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E.—l

2

RE POET.

Contents. This report, with its appendices, gives the information which is of general public interest with regard to the administration of the Education Act, 1908, the Education Amendment Act, 1908, and the Education Reserves Act, 1908, the expenditure of public funds appropriated by Parliament for educational purposes, and the principal statistics relating to matters which are more fully dealt with in separate papers, as follows:— E.-2. Primary Education ; with appendices, namely, — (a.) Reports of Education Boards ; (6.) Reports of the School Commissioners ; (c.) Reports of Inspectors ; (d.) Training of Teachers ; (c.) List of Public Schools and Teachers. E.-3. Native Schools. E.-4. Special Schools and Infant-life Protection. E.-5. Manual and Technical Instruction. E.-6. Secondary Education. E.-7. Higher Education. E.-8. Annual Examinations. E.-9. Teachers' Superannuation. E.-10. Education Conferences. E.-11. Junior Cadets. PRIMARY EDUCATION. Public Schools. Number of Schools. The number of public schools open at the end of 1909 was 2,057, or 59 more than at the end of 1908. In Table A the schools are classified according to the yearly average attendance. The classification is in accordance with the provisions of the Education Amendment Act, 1908, which came into operation on the Ist January, 1909. The number of small schools with an average not exceeding fifteen, which in 1908 rose from 447 to 504, shows a further increase for 1909, the number of such schools in operation last year being 569, or more than a quarter of the number of public schools in the Dominion. There was a decrease of 28 in the number of schools with an average attendance of sixteen to twenty-five (1908 —466 schools; 1909 —438 schools). The number of schools graded with an average attendance of twenty-six to forty was 329 in the year 1908; the number of such schools in 1909 was 349 (an increase of 20); of the last-named number, 90 schools, having thirty-six to forty pupils in average attendance, were accordingly grouped with the other schools of Grade IV (36-80), in which two adult teachers are provided by the new scale. In estimating the total number of schools under the charge of one teacher it is therefore necessary to deduct the 90 schools referred to; the total number of such schools—that is, schools with an average attendance not exceeding thirty-five —was last year 1,266; in 1908 the number of sole-teacher schools— namely, schools with an average of not more than forty—was 1,299. In other words, in 1908 the sole-teacher schools formed 65 per cent, of the total number of public schools, and in 1909 such schools formed 61-5 per cent, of the total. The aggregate average attendance at schools of this kind in 1908 was 24,812. or 19-4 per cent, of the total average attendance for the Dominion; in 1909 the aggregate w r as 22,859, or 17*1 per cent. In 1908 the number of schools with two or more teachers was 699, in 1909 it was 791. Of these schools there were in the former year 24 schools with an average attendance exceeding 600; last year there were 28 schools with such an attendance.