Secretary. WAIMATE HIGH SCHOOL. General Statement of Accounts fob the Year ended 31st December, 1910. Receipts. £ s. d. Expenditure. £ s. d. Balance at beginning of year .. .. 2,798 3 10 Management— Current income from reserves .. .. 354 3 6 Office salary .. .. .. .. 20 0 0 Interest on moneys invested and on unpaid Other office expenees .. .. .. 14 6 0 purchase-money .. .. .. 157 0 0 Other expenses of management.. .. 214 10 Insurance indemnity .. .. .. 0 5 0 Teachers'salaries and allowances .. 127 10 0 Exchange .. .. .. .. 0 0 6 Examinations —Examiners' fees .. .. 16 16 0 Scholarships .. .. .. .. 127 10 0 Prizes .. .. .. .. .. 770 Printing, stationery, and advertising .. 10 0 6 Cleaning, fuel, light, &c. .. .. 3 9 1 Books and stationery for sale to pupils, and other temporary advances .. .. 3 3 3 Miscellaneous rates .. .. .. 0 5 0 Interest .. .. .. .. 0 9 0 Other expenditure— Grant, technical classes .. .. 10 0 0 Exchange .. .. .. .. 0 4 0 Bank charge .. .. .. .. 0 10 0 Solicitor's account .. .. .. 0 10 6 On mortgage .. .. .. .. 2,800 0 0 Balance at end of year .. .. .. 164 17 8 £3,309 12 10 £3,309 12 10 H. C. Barclay, Chairman. Geo. Bolton, Secretary. Examined and found correct. —R. J. Collins, Controller and Auditor-General
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Statement of Monetary Assets and Liabilities as at 31st December, 1910. AsseU. £ a. d. Liabilities. On mortgage .. .. .. .. 2,800 0 0 In bank .. .. .. .. 164 12 8 Rents .. .. .. .. .. 51 10 10 Interest .. .. .. .. 44 0 0 Nil. Cash in hand .. .. .. .. 018 0 £3,061 1 6 Geo. BoLTON, Secretary. WAITAKI HIGH SCHOOL. Staff. Boys' School.—Mr. T. Milmr. M.A. : Mr. <i. H. lltl.-v. M.A.. B.Sc. : Mr. M. K. MoCulloch, M.A. ; Mr. D. 8. Chkholm, M.A. ; Mr. H. H. Allan. M.A. : Mr. R. C. Onglej ; Mr. W. M. Uttley ; Miss M. McCaw : Sergeant-major Kibblewhite. Girls' School- Miss C. Ferguson, .M.A. ; Miss C. 15. Mills. M.A.. B.So. : Miss A. M. Bmlcl. M.A. : Miss M. Reese, B.A. ; Miss M. McCaw ; Sergeant-major Kihblowhite. 1. Report of the Board of Governors. The Board of Governors beg to report a continuance of the success that attends the institutions under their charge. The total enrolment at the boys' school during the year comprised 229 pupils, of whom 159 were boarders. The roll at the girls' school has maintained the average. The results of the various public examinations were again satisfactory. At the boys' school 10 pupils who kept terms in connection with Otago University passed the first sections of the B.A. and L.L.B. degrees. The 3 candidates presented for Senior Civil Service gained full passes ; 45 out of 50 candidates passed the Junior Civil Service Examination. Out of 6 candidates presented for the New Zealand Junior University Scholarship Examination, 2 won Junior University Scholarships, one of whom topped the list for the Dominion, 2 gained Senior National Scholarships, and the other two gained credit passes. Eight boys passed Matriculation, and 5 were allotted Otago Senior Board Scholarships. During the yeai the Board have added considerably to the equipment of the school. Duncan Sutherland, Chairman. 2. Work of thk Highest and Lowest Classes. Highest. — Boys : Mathematics —Baker and Bourne's Algebra, 1 and II ; Hall and Stevens's Geometry ; Hall and Knight's Elementary Trigonometry ; Ward's Trigonometry Papers. Latin— Roby's School Latin Grammar; Bradley's Latin Prose Composition ; Horton's History of Rome ; Ramsay's Elementary Roman Antiquities ; Bryan's Caesar's Latin Prose ; Horace, Odes I and II; Caesar's Gallic War, Book VII; Ovid, selections ; Virgil's Aeneid, Books XI and XII. French— Berthou's Selection from Modern French Prose ; Berthou's Selection from Modern French Verse ; Victor Hugo's Waterloo, Les Miserables ; La Fontaine's Fables ; Theopile Gautier's Scenes of Travel; Wellington College French Grammar ; Bue's French Idioms. English—Nesfield's English, Past and Present ; Skeat's Chaucer's Prologue ; Shakespeare's Hamlet ; Browning's Saul and Rabbi Ben Ezra ; selections from Tennyson, Milton, Keats. Shelley, Coleridge; Hawthorne's Scarlet Letter; Tutorial History of English Literature. Science—Tutorial Chemistry (both parts, metals and non-metals), Chapman Jonas's Practical Inorganic Chemistry for Advanced Students ; Draper's Heat for Advanced Students ; Robson's Practical Exercises in Heat. Girls : English—As You Like It ; Richard II ; Morell's English Literature ; Readings from Carlyle ; Chaucer's Prologue and Selected Tales ; mis cellaneous readings from various authors; Nesfield's Grammar, Past and Present, Part III; essays, Latin —Bradley's Arnold's Latin Prose Composition, to the end; Virgil's Aeneid, Book I; Cicero's In Catilinam ; Livy's History, Book XXII ; Horace , * Odes, Book III; miscellaneous reading from various authors; Roman History (Merivale). French — Boielle's Poetry; Weekly's Prose; Halfhours with the Best French Authors ; La Fontaine's Fables ; Blouet's Extracts ; Chardenal's Idioms : Wellington College Grammar ; miscellaneous prose. Botany—-As for Junior University Scholarship. Heat —Glazebrook and Deschanel, to Junior University Scholarship standard. Mathematics —Arithmetic (the whole subject) ; algebra, Baker and Bourne's ; geometry, Hall and Stevens's ; trigonometry, Lock's. Scripture —Lives of Abraham, Joseph, Moses. Lowest. — Boys : English—Yoxall's Speller ; Nesfield's Outlines of English Grammar ; Nesfield's Oial Composition ; Call of the Home-land ; Readings from Dickens ; Macaulay's Armada, Ivry, and Battle of Naseby ; Irving's Rip Van Winkle, Struggle for Freedom. Latin — Elementa Latina. Mathematics —Baker and Bourne's Algebra ; Hall and Stevens's Geometry, 1 to 4 ; Pendlebury's New School Arithmetic. Science —Murchie's Physiology ; First-stage Physiology ; Furneaux. French — Roseman and Schmidt, Part I; Mademoiselle Papillon ; French without Tears, Part I. Girls : English —Logic Robertson's Prose ; Laureata ; Nesfield's Manual, to page 91 ; essay-writing. Latin — Longmans', Part I, to exercise 70. French —Bell's First French Course, and part of Second Course.
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Botany -Flower, fruit, root, stem, seed, leaves, and a few orders. Physiology—Murehie's, and practical work. Arithmetic—Pendlebury's. Algebra—Baker and Bourne's, up toH.C.F. and L.C.M. Geo metry —Baker and Bourne's. Book I, up to proposition 31. Drawing—Freehand, model, brushwork. Scripture Lessons from G-enesis and Exodus. 3. General Statement op Accounts fok the Yeak ended 31st December, 1910. Receipts. £ s. d. Expenditure. £ s. d. Government capitation— Dr. balance at beginning of year .. 1,077 7 1 For free places .. .. .. 2,060 8 4 Management— For recognized school classes for manual Office salary .. .. .. 200 0 0 instruction .. .. .. 12 17 6 Other expenses of management—petty Subsidy on voluntary contributions, seoond- cash .. .. 5 0 0 ary schools .. .. .. .. 500 0 0 Teachers' salaries and allowances .. 2,642 5 0 Current income from reserves .. .. !, 439 9 6 Prizes .. .. .. .. 33 2 3 Paid by School Commissioners .. .. 326 1 l J Printing, stationery, and advertising .. 80 :< 8 School fees .. .. .. .. 816 .5 0 Cleaning, fuel, light, &c. .. .. 158 5 9 Interest on Scholarship Account .. 3 15 0 School institutions .. .. 89 11 (i Voluntary contributions— Maintenance of classes for manual instrucOn account of general purposes of the tion.. .. .. .. .. 39 4 !i sohool .. .. .. .. 500 0 0 Site, buildings, furniture, AcRefunds .. .. .. .. 0 9 0 Purchases and new works .. 1,971 6 1 Lighting-plant sold .. .. .. 21 10 0 Fenoing, repairs, &c. .. .. .. 44 10 0 Dr. balance at end of year .. .. 870 2 8 Miscellaneous (rates, &o.) .. 71 5 0 Interest on current account .. .. 39 11 6 Purchase of other lands—rebate of rent .. 25 0 0 ! Miscellaneous (surveys, &c.) .. .. 12 9 0 Incidentals .. .. .. .. 24 15 0 I Drill Instructor .. .. .. 17 10 0 Ranger .. .. .. . 15 0 0 Law-costs .. .. .. .. i 10 8 £6,560 18 9 £6,550 18 9 Duncan Sutherland, Chairman. A. A. McKinnon, Secretary. Statement of the Monetary Assets and Liabilities at Hist December, 1910. Assets. £ s. d. Liabilities. £ s. d. Rents uncollected, outstanding .. .. 296 2 5 Outstanding accounts (estimated^.. .. 35 2 9 Capitation, third leim, 1910 .. .. 685 8 4 Contracts in progress (estimated) .. .. 1,359 0 0 Capitation, technical, third term, 1910 .. 17 15 7 Bank of New Zealand, Dr. balanoe .. 870 2 8 £999 6 J £2,264 5 5 Examined and found correct, except that —(1.) The payment of £15 for Waitakian if without authority of law, and is therefore disallowed. (2.) The following payments contravene ;i principle of the Trustees Aft thai persons holding a position of fiduciary character must nut benefit from their relationship to their trust : Mr. .1. M. Brown (a member of the Board) for <,'<->ods supplied, £100 I Is. Bd. ; Messrs. Milligan and JJond (of which firm Mr. l\. Milligan, a member of the Board, is a partner) for goods eupplied, £14 :!s. 3d. —R. J. Collins, Controller and AuditorGeneral.
OTAGO HOYS' AND GIRLS' HIGH SCHOOLS. Staff. Boys , School.—Mr. W. -I. Monell, M.A. ; Mr. M. Watson. M.A. ; Mr. -I. Macphereon, F.E.I.S. ; Mr. I-'. H. Cimp bell, B.A. ; Mr. R. A. McCullough, M.A. : .Mr. E. .1. Tan-. M.A., B.Sc. ; Mr. .1. Reid, li.A. ; Mr. .]. <;. Fullarton, B.A. : Mr. H- Chapman, B.A. ; Mr. W. A. Armour, M.A.. B.So. : Mr. .J. <;. Paterson, M.A. ; .Mr. I). Sherriff; Mr. .1. II Girls' BchooL —Miss M. E. A. Marchant, M.A. ; Miss F. M. Allan, M.A. ; Miss H. Alexander, B.A. : Miss S. ('. c. McKnight, M.A.. M.So : Mies E. 10. Little ; Miss P, Campbell, B.A. ; Miss L A. N. Downes, B.A. ; Miss M. \V. Alves ; Miss E. M. Campbell ; Miss M. MoLeod : Mr. -I. Haiina : Mr. W. <>. Taylor; Mrs. 1,. A. Mason. 1. Report of the Board of Governors. In compliance with your circular of the 7th December, 1910, I have the honour to forward the following genera.! report on the schools for the year ending 31st December, 1910. The schools were inspected in October last by the Assistant Inspector-Genera] of Schools, Dr. Anderson, and Inspector Gill, who reported generally on the satisfactory work done, and the efficiency of the staff. The main portion of the new Girls' High School building was completed in September, 1910. The building is thoroughly modern in all respects and temporarily meets the requirements of the school, but with the increased attendance it will be necessary at an early date to complete the additional wing which was provided for in the plan of the new building. It was very gratifying to the Board to have the building contract carried out and completed in a most satisfactory manner. J. R. Sinclair, Chairman.
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2. Work of the Highest and Lowest Classes. Highest.- Boys : English—Shakespeare, Macbeth ; Chaucer, Prologue ; Milton, Paradise Lost, Book II : Palgrave's (Jolden Treasury, Book IV (selections) ; Lee, Seventeenth Century Prose ; Kuskin, Sesame and Lilies ; Nesfield's Historical English ; Nichol and M'Cormick, Exercises on English Composition. Latin —Livy. Book II ; Cicero. In Verrem Actio Prima ; Horace, Odes, Book I; Virgil. Georgics, II ; sight translation, prose composition, and grammar papers; Shuckburgh. History of Rome : Wilkins, Roman Antiquities. French —Daudet, Tartarin de Tarascon ; Moliere, Le Medeoin : Victor Hugo. Lyric Poems, composition, grammar, phonetics, &c. Mathematics—Arithmetic (whole subject) : algebra, Baker and Bourne, to permutations ; geometry, Baker and Bourne, Books I to VII ; trigonometry, Hall and Knight. Science- —Chemistry, the metals, revision of non-metals, elementary qualitative analysis ; physios; heat. Girls: English —Chaucer, part of the Prologue, and extracts from Tales; Shakespeare, Julius Caesar, Antony and Cleopatra, Twelfth Night. Henry IV; Milton's Comus; Historical English Grammar; composition. &c. ; Literature, general, with readings from modern poets and Kuskin. Latin- Livy. Book 111. chapters 9-26; Horace Odes. Book 111 (part). Book IV. four epodes, four epistles; Middleton's Latin Verse ; composition, grammar, &c. ; Roman History and Antiquities. French — Macmillan's Advanced Exercises; Wellington College Reader; Boielle, poetry; Pellissier, French Unseens for Higher Forms; Grammar, composition, &c.; Berthou., Specimens of Modern French Verse. Mathematics — Arithmetic, flic whole eubject : algebra, to permutations and combinations, inclusive; geometry, Euclid. Books 1. 11. 11. V. VI, VII (Baker and Bourne): trigonometry, Lock's Trigonometry, to solutions oi triangles. Science Botany The morphology and physiology of the botanical types specified in the Junior Scholarship schedule. Physics — As denned in the .Imuor Scholarship schedule. Commercial Work- -Elementary book-keeping; shorthand and typewriting. Lowest. Boys: English Smith. Book of Verse, Part II: Scott. Talisman; Anson, Taking of the Galleon ; Gow's Method of English, Parti. English History Tout. First Book of British History. (IIIb) to 17:27. (I I If) to 1625. Geography—Herbertson, Preliminary Geography. Latin—Macmillan's Shorter Latin Course. Part I. (Illii) the whole; (IIIc), sections 1 -55; Bell's Scalae Primae. (IIIb) chapters 35 15; (IIIc) chapters I 10. French Siepmann's Primary French Course. Part I. (IIIb) Lessons i 25; (IIIc) 1 18. Mathematics Workman's School Arithmetic. (111b) to ratio and proportion. (IIIc) I<> recurring decimals ; algebra, Baker and Bourne, (lllit) to simultaneous equations. (IIIc) to easy problems ; geometry. Hall and Stevens. (I I In) theorems I 22, (IIIc) theorems 1-13, problems 16; experimental work. Science —Elementary Inorganic Chemistry (Jago). Qvrls : English ■ — Literature, In Golden Realms. Midsummer Night's Dream : reader, Literary Reading and Composition ; grammar, parsing and analysis; Nesfield's Aids to the Study and Composition of English : composition ; geography. Regional Geography (Europe). French — Siepmann, Part I ; and regular verbs. Mathematics Arithmetic, fractions, decimals, practice, proportion, proportionate division; algebra. Hall and Knight, to equations; geometry, practical work. Science Botany, as in [Vα. Commercial work- -Elementary. S. General Statement of Accounts fob the Yeak ended 31st Decejmbbk, 1910. Receipts. £ a. d. Expenditure. £ s. d. Balance in band and in bank at beginning Management— of year .. .. .. .. 567 6 9 Office salaries .. .. .. 235 0 0 Government graDta for sites, building, furni- Other office expenses .. .. .. 24 18 5 ture, &c. (general purposes) .. .. 6,928 5 0 Other expenses of management .. 39 7 4 Government capitation— Teachere' salaries and allowances .. 5,289 5 11 For free places ... .. .. 3,521 8 8 Boarding-school account— For recognized school classes for manual Repairs .. .. .. .. 176 14 8 instruction .. .. .. 23 7 6 Rent .. .. .. .. 51 7 6 Current income from reserves .. .. 2,728 15 7 Sundries and incidentals .. .. 49 8 8 Interest on moneys invested and on unpaid ; Legal .. .. .. .. .. 16 16 6 purchase-money .. .. .. 18 11 10 Laboratory Account .. .. .. 15 9 6 Paid by School Commissioners .. .. 374 11 2 Prizes.. .. .. .. .. 44 13 11 School fees .. .. .. .. 362 5 2 Insurance premiums .. .. .. 38 5 6 Deposits on contracts .. .. .. 17 9 0 Printing, stationery, and advertising .. 139 12 4 Sale of timber on reserves .. .. 8 0 0 Cleaning, fuel, light, Ac, including wages Interest from prize funds .. .. 518 4 of two janitors .. .. .. 301 0 (i Costs from tenants for leases .. .. 11 11 0 Books and stationery for sale to pupils, and Sale of building material .. .. 115 0 0; other temporary advances .. .. 12 1 Valuation improvements from incoming Maintenances of classes for manual intenants .. .. .. .. 165 0 0 sttuction .. .. .. .. 28 7 6 Dr. balance at end of year .. .. 605 11 6 Site, buildings, furniture, &o. (Government grants) .. .. .. .. 6,023 6 0 Building Girls' School .. .. .. 1,226 l'J 11 Fencing, repairs, &c, furnishing .. 209 5 7 Miscellaneous (rates, &c.) .. .. 51 0 4 Buildings, equipment, &c, for manual instruction .. .. .. .. 34 4 4 Interest on ouirent account and on debentures .. .. .. .. 151 4 0 Endowments— Expenditure .. .. .. .. 147 14 11 Valuation (outgoing tenants) .. .. 165 0 0 Sinking fund .. .. .. 16 10 0 Bent temporary premises .. .. 73 18 6 Refund of deposit .. .. .. 2 9 0 £15,448 1 6 £15,448 1 6
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Balance Account, 1910. 1910. fi s. d. I 1910. a s. d. Jan. 1. Balance brought down— Jan. 1. Balances brought down— Deposit on contract .. .. 30 0 0 Uncompleted purchases .. 819 4 1 Dee. 81. Ordinary expenditure .. .. 15,264 2 6 Fixed depositsBalances carried down — Dalrymple Prize Fund .. 100 0 0 Dalrymple Fund .. .. 100 0 0 Sinking fund .. .. 33 0 0 Uncompleted purchases .. 316 4 11 Campbell and Hawthorne Sinking fund " .. .. 50 15 8 Fund .. .. .. 47 17 8 Campbell and Hawthorne Prize Cash in Bank of New Zealand.. 519 9 1 Fund .. .. .. 47 17 8 | De 0.31. Ordinary revenue, &c. .. .. 7,150 17 5 Interest on sinking fund deposit 15 8 Building grant .. .. 6,923 5 0 Interest on personal accounts .. 15 I' 2 8 Balances carried down— Overdraft, Bank of New Zealand 653 9 i Deposit due to contractors .. 45 0 0 £15,809 0 9 i £15,809 0 9 1911. 1911. Jan. 1. Balances brought down — iJ 9. d. Jan. 1. Balances brought down— £ s. d. Overdraft Bank of New Zealand 653 'J 2 I Dalrymple Prize Fund .. 100 0 0 Deposit due to contractors .. 45 0 0 Uncompleted purchases .. 316 411 Sinking Fund .. .. 50 15 8 Campbell and Hawthorne Fund 47 17 8 £698 9 2 £514 18 3 Statement of Monetary Assets and Liabilities on Slst December, 1910. Asxets. k, s. d. Liabilities. £ s. d. Rents overdue .. .. .. .. 25)2 8 3 ! Tradesmen's accounts unpaid . . .. 91 4 4 School fees overdue, including Government Public debt —Debentures .. .. 3,300 0 0 capitation— Deposits to contractors .. .. .. in 0 0 Boys .. .. .. .. 873 4 l J Overdraft, Baok of New Zealand .. 653 'J 2 (rirls .. .. .. .. 597 12 10 Rent overpaid .. .. .. .. 0 0 4 Amount due on land instalments, including interest .. .. .. .. 316 4 11 Amount on fixed deposit (Campbell and Hawthorne Fund) .. .. .. 47 17 8 Amount at credit of Sinking fund .. 50 15 8 .1:2,178 4 1 £4,089 13 10 Gray Russell Scholarship Fund. Receipts. £ s. d. Expenditure. £ s. d. Balances brought forward, Ist January, 1910 56 15 5 Paid scholarship, H. W. Slater .. .. 40 0 0 Interest on mortgage .. .. .. 40 0 0 Balance in Bank of New Zealand .. 64 15 5 Interest on fixed deposit .. .. 8 0 0 £104 15 5 £104 15 5 Gray Russell Scholarship Fund Capital Account. Receipts. £ s. d. Expenditure. £ s. d. Balances on 31st December, 1909— Balances, 31st December, 1910— Amount advanced on mortgage .. 800 0 0 Amount of Robertson's loan .. .. 800 0 0 Fixed deposit. Bank of New Zealand .. 200 0 0 Amount in Bank of New Zealand, on fixed deposit .. .. .. .. 200 0 0 £1,000 0 0 £1,000 0 0 Hichardson Cadet Corps Fund. Receipts. £ s. d. Expenditure. £ s. d. Balances brought forward. Ist January, 1910 — Paid Otago High Sohool cadets .. .. 4 0 0 Fixed deposit, Bank of New Zealand .. 20 8 0 Paid Normal School cadets .. .. 4 0 0 Interest on fixed deposit .. .. 8 0 0 Balance 31st December, 1910, fixed de'jiosit, Bank of New Zealand .. .. 20 8 0 £2S 8 0 £28 8 0 Richardson Cadet Corps Fund Capital Account. £ s. d. £ a. d. Original capital .. .. .. 150 0 0 Balance, 31st December, 1910, fixed deposit, Profit, sale Bank of New Zealand shares .. 29 12 0 Bank of New Zealand .. .. .. 179 12 0 £179 12 0 £179 12 0 Frank Lee-Smith Prize Fund. 1910. £ s. d. 1910. £ s. d. Jan. 1. Balance on fixed deposit, Bank of Dec. 31. Balance on fixed deposit, due 2nd New Zealand .. .. .. 14 3 10 i March, 1911 .. .. 14 3 10 £14 3 10 £14 3 10
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Dalrymplr Prize Fund. Receipts. £ s. d. Expenditure. £ s. d. Interest on fixed deposit, Bank of New Zea- Paia prizes, Girls' High School .. .. 4 0 0 land . . .. .. .. 4 0 0 £4 0 0 £4 0 0 Dalrymple Prize Fund Capital Account. £ s- A. £ «. d. Balanoe on 31st December, 1909 .. .. 100 0 0 Balance, 31st December, 1910, fixed deposit, Bank of New Zealar.d.. .. .. 100 0 0 £100 0 0 £100 0 0 Statement of Income and Expenditure of the Otago Boys' and Girls' High Schools Sinking Fund Account for Year ending 31st December, 1910. E a. d. £ s. d. Balance on Ist January, 1910 .. .. :{:s 0 0 Balanoe on 31st Deoember, 1910, fixed Annual payment to sinking fund .. .. lti 10 (i deposit, Bank of New Zealand .. .. 60 15 8 Two years interest on fixed deposit. Bank of New Zealand.. .. .. .. 16 8 £60 I £50 15 8 J. K. Sinclair, Chairman. C. Macandrew, Secretary. Board of Governors, Otago Boys' and Girls , High Schools. — Statement of Rents for Year ending 31st December, 1910. . cl. £ s. d. Arrears on 31st Deoember, 1909 .. .. 666 14 8 Cash collected, 1910 .. .. .. 2,728 15 7 Charge for year 1910 .. .. .. 2,456 ! as— Kent over-collected or paid in advance .. (104- Current year .. .. .. .. 268 10 7 Previous year .. .. .. 23 17 8 Written off .. .. .. .. 15 0 £3,022 8 in £3,022 8 10 C. Macandrew, Secretary. Bank Balances. £ s . f |. Outstanding cheques .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 482 13 4 Otago Boys' and Girls' High School— No. 2 Account .. .. .. .. .. .. Dr. £157 14 5 No. 1 Acoount .. .. .. .. .. .. Or. 51 14 0 106 0 5 Amount belonging to G. G. Russell Scholarship . . .. .. .. .. 64 15 r> 653 9 2 Less amount on fixed deposit, Bank lif ,\\\v■ /mlaml .. .. .. 47 17 8 £605 11 l> C. Macandrew, Secretary. Examined and found correct, except (I) the ai nit of £64 15s. sd. at credit of the George Russell Scholarship Fund lias unlawfully been used to reduce the bank overdraft, and (2) the payments included in the item Sundries and incidentals, £49 Bs. Bd.; of £3 25., expenses of members attending meetings of the Board; and £7 9s. Bd., travelling-expenses of Rector attending the Secondary Schools Conference, arc without authority of law, and are therefore disallowed. — R. J. Collins, Controller and Auditor-General. GORE HIGH SCHOOL. Staff. Mr. J. Hunter, M.A. ; Mr. W. T. Foster, M.A. ; Mr. A. B. Fitt. M.A. ; Mice H. P. Kerse, M.A. 1. Report of the Bo*ard of Governors. The buildings occupied by the school during the year 1909 were found totally inadequate to accommodate the pupils who were enrolled at the commencement of 1910. The Board were fortunate in securing from Messrs. Wallis and Waddell, at a rent of £1 per week, the lease for twelve months from the Ist of February of the upper story of Ambrosse's Buildings. This provided for five class-rooms, and, although not all that could be desired, was probably the best that could be obtained for the purpose. The alterations, &c, to the surroundings cost the Board about £40. Owing to the large increase in the roll the Board invited applications for a second male assistant to take up commercial subjects, and on the 10th March Mr. A. B. Fitt, M.A., of Napier Boy's High School, was appointed. On the 29th March the Board accepted the tender of Mr. Owen Kelly for the erection of the new school buildings on the plans approved by the Department, the contract price being £4,350. The contract included the erection of a woodwork and a cookery room. On the 10th May the Southland Education Board made a distribution of the accumulated savings of the last ten years to the various technical schools. The amount allotted to Gore and received by the Hoard was £375 towards the cost of the erection of a cookery-room in brick, of which the primary-school teachers and pupils should have the use for classes as well as of the woodwork-room. On the 6th April the foundation-stone of the new school building was laid by His Excellency the Governor, Lord Plunket, B—E. (').
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who was accompanied by the Right Hon. bhe Premier, Sir .1. (I. Ward, Mr. G. J. Anderson. M.P.. the Mayor and Mayor-elect of Gore, and members of the Board of Governors. During the year the grounds have been cultivated and improved with a view to having them laid down in grass at the earliest possible date. Some five hundred holly-trees have also been planted as a fence. The seating of the new school was the subject of much thought and consideration by the Board. Reports from various educational institutions in the large centres were considered, and eventually, on the L2t!i September, it was decided to install the automatic Triumph model of combined seat and desk, fifty-five double and thirty single desks being ordered. Arrangements were made with the Borough Council for drainage of the school buildings connecting with Richmond Street drain, the Board giving a subsidy of £15. In conclusion, the Board desire to place on record their high appreciation of the work of the Rector and his staff, and the Board have every reason to believe that splendid work is being carried out under considerable difficulties in regard to accommodation for classes and outdoor work. The results of the examinations have been most satisfactory, and the health and conduct of the, pupils also testify to the great care exercised by the staff. On the 9th December the annual break-up ceremony «as held. Mr. James Allen, M.P.. was invited by the Board of Governors to give an address and to present the prizes. The function was a most enjoyable and successful one. Andrew Martin, Chairman. George Brett. Secretary. 2. Work of the Highest and Lowest Classes. Highest. —English —Nesfield's Manual of English Grammar and Composition ; Meiklejohns Spell-ing-book ; Shakespeare's Midsummer Night's Dream ; Scott's Waverley ; Coleridge's Ancient Mariner ; Nesfield's Senior Course of Composition. Latin- Composition. Allen's Latin Exercises, Part 11, Allen's Latin Grammar ; Caesar, Book VII : sight translation ; Exeerpta Facilia. French- Siepmann's Public School French Primer; Wellington College French Grammar; Berthou's Specimens of Modern French Prose; Berthou's Spei Modern French Poetry. Arithmetic —The whole subjeci : Goyen's Advanced Arithmetic and ilgebra and Mensuration. Algebra Hall and Knight's, covered course for Junior University Scholarship. Geometry—Hall and Stevene'e, covered Matriculation course. Trigonometry—Pendlebury's. covered course for Junior University Scholarship. Geography —Longmans' Series, Book V ; Bosworth's Short Geography of the World. History—Ransome's History of England, covered Matriculation course. Lowest.— English —Nesfield's Manual of English Grammar and Composition. Part i to page 117, Part 11, chapters 14 and 19, Part 111, chapters 24 and 25 ; Nesfield's Oral Exercises in English Composition, pages 1 156, chapters 1-6 ; Yoxai! igory's Spelling-book ; Shakespeare's, As You Like it; Macmillan's Advanced Reader. Lati enta Latina (the whole); Allen's First Latin Exercise Book, to Exercise 16. French —Siepmai iary French Course, Part I, to page 78. Arithmetic Workman's School Arithmetic, sections ito viii. Algebra —Hall and Knight's, to chapter 16, omitting chapters 9j 13, 14. and cube-root. Geometry- Hall and Stevens's, to page 68. Geo Longmans' Series, Book V. Elementary Physical Geography ; Bosworth's Short Geophy of the World, to page 67. History—Aral :kley's History of England for Beginners, 69. Coin' (.ik: Book-keeping —Thornton's Primer, to page 87; Thornton's Easy rciees, to page 95. Shorthand tor bo page 89. Commercial correspondence, indexing and precis-writing —Pitman's Guide to Commercial Correspondence and Business Composition, taken as teacher's guide for letter-writing, &c. Commercial arithmetic —Stocks, shares, and mensuration (no special text-book). Commei o text-book) — The substance of Marshall's Geography of New Zealand. Part 111, chapters i i> (inclusive); Pitman's Commercial Geography, pages 62-177 ; New Zealand Official Year-book, con sections. 3. Gbnerai, St ok Accounts nded 31st Dkcembek, 1910. Receipts. & s. d. oenditure. £ s. d. Balance at beginning of year .. .. 130 1 3 Management— Government grant for sites, building, furni- Office salary .. .. .. .. 58 0 8 ture, &c. (general purposes) .. .. 1,450 0 0 Other office expenses .. .. .. 511 G Government capitation— Other expenses of management .. .. 1 : For froe places .. ... .. 1.097 18 4 Teachers' salaries and allowances.. .. 919 8 1 For recognized school classes for manual Prizes .. .. .. .. .. o 12 7 instruction .. .. .. ... 24 7 3 Material for classes other than classes for Paid by School Commissioners .. .. 78 10 o manual instruction .. .. .. 44 'J 3 Schocil fees .. .. .. .. t>3 6 8 Printing, stationery, and advertising .. 33 18 0 School fees—technical classes .. .. 18 0 0 Cleaning, fuol, light, &c. .. .. .. 37 I!) 11 Southland_Educauon Board—grant towards ■ Books and stationery for sale to pupilfl, and technical schools building .. .. 375 0 0 other temporary advances .. .. 9 1-1 0 Maintenance of classes for manual instruction .. .. .. .. .. 88 1") i Site, buildings, furniture, &O.— Ordinary (Government grant) .. .. 1,277 Fencing, repairs, &c. .. .. . 40 14 10 Teas fot early scholars .. .. .. 19 9 Trowel presented to Governor .. .. 5 0 0 Flag .. .. .. .. .. 100 Tablet for foundation .. .. .. 310 0 Travelling-expenses re desks .. .. 215 0 Cartage .. . . .. .. 0 10 Balance at end of year .. .. .. 702 16 -i £3,243 3 11 £3,243 3 11 AndrewJMartin, Chairman. George Brett, Secretary. Examined and found correct, except that the following payments, being without authority of law, are disallowed : Trowel presented to Governor, £5 ; tablet for foundation, £3 10s.; travellingexpenses re desks, £2 15s.—K. J. ""Collins, Controller and Auditor-General.
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General Statement of Monetary Assets and Liabilities as at Slat December, 1910. Assets. £ s. d. Liabilities. £ B. d. Balance in Bank of New Zealand, Gore .. 714 13 9 Outstanding cheque .. .. .. 11 17 6 Rents due from School Commissioners .. 41 6 8 Outstanding accounts (eetimateill.. .. 20 0 0 Balance of capitation, third term.. .. 183 G 8 Voted by Borough Council .. .. 25 0 0 Claim for furniture, fittings, reut, &c. .. 155 7 S £1,119 13 0 L 17 6
SOUTHLAND HIGH SCHOOL. Staff. how' School. -Mr. T. D. Pearce, M.A. ; Mr. .1. Williams, B.Sc. ; Mr. J. P. Dakin, B. \. ; Mr. J. S. MoGrath, B.A. : Mr. J. Pow; Mr. !'. Edmondson, 8.A.; Mr. I. G. Galloway; Mr. J. W. Dickeon; Mr. R. Brownlie. School. -Miss C. M. Cruickahank, M.A., M.So. j Mise .M. H. M. King, M.A. P. Gibson, M.A. ; Miss E. S. Morrison, M. \. ; Miss E. E. Law, M.A. ; Mies V. C. Farnie, B.A. ; Miss A. M, Griffin, B.A. ; Miss G. A. Turner; Mr. !. G. Gallowaj ; Mr. J. W. Dickson. 1. Work of the Highest and Lowest Classes. Highest.—BoyB : English Reading, Shakespeare's Macbeth ; Seeley's Colonial Expansion : combive poetry, Chaucer, and selections from various authors; historical grammar; composition and rhetoric. Latin -Reading in Liw, Cicero, Vergil, Horace; unseens in prose and verse: grammar; prose composition; history: antiquities. French —Reading, Sandeau's Sacs et Parchemins, Gems of Modern French Poetry; unseens; grammar; composition. Mathematics — Arithmetic, algebra, geometry, and trigonometry, to University Scholarship standard. Science — Chemistry, inorganic : lie and non-metals ; qualitative and quantitative analysis ; electricity and iversity Scholarship standard. Girls (Form VI) : English —Nesfield's English Gramma r. Pasi sent; Chaucer, Prologue and Knight's Talc: Shakespeare. Macbeth: Milton. Comufl ; Wordsworth epoch, with selections from the poets: selections from Macaulay. Froude, and Carlyle. French Welling College French Grammar; Bue's French Idioms: Macs need French Prose Com Hugo, Quatre-vingt-treize Po&mes Choisis ; S kpfd Exeroiees ; phoi d dictation. Latin —Arnold's La' i Composition: Allen's i ; Bryan's Exercises : Aeneid, IX; selections from Caesar and Livy VIII; Eori bory of the Romans ; WilMns's; Roman Antiquities. Mathematics Arithmetic the win ! (Worki igebra, Hall and Knight's Al work: geometry, Godfrey and Siddon's and s '< ens's Geometry. VI ; Trigonometry, !.m as for Junior bolarship. Botany Lowson's Botany, types and orde and : Bet for Junior Uni ■ i i. Heal Glazebrook's i!-. tical work and extra Lessons as for Junior University Scholarship. (Form V) : ■ teld's Lockwood and E iric ; The Mill on bhe Floss-; selections from Pope, Wordsworth, Byroi ■: miscellaneous exercises, paraphi inctuation, correction o Writer: Spiers's (forth and Hillard's Prose : form Ovid . sij matics —Arithmetic ; Workman, as for Matriculation : algebra, Hall and Knight, as for Matriculation : geometry, Godfrey and Siddons, as for Matriculation. Lowest. — Boys : English —Authors read ; Laureata ; Great Deeds on Land and Sea ; Greek M grammar,- composition, and spelling. Geography —physical. English History —Ransome's Elei Course. Latin — Welch and Duffield's Accidence; Latin reader. Caesar's Invasion of Britain: G diner's Translation Primer. French — Beuzemaker's First French Course. Non-Latin —Boo: and commercial arithmetic; European history; Greek legends. Non-French —Book-kee: tmercial arithmetic, and woodwork. Mathematics—Arithmetic (the whole subject), and mental : Hall and Knight, bo Eactors ; . Barnard and Child, junior course. Science physii s : elementary chemistry. Oirls : Botan] (A) —All orders prescribed for Junior Civil Sen on, -•■ ■• ■■■ l-« i ; tration. I ■■ moss, fern, pine (no n irk). Botany (B) —Orders and types prescribed for Junior Civil Service; gem ] botany; respiration, transpiration, :>n<l nutrition illustrated by experioination (no microscopic work). Physiology— Meachen's 1 >; outline. History—James I; William IV; Ransome'aJSlementary History. Geography The British Empire. Needlework md underclothing patterns; cuttin of blouse ; slip-bodice or camisole made by hand. First Aid —Treatment of fractures, hemorrhage, drowning and choking, unconsciousness, poisons, dislocation, sprain and strain, foreign body in eye, and nose: use of splints and triangular bandage. (Form III): English (A) —Marsh's Literary Reader; Laureata; Merchant of Venice; K-. ; West's Grammar; NesfieSd's Oral Composition; Parables from Nature ; The Black Arrow ; an direct speech, correction, essays ; Speller (Yoxall and Gregory). English (B) Marsh's Literary Reader; Lj Merchant of Venice; Evangeline ; West's Grammar; IV om Nature (Mrs. Gatty); analysis, synthesis, indirect speech, correction o (, s. Word Builder and Spellei jory). French (A) —Methode Naturelle : Regular and Irregular Verbs ; Scenes of ( hild Life : compositions. French (B) —Methode Naturelle ; indicative mood, participles, and imperative mood of regular verbs, and first page of irregular verbs. Latin tin Book (Scott and Jones). Needlework Cutti ad making of nightdress and undershirt. Hygiene —Health Header; cleanliness in c and person ; circulation exercise ; I more full) treated; use of soap, sodi &c, ■ iindrv : removal of stains ; hints on nursing.
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General Statement of Accounts fok the Yeak ended 31st December, 1910. Receipts. £ s. d. Expenditure. £ s. a. Balance at beginning of year .. .. 1,563 9 9 ManagementGovernment capitation— Ofiioe salary .. .. .. .. 50 0 0 For free places .. .. 8,279 84 I Other office expenses .. .. .. 01 10 0 For recognized school classes for manual Teachers'salaries aud allowances .. 3,004 0 0 instruction .. .. .. 00 4 7 Physical instructor's salary .. .. 165 0 0 Subsidy on voluntary contributions — Prizes .. .. .. •■ 23 18 11 secondary schools .. .. .. 25 0 0 Pi inting, stationery, and advertising .. 120 0 9 Current iiioome from reserves .. .. 1,570 17 11 Cleaning, fuel, light, &c. .. .. 235 7 4 Paid by School Commissioners .. .. 249 10 ; Maintenance of classes for manual instrucSchoolfees .. .. .. .. 180 13 4 lion .. .. .. .. •• 29 5 0 Books, &c, sold, and other refunds .. 94 (i Bent, Corporation leases .. .. .. 15 0 0 Voluntary contvibutioue on account of gene- ( Penoing, repairs, &c. .. .. .. 213 13 4 ral purposes of the school .. .. 25 0 0 Taxes and insurance .. .. .. 50 4 4 Gymnasium suteirlies .. .. .. 110 0 0 Intore3t on loan.. .. .. .. 33 15 0 Interest on fixed deposit .. .. 27 00 ; Repayment (instalment of loan) .. .. 500 0 0 Rents for Corporation leasehold .. .. 73 0 0 Purchase of lands .. .. ■. 900 0 0 Athletics .. .. .. -. 5 0 0 Chemicals and apparatus .. .. 33 12 4 Library .. .. .. .. .. 711 3 Sundry expenses, including valuation and sale of leases .. .. .. . ■ 50 6 11 Balance at end of year .. .. .. 1,674 9 2 £7,178 M I £7,178 14 4 Statement, of Monetary Assets and Liabilities as un the iflst December, 1010. Assets. £ s. d. Liabilities. £ s. d. Bank of New Zealand -Balance, 31st Decem- Bluff Harbour Board—Balance of loan still ber 1910 .. .. .. •■ 1,674 9 2 due .. .. .. •• .. 500 0 0 Sohool fees due and unpaid .. .. 10 0 0 Secretary—Salary for November - December 8 6 8 Free-plaoe capitation due by Department .. 1,010 8 4 Corporation— Rents of endowments due and unpaid .. 250 2 9 Rent of theatre .. .. .. 75 0 Rents, secondary reserves, for quarter ending Kent of leaseholds .. .. .. 27 0 0 31st December, 1910, due by School Com- J. W. Thompson—Cleaning, supplies, &c. .. I lfa 0 missioners .. .. .- 11l 2 3 W. Cook-Asphalting .. .. .. 918 8 Subsidy due by Department on voluntary Insurance— contributions 25 0 0 Girls' school 519 0 Other properties .. .. .. 2 12 8 Southland Times —Printing reports .. 27 9 0 Various papers—advertising .. .. 5 11 0 £3,081 2 £596 18 0 W. Macalisteu, Chairman. Jno. Neill, Secretary and Treasurer. Examined and found correct, except that the following payments contravene a principle of the Trustees Act that persons holding a position of a fiduciary charaoter must not benefit from their relationship to their trust: £6 6s. for legal work done by Macalister Bros., of which firm Mr. W. Macalister, Chairman of the Board, is a member ; E2? L9s. 2d. for supplies by Smith and Laing, of which firm Mr. J. Crosbie Smith, a member of the Board, is a partner. —R. J. Collins, Controller and Auditor-General.
Statement of Rents of Reserves for Year 1910.
W Macalisteu, Chairman. .Ino. Neill, Secretary and Treae Approximate < ist of Paper.— Preparation, not given ; printing (2,260 copies, including,' illustrations), 475.
By Authority : John Mackay, Government Printer, Wellington. —1911. 1 rice Is. 3d.]
Arrears from previous < bargee [or Current fear. Year. ,. d. £ s. d. .-) 6 1,428 15 2 i Cash collected. £ h. d. 1,570 17 11 Previous *> ee r e ... a. 2 10 0 Arrears. Current Yee r. £ e. d. 247 12 9
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/parliamentary/AJHR1911-I.2.3.3.6/2
Bibliographic details
EDUCATION: SECONDARY EDUCATION. [In continuation of E.-6, 1910.], Appendix to the Journals of the House of Representatives, 1911 Session I, E-06
Word Count
43,061EDUCATION: SECONDARY EDUCATION. [In continuation of E.-6, 1910.] Appendix to the Journals of the House of Representatives, 1911 Session I, E-06
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