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NOTES BY MEMBERS OF THE COMMITTEE
A
MEMORANDUM OF DISSENT, BY MR. CHAMBERS, MISS CONWAY, MR. ROSCOE AND MR. SAINSBURY
The report signed by our colleagues has analysed with patience and lucidity the conditions surrounding the preparation of the teacher for his high calling; and has made many proposals for reform from which we have no desire to dissent. There are, however, two points upon which that report appears to us to have failed to face the practical application of principles which it has itself formulated; and these points are so fundamental that we think it best to make a separate statement of our conclusions. We can be the more brief; because the material upon which these are based has already been set out for us.
I
The first point is as to the proper function of the training college. At present it serves a double function, completing the academic education of the teacher, and beginning that direct professional preparation for his actual duties to which alone the term training is strictly appropriate. The report (p. 12) has shown how this duality of function had its historical origin in the fact that, when the need for trained teachers first made itself felt, the public provision of institutions for higher education was both inadequate in extent and inaccessible to pupils from working class homes; how the first training colleges found it imperative to supplement the meagre literary equipment which their neophytes had been able to obtain in the elementary schools; and how the rapid development of provincial universities and of secondary schools during the last quarter of a century has entirely revolutionised this state of affairs. It has shown also (pp. 90, 94) that duality of function has had its inevitable result in conflict of objectives, particularly in the ordinary colleges where the academic education and the professional preparation have been undertaken concurrently; that the academic outlook has tended in the past, and in spite of attempts to redress the balance even now tends, to prevail; and that we are at present faced with the paradox of training institutions largely staffed by persons of high academic attainments, many of whom have had no substantial experience of elementary teaching and have not themselves been trained, in the professional sense, at all. Having set out these things, our colleagues accept, up to a point, the inference to be drawn from them. They desire (p. 114) to introduce a "new orientation". They tell us (p. 84) that "Training Colleges should become institutions for vocational education primarily"; and again (p. 93), that the courses "should become more professional in character and aim", and "the academic work which they include should be undertaken primarily as a means to professional skill, and less for learning or intellectual development in itself." We share the desire here expressed for a more professional course. But we are convinced that it is necessary to go farther, and that, the "new orientation" will not be secured, unless the academic work of students is completed before they enter a training college, and the attempt to continue it side by side with the acquirement of professional skill is definitely brought to an end.
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The majority report stops short of this conclusion. "In order that the claims of scholarship may be in no danger of being ignored or forgotten" it is suggested (p. 94) that for each student "there should be one subject selected and studied at least as much for itself as for the purposes of Elementary School teaching, and carried to as high a pitch as can be attained in the two years." Room is also left for a second such subject in individual cases. These subjects, moreover, are to be included in the final test before certification. If these are to be the conditions, we share the opinion (p. 90) that "progress in this direction would mean no radically new departure", and the anticipation (p. 94) that what is proposed would "in some cases mean a state of affairs differing little in actual fact from present arrangements." But we want a different state of affairs and think that a radically new departure is needed in order to arrive at it. We want places of professional training, content to leave academic studies to academic institutions, and to devote themselves with a single eye to the important task of teaching recruits how to teach, so far as this can be done in advance of actual entry upon the job. And we are sure that we shall not get it, with the existing academic bias in the colleges, if each student is required to study one or two academic subjects, if these subjects are to be tested in the final examination, and if the colleges are to be staffed so as to be able to provide instruction to a high pitch in the subjects taken. Two advanced subjects are little less than the main content of a sixth form course in a secondary school, for which the whole time of the pupil is available. Some stress is laid in the discussion which we are criticising upon the necessity of the academic studies for developing the "habit of study". Certainly we agree that every teacher should endeavour to maintain the habit of study throughout life. But what is the academic period for, if not to develop that habit, and if it is so developed, it will not be lost because for a short period the mental activities are turned into other channels. The professional course itself will not be trivial in its demands upon the intellect, nor will it interrupt the formation of "habits of study". It will include a review of subjects already studied, from the new standpoint of the methods to be followed in presenting them to immature minds. It will include some furbishing up of actual knowledge in subjects early dropped, but necessary for elementary school purposes. It will include some study, very empirical we hope at this stage, of the place of education in the life of the individual and the community. We do not at all wish to suggest that there will not be time for disinterested reading in a "favourite" subject; it will be all the better if it is not in preparation for a "test", not too systematic, not too much under direction. Inspectors complain that the present crowded curriculum leaves too little time for browsing and reflection. Let this be the subject for browsing, although, as a matter of fact, we look upon browsing as really more in place in the sixth form or university, rather than at a time when weapons are to be sharpened and loins girt for the imminent trials of active life.
If the Training College course is to become purely professional, it is essential that the previous academic education shall have been adequate. We do not think that the main report secures this. It contemplates (pp. 69-70) a pass in the First Examination at the age of 16 or 17, followed, for candidates from secondary schools by at least one year more at school before entry into the Training College, at the age of 18. We are clear that for our purely professional course the minimum academic requirement should be two full years of study after the First Examination. We accept the corollary that, where the First Examination has been deferred to 17,
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entry into the Training College must be deferred to 19. There can be much elasticity as to where the two years should be taken. We share the hope that to an increasing extent the teaching profession will attract recruits who have graduated in a university. The possibility of any further advance in the Elementary School leaving age must indeed depend inter alia [among other things] upon the availability of teachers of good academic attainments for the higher forms. Nor do we altogether exclude the alternative of a shorter university course for those unable to aim at a degree, although we think it important that this shorter course should be complete in itself and not a mere truncated degree course, even if it is accepted as a stage towards certain degrees. We recognise that a university can only to a limited extent absorb undergraduate students who do not seek degrees, and, therefore, there will remain for the present many who must take their final academic years in the secondary school itself. This does not alarm us, and since it is impossible to view any one educational problem in complete isolation from the rest, we should even welcome the strengthening of sixth form work that would result. The pupils who defer their First Examination to 17 are mainly girls, and there is no obvious reason why secondary schools should not keep a few of their pupils to 19 and thereby provide for those whose powers develop late. The question of a test will arise. For ourselves, we should be content, the First Examination once successfully passed, to accept a certificate from a secondary school of satisfactory study during two more years and of suitability for the teaching profession. But we recognise that public opinion and perhaps even professional opinion is still hag-ridden with the idea of external examinations, especially for a teaching qualification. We contemplate, therefore, that the two years of advanced study will be tested by a Higher School Examination of suitable range and standard, or by some examination at least equivalent to this. For this purpose the system of Higher School Examinations will have to adapt itself to a greater variety of advanced courses, some of which will have to be less specialised than those which at present prevail. Courses might be arranged which would give a valuable education for home life, and would at the same time suit the needs of future teachers of infants and of specialist teachers of drawing, physical training, music, handicraft and domestic subjects. We do not, however, exclude for teachers of these types the continuance of Training Colleges conducted much on existing lines. Finally, it may prove, although we hope it will not prove, that for denominational rather than strictly educational reasons some bodies interested in promoting the recruitment of teachers may desire to secure pupils for preparatory work in a particular atmosphere during the last year or two of their academic life; and if so, room will have to be found for such an arrangement.
We must now make it clear that we are thinking of the course of professional training, entered upon to a growing extent not earlier than 19, as a one-year and not a two-year course. And here again we have with regret to differ from our colleagues. We think of this preliminary training as a very practical affair, based upon the study of subject method rather than upon that of educational theory, and leading directly on to further training during actual school work in the proposed probationary year (pp, 116-118). The complete preliminary training should be clearly envisaged as covering both the college year and the probationary year. Study under the artificial conditions of a College cannot by itself give a full preparation for the teaching job; it is a laboratory process and its results, like those of other laboratory processes must be tried and confirmed and sometimes modified by further experience, still under skilled supervision, upon the job Itself. A fortiori [with yet stronger reason] it
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follows from all that we have said, that we cannot accept the idea for an additional year, interposed (p. 100) between the normal Training College course and the probationary year, either for further professional study, or still more, for further academic work. To learn practical methods and then to lay them aside for something else before putting them into use seems to us absurd. A preliminary whetting of the scythe before setting to work is a good thing, but when the process is complete the work should surely be begun. On the other hand, a scythe once whetted does not remain sharp for ever, and we are fully in sympathy with the idea (pp. 118-121) that after a few years teaching there should, at any rate for ambitious teachers, be a break to be spent either in renewed academic study or in a more fundamental study of educational principles and their application on the basis of the experience gained. And this, we think, rather than the preliminary empirical training, is the proper function of University Departments of Education.
We have considered the grounds upon which our colleagues cling to the two-year course. One is, no doubt, the desire to leave room for the academic subjects; and on this we have nothing further to say. Another, (p. 87) is apparently the humanising value of a fairly long period in a residential institution away from home. We do not deny this, although we think it possible that the amenities of college residence are not always the best preparation for some of the dusty conditions of a teacher's life. Moreover, of the students who are in training for teaching, a large number attend as day students. We hope, however, that an increasing number of teachers will have had their opportunities of university residence in colleges or hostels. And in any case we should find a very real compensation in the equally humanising effect of the opportunities afforded by sixth form life in a secondary school. Thirdly, it is claimed (p. 85) that the two years are necessary for the proper development of what is described in the main report as a "sense of vocation". Outside critics sometimes speak, more dubiously, of "the caste mind". And here it is necessary to move delicately. We do want a sense of vocation and we do not want the caste mind. We do not want recruits to enter the teaching profession, or any other profession, without a conscious intention, not merely to earn an honourable living, but also to render public service to the community. But what are schools and universities worth, if they do not inspire a sense of vocation in this wider and more generalised form. Anything more narrowly professional, any specialised consciousness of the dignity and value of the teacher's own calling, will surely come into existence readily enough, as it does in other professions, through habitual fellowship with persons engaged in serving the community along the same lines and to the same ends. And it has its peculiar dangers. We do not desire to see the teaching profession, any more than the Civil Service, adopting the pose of a priesthood.
Fourthly, it is urged (p. 86) that the corporate life of a College dealing with a succession of one-year students will be slight and difficult to maintain. That is true and must be put on the debit side of the account. The tradition of some of the great Training Colleges will be a loss which we shall be the first to regret. But we do not fear that generous youth will ever lack an alma mater [one's old school or university]. The tendrils of affection and loyalty which the human organism puts forth during its period of growth will always find some institution about which to entwine themselves. If it is not the Training College, it will be the university or the school. These, too, have their tradition; in some cases a great, in others a growing, tradition.
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Incidental advantages of the one-year course and of the break between academic and professional study are these. It will be comparatively easy (p. 49) to adapt the intake of the colleges year by year to the estimated needs of recruitment not more than twelve months ahead. The difficulties of a trial period in an elementary school (pp. 71-75) will disappear when no interruption of an academic course is involved. If some candidates take this period and others do not, it will be possible to arrange (p. 48) for terminal intakes into the colleges and terminal outputs to meet the needs of the schools more nearly as they accrue; and this will of itself provide some measure of continuity in the college life. Finally, the accommodation of colleges now planned for two-year courses will go twice as far, and it will no longer be necessary to exclude candidates from training for lack of room.
II
This brings us to our second fundamental point, the finance of training. Here, too, we cannot but feel that the main report is inclined to shy at the conclusions of its own logic. It sets out admirably (p. 30) the evils of the existing bounty system, under which a declaration of an intention to become a teacher secures special financial assistance, not only during the Training College course, but even in a secondary school, sometimes from the date of entry, sometimes from that of the First Examination. It is pointed out that in the opinion of a number of witnesses these subsidies lower the dignity and prestige of the profession in comparison with other professions which are entered in a more normal way; and that the early earmarking of candidates leads to the presence in the schools of teachers who are there, not because they deliberately chose the calling, but because the path to it was made especially easy for them, at an age before they could know their own minds or realise to what they were being committed. The thing is done in the interests of keeping up a supply: and, of course, like all such bounty feeding, it tends to keep down salaries. It is suggested that the only proper way of securing a supply is that of the open market, through the establishment of conditions of employment sufficiently attractive in themselves to stimulate a natural flow of recruits, with no greater public financial assistance than should be available for those aiming at other occupations which require the same standard of education.
This seems to us quite a sound principle. It also seems quite sound to our colleagues, who proceed to label it as an "ideal", and to maintain that it cannot be given a practical application. They tell us that the amount of "open" public assistance required would be very great, that the door would be closed to children from working-class homes, and that supply would be endangered, because parents would not see the way to employment for their children clear ahead.
We are not convinced by these arguments. The provision of maintenance allowances is bound to grow in any event. There are professions other than teaching to which there ought to be a widened avenue for working-class children of talent. Nor, on the other hand, is it desirable that Elementary School teaching should continue to be regarded as so exclusively an avenue for the "honourable and socially valuable ambition" of the working classes that, when careers are being considered in households of other types, it is given the go-by as a matter of course. This does not add to the dignity and status
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of the occupation. Nor are the qualities enumerated in the main report as going to the make-up of a successful teacher - sympathetic understanding, vitality, firm flexibility, justness, patience, humour, clearness and freshness of mind, wide interests, breadth of outlook, commonsense - so often combined that it is wise to limit the field in which they are sought. Certainly they are not the peculiar characteristics of any one class.
However, our colleagues do not see their way to any more drastic recommendations than that earmarked grants for teachers should not be given before the age of 16. This amounts to very little indeed. The practice of earmarking awards before 16 is a recent one, or perhaps more precisely, has been recently re-introduced owing to pessimistic anticipations as to the future of supply. The Board do not differentiate financially in favour of such awards as against open awards. Nor do they, indeed, any longer differentiate in favour of earmarked awards in secondary schools after the First Examination, since the special Bursary grants formerly paid for intending teachers are now merged in a general system of maintenance allowances aided on the 50 per cent basis. We think that the Board might well proceed further in this direction, and abandon special grants for the academic education of intending teachers at any stage, leaving university courses to be financed either by State Scholarships, or by scholarships from Local Education Authorities, awarded after due consideration of the individual needs of applicants. These scholarships would, of course, rank for the 50 per cent subsidy. We recognise that the problem of securing a supply of teachers is primarily one for the Local Education Authorities; and so long as they feel unable to trust to the attractions of the profession in the open market, or to afford a system of open scholarships adequate to meet inter alia [among other things] the legitimate needs of aspirants to teachership, it must be left to them in the exercise of their discretion to resort to earmarking. But the State should take no further responsibility for the continuance of this method.
So far, we have been thinking purely of the period of academic preparation. Somewhat different considerations come into play, when the student - up to this point, if our object can be secured, free as to his choice of a profession - decides to enter a Training College, and thereby commits himself to a teaching career. It is desirable that he should still be free as to the locality in which he is to teach, and on the whole, we do not think that it would be unreasonable that the State should burden itself as a national charge with the whole cost of his training, so far as that is proper to be charged to public funds. In conducting the colleges, the universities, Local Education Authorities, and denominational bodies would then be acting as agents for the State. How their expenditure should be kept within reasonable limits, and whether any charge should be made to the students - and, if so, whether at a flat rate or after consideration of means - are details which we do not think it necessary to explore. It is at least arguable that at this stage a flat rate would be legitimate, the charge upon the State being regarded less as a scholarship than as a salary during the first probationary year of one already selected for the profession. Obviously, the more completely the State pays for the training, the more the student's own funds become available for the academic period; and this is as it should be.
The intricacies of Training College finance are considerable and we do not feel able to make any close estimate of the probable profit or loss to the Exchequer of the adjustment which we suggest. We do not see why it should increase the cost, except in so far as the
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number of teachers who take a training course becomes greater. And in this event the country gets more value for its money. The plan we propose would certainly reduce the present heavy expenditure which goes to provide subsidised educational and professional training for women teachers, who, by reason of early marriage, are prevented from giving service in the schools commensurate with the cost of their specialised training. If there is any saving, it can help to finance the system of supplementary courses of training or study after a period spent in the schools, upon which, like our colleagues, we build high hopes.
What then are our recommendations?
(1) That all Training College courses should be post-academic.
(2) That the entrants should be persons who have completed an academic education, to an increasing extent in universities, and otherwise by a full course of study in a secondary school followed by a pass in a Second School Examination, or in some examination equivalent to this.
(3) That the content of Training College courses should be strictly professional, and based upon subject-method rather than upon philosophic theory.
(4) That the courses should be one-year courses.
(5) That successful teachers should be encouraged, after a few years of work, to undertake a year of further study, academic or professional, preferably in a university.
(6) That students should pay for their own academic preparation, with the aid of a liberal public provision of scholarships and maintenance allowances.
(7) That, so far as the needs of recruiting are held to admit, these scholarships and maintenance allowances should be open ones, and not ear-marked for intending teachers.
(8) That the State should assume financial responsibility for the cost of Training Colleges, so far as it falls upon public funds.
Our conclusions may seem far-reaching. But the cumulative changes in universities, secondary schools and elementary schools during the last half-century have in the aggregate amounted to a revolution; and the Training Colleges, which after all are only subsidiary machinery designed to serve the interests of the integral elements of the education system, have not as yet been adjusted to the new conditions.
E. K. CHAMBERS,
E. R. CONWAY (with reservation, see note*),
F. ROSCOE,
E. J. SAINSBURY.
*I am signing this memorandum because of the recommendation raising the standard of academic equipment. I do not consider the recommendations in the report any advance but rather a retrogression on the present position. I consider, however, that two years' training is required for those students who will only reach the academic standard of the Intermediate Examination for a degree, or the equivalent, and therefore I cannot subscribe to recommendation (4) above. - E.R.C.
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B
STAFFING OF TRAINING COLLEGES: NOTE BY MR. JACKSON AND MISS WODEHOUSE
We have assumed the continuance of colleges under the control of religious denominations. Nevertheless, in view of the desirability of choosing the best possible staff from as wide a field as possible, and of drawing the best persons as freely as possible into this field of work, we regret that membership of a special denomination should so often be required from all, or almost all, the holders of teaching and administrative posts in these colleges. We believe that the effect of this requirement, in restricting the field of possible candidates for a post, is not realised in its full extent by the governing bodies who impose it; and we urge that at any rate a proportion of the posts in each college should be thrown open.
P. R. JACKSON,
HELEN WODEHOUSE.
C
FINANCE: NOTE BY MR. A. W. HURST
I have signed the report because I am in general agreement with my colleagues as to the main lines along which development should proceed in this service, but I feel bound to qualify my signature with some observations on the comparative urgency of such development and to submit separate recommendations on the more important financial questions dealt with in Chapter Xl.
Under present trade conditions the amount which this country can afford to spend on public services is strictly limited. All public burdens on industry whether they take the form of taxes or rates go to reduce the margin out of which wages and profits are paid, and when, as at present, profits in many industries are abnormally low, public burdens undoubtedly tend to depress the standard of wages. In such circumstances it is clearly impossible to meet the whole of even the more pressing social needs and it becomes imperatively necessary to weigh the relative merits of all schemes involving increased expenditure.
Thus the practical question for decision at the present time becomes not so much whether it may be a good thing, say, to have in the elementary schools only teachers who have received a full university or college training, but whether such money as can be provided for the improvement and extension of social services should be spent in this manner rather than in meeting other urgent calls, such as housing, better school buildings, more teachers, widows' pensions, etc.
In this connection the question of the national standard to be adopted in regard to each service is of fundamental importance. In many services the nation endeavours to secure a minimum standard for everyone, e.g. a minimum income for every person at 70; a minimum amount of instruction for every child; a minimum provision of medical facilities. In the last case, to ensure that the service is properly rendered, it fixes minimum qualifications for the person authorised to give it. Not so for the practitioner on the mind. It is true that we have proceeded a long way towards this desirable end in the free elementary schools, where 73 per cent of the teachers hold the certificate of the Board of Education, but in regard to
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the private or non-aided schools the position is very different. A large proportion of the children of the better-to-do classes between the ages of 5 and 14 are being taught in such schools, yet the proportion of the teachers therein holding certificates of qualification to teach is negligible. Most of the proposals in the report aim at raising still higher the general standard of qualification of the teacher in the free elementary schools, involving in the aggregate no small eventual increase in the cost of such schools. Our terms of reference restrict us to the teachers in these schools but it is a matter for consideration how far such expenditure should be incurred in advance of a considerable improvement, under State regulation or otherwise, of the standard of teaching in the private schools. In connection with any such improvement, no doubt serious difficulties would arise as to the ability of the parents of children attending such schools to meet the resulting increase in cost, yet are these people who are already relieving the State of an enormous charge for the education of their own children, while meeting at the same time a large part of the cost of the public elementary schools, to be taxed and rated still more to provide a standard of teaching in such schools which they cannot afford for their own children?
On both the grounds indicated above I am of the opinion that whatever ground there may be for improving the Public Elementary Schools in other directions, there is no case for any considerable immediate increase of expenditure on raising still higher the standard of qualification of the teachers.
Turning now to the specific financial questions dealt with in Chapter XI of the report I agree with my colleagues in the general principle that the arrangements for recruiting teachers for the Public Elementary Schools should in time approximate more and more to those applying to entry to other professions, but I differ from them in regard to the application of this principle, first as regards the assistance given to intending teachers during their college career, and secondly as to the arrangements for financing the training colleges.
(1) Aid to intending teachers. We are expressly charged by our terms of reference to have regard to:
(a) the economy of public funds;
(b) the attractions offered to young persons by the teaching profession as compared with other professions and occupations.
The need for the economy of public funds is patent to everyone, and there can be no doubt as to the great improvement since the war in the financial position of elementary school teachers as compared with other professions and occupations. While the index figure for the cost of living has risen about 80 per cent since 1914, there are comparatively few sections of the community other than manual workers, and by no means all of the manual workers, who have been able to preserve unimpaired their standard of life. It is obvious that this must be so, since the cost of the war has to be borne by someone. In comparison with this rise of 80 per cent, the average salary of teachers in the elementary schools has risen 157 per cent.
The increased salaries have been in operation for so short a time and their future trend has hitherto appeared so uncertain that one would hardly expect them to have had much effect up to the present in stimulating entry into the profession, and indeed any tendency in this direction has been largely counteracted by the unsettling effect of the curtailment in the opportunities for employment in 1922 and 1923. But as regards the future there seems every prospect of a
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stabilisation of the teachers' position on a plane little inferior to the present level: if so it can hardly be doubted that the profession will tend to appeal to a much wider circle than before the war. Much as it is to be desired that the ranks of the profession should contain a higher proportion of the better-to-do sections of the community, it would however be against all experience to expect a rapid change in this direction. Old traditions of this kind change slowly. What is needed to bring about the change is not only such an improvement, as has in fact taken place, in the financial position of the teachers, but a rise in the standing of the profession in the public esteem. Mention is made in Chapter XI of the report of the extent to which the very generous public assistance given in the past has tended to lower the prestige of the profession, and this has in turn tended to make that assistance all the more necessary to secure entrants. The recent improvement in the prospects of the profession provides an excellent opportunity for reversing the working of this cycle of causes, and I recommend therefore that the assistance to be given to intending teachers in future should be strictly limited to those needing it and to such amounts as they need.
(2) The financing of the training colleges. This end is not easy of attainment under the present arrangements for financing the training colleges, and this is one of the reasons which lead me to suggest a radical alteration in the whole arrangements by which the colleges receive assistance from public funds.
The second reason is the urgent necessity explained in Chapter XI of the report for devising some system which shall spread the expense of training teachers more equitably among the local authorities. I am in entire agreement with the majority of my colleagues that, as between the local authorities and the State, the division of the cost of training teachers should follow the general principle on which the expenditure on other branches of higher education is apportioned. But the solution they propound to secure this end, apart from certain practical difficulties, hardly seems to me consistent with the general aim of bringing the arrangements for the training of teachers gradually into line with those applying to entrants to other professions. Our whole system of higher education has grown up since the Voluntary Training Colleges were established, and the present arrangement under which they receive large subsidies from the State and little or nothing from local authorities is somewhat anomalous. The normal arrangement now is that a child desirous of entering any occupation looks to its education authority to provide it with reasonable assistance to obtain the necessary training, the local authority in turn recovering one half of its expenditure from the State. It is no answer to the claim of the child on its education authority that there is a considerable probability that when trained for his profession he will leave the authority's area: that probability is already recognised in, and indeed provides one of the main grounds for, the State grant of 50 per cent.
I can see no ground for continuing to treat entry to the teaching profession in a totally different manner. I recommend that as from a convenient date all State grants for new students at training colleges or training departments be discontinued; that the colleges, whether maintained by local authorities or voluntary bodies, be left to charge the individual students the full fee necessary to provide for their training, and that such assistance from public funds as it may be necessary for the student to receive be provided by his local authority with, of course, the assistance of the usual State grant. The chief difficulty of course in introducing an arrangement of this
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kind is that of securing that an adequate number of students in certain local authorities' areas are able to obtain assistance from their authorities. These are the authorities which under the present system are reaping where others have sown, and some element of compulsion will probably be necessary whatever scheme is adopted if they are to be brought to take their proper part in the provision of an adequate supply of teachers for the Public Elementary Schools of .the country.
A. W. HURST.
D
PRELIMINARY EDUCATION AND PRACTICAL EXPERIENCE: NOTE BY MR. SPURLEY HEY
Whilst signing the Report, there are three matters upon which I desire to make reservations:
(1) The tendency of the policy outlined in the Report is towards continued and uninterrupted education in a Secondary School to the age of 18 or 19 years, directly followed by a two or four years' course of training, and again, directly followed by a course of probationary teaching, normally of one year, in an Elementary School. This arrangement makes no real provision for the ascertainment and early elimination of those intending teachers who do not give sufficient promise from the practical teaching point of view. Under the existing system, Student Teachership and Pupil Teachership do provide such a means of elimination, and the absence in the Report of any such provision is directly in opposition to the evidence of the Local Education Authorities generally, upon whom the responsibility rests for maintaining an adequate supply of suitable teachers. Whilst it may not be necessary to retain the Student Teacher and the Pupil Teacher system in their present form, it is, in my view, highly desirable that a first means of elimination on grounds of practical unsuitability should be provided not later than the age of 18 years, before admission to a Training College, rather than at the age of 21 or 23 years, at the close of the probationary year of teaching. At the latter age, there will be, in actual practice, little likelihood of rejection of unsuitable teachers.
(2) The tendency to make the Secondary School practically the sole avenue to teaching is, in my view, undesirable because it is calculated-
(a) to restrict and to stereotype supply;
(b) to reduce for suitable children from poor homes the facilities of access to the teaching profession.
It should be possible, as at present, for suitable children who have entered Central Schools to find a direct passage into the teaching profession, without the necessity of transfer to Secondary Schools. There are still large numbers of children who are quite as capable as the fee-paying pupils of Secondary Schools, but who, when all the free places available have already been filled, are unable to gain admission to a Secondary School because they are unable to pay fees. Many of these children enter Central Schools, and Central Schools provide a course which, though different from the Secondary School course, is, in many respects, quite as valuable a preliminary course for the intending teacher. It is desirable that the excellent system of Central Schools now growing up in the country should
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be made available as a supplementary avenue to the teaching profession. Since the closure of Pupil Teacher Centres in 1907, the supply of intending teachers for which the Secondary Schools have been mainly responsible has gradually fallen away. So low did the supply become that the Board of Education found it necessary to resuscitate Pupil Teacher Centres. There is no evidence that the Secondary Schools, if made the only means of supply, will be any more successful in maintaining and increasing supply than during the period in which they have been responsible for the larger proportion of the supply.
(3) The Report, whilst emphasising the academic side of the future teacher's preparation, fails to give due weight to the vocational side. The vocational aspect prior to admission to a Training College is practically eliminated. The actual school practice during the Training College course remains, as at present, at a period of from 6 to 12 weeks. The probationary year is little more than a name, in view of the fact that the Report asks for payment of salary on the Scale and gives no indication as to how far -
(i) the probationary teacher is still regarded as continuing his course of training;
(ii) the Training College or the Head Teacher of the Elementary School is the responsible authority for any training expected during probation;
(iii) the probationary teacher, being in receipt of the Scale salary, will be regarded as an effective member of the staff and, as such, responsible for the duties of a class teacher.
I would specially direct attention to the school practice provided during the Training College period. So far as the Report is concerned, the school practice remains as at present, and amongst the weaknesses of existing Training Colleges there is none more unsatisfactory than the amount and the character of the work done in respect of practice in Elementary Schools. I am of the opinion that the best place for training to teach is in the Elementary Schools themselves. There is not the least indication in the Report that, during the Training College Course, either more time will be given to training in the Elementary Schools or the time given will be better organised or utilised to better advantage than is the case at present.
SPURLEY HEY.
E
THE PROFESSIONAL COURSE: NOTE BY MISS HAWTREY
I welcome the recommendation in the Report that a course of vocational education should be provided for intending teachers. It is an important alternative to the more academic course provided for the subject specialist. As the question of curriculum may need consideration later as a result of the Committee's report (p. 154), I am anxious to make clear what I understand by this professional course. I accept it as a course which requires the study of those subjects that form the essential elements of a child's education, and which includes some experience in the selection and preparation of a portion of this
[page 189]
material for presentation to a class of children. I assume as the basis for this work a study of the mental and physical development of children and of their environment. It follows, therefore, that I interpret Recommendation 23 as follows:-
"That the function of the Training Colleges being to educate students as teachers, their course should be organised with that end in view, and should aim at producing teachers who can deal effectively in school with the essential elements of a child's education."
It may be unnecessary to emphasise this interpretation, but the retention of the word "training" in connection with the professional education of teachers, and of the term "trained teacher" to denote "qualified teacher" tends to perpetuate the belief that technical skill in class management can be taught. I wish to dissociate myself from any recommendation that instruction be given to any intending teacher in the method of teaching all the subjects of the school curriculum.
The course in vocational education must be based on a good general education and I welcome the recommendation that intending teachers should have a continuous Secondary School education till 18. I especially welcome the freedom left to Secondary Schools to provide suitable courses, unfettered by examination, for their pupils who have passed the First School Examination and who intend to become teachers. I cannot, however, accept a mere pass in the First School Examination as an entrance qualification and I consider that the candidate should have gained credit in at least four subjects.
I am also unable to accept the implication that two years is sufficient time for a professional course for teachers. I believe (as the Froebel Colleges have discovered) that a three years' course is as necessary for the adequate preparation of teachers of general subjects as it is for the preparation of teachers of physical training. I welcome the encouragement of a third year (continuous or deferred) and realise that the extent of the encouragement must be limited for the present by financial considerations. I wish, however, to record my opinion that three years is necessary for an adequate professional course for teachers.
F. HAWTREY.
F
TRAINING COLLEGE GRANTS: NOTE BY SIR JOHN GILBERT
Under the system of grants proposed in the Report, Local Authorities providing Training Colleges in which the net cost per student exceeded the capitation grant would, if students were selected without restriction, have to contribute from their rates towards the maintenance of extra-area students. Such a possibility would tend to make these Colleges mainly, if not entirely, local in the selection of students - an undesirable result from an educational point of view.
[page 190]
To meet this difficulty two alternatives may be suggested:
(a) If the training of teachers be considered national work, the net cost of training should be met by a Government grant on a capitation basis to all Colleges; or
(b) If the work be held to be part of Higher Education falling under the 50 per cent arrangement in the Education Act of 1921, the Board of Education should make a grant as above and recover half the total amount from all the Local Authorities dealing with Higher Education on the basis of the attendance in the elementary schools in each year.
The net cost per student would represent the difference between the gross cost and a suitable fee, both as fixed by the Board of Education.
If it is desired to continue the present differentiation between Provided and Non-Provided Training Colleges, the second proposal, i.e. (b) above, could be applied to the former only,
JOHN GILBERT.
[page 191]
INDEX TO REPORT
ACTS (Education):
1870 12, 24
1902 11, 12, 15, 18, 24, 82
1918 and 1921 14, 15, 19, 23, 27, 29, 39, 43, 45, 53, 63, 123, 126, 135, 145
1922 (Superannuation) 39
ADJUSTING SUPPLY TO DEMAND, see under SUPPLY OF TEACHERS
ADVANCED COURSES:
School 16, 70
Training College 89, 91
ADVISORY COMMITTEE FOR SUPPLY 50
AFTER TRAINING OF TEACHERS 116-122
APPOINTMENTS, Importance of first 116-118
ATTRACTIONS OF ELEMENTARY SCHOOL TEACHING, see under SUPPLY OF TEACHERS
BANGOR, NORTH WALES, TRAINING COLLEGE 108
BIRTH RATE 26, 28
BURSARS 14-17, 24, 64, 71
CENTRAL SCHOOLS 53, 54, 66, 67, 68, 69, 113, 127, 132
CERTIFICATE EXAMINATION FOR ACTING TEACHERS 17, 21, 22, 46, 61-62, 76, 121, 129
CERTIFICATED TEACHERS 10, 11, 17, 21, 22, 23, 25-27, 29, 44-46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 57, 59, 61, 62, 65, 75, 81, 103, 111, 114,117, 118, 124,126, 127, 129, 135
CHESTER TRAINING COLLEGE 108
CIRCULARS, Issued by the Board:
573 (Pupil Teachers) 11, 29
908 (Supply) 29, 45
1124 (Supply) 29, 45
1160 (Supply) 45
1190 (Economy) 45
1301 (Probation) 117
CLASSES, size of 53
COMMISSION, Newcastle 87
COMMITTEE OF COUNCIL ON EDUCATION 18
CONFERENCES:
One-day 121
In University Areas 111
CONTINUATION SCHOOLS 28
COST OF TRAINING, Distribution of 146, 148
DAY TRAINING COLLEGES 18, 19,20, 24, 103, 150
DECLARATION (of intention to teach) 112
DEGREE COURSES 19-21, 103-107, 111-113
DEGREE EXAMINATIONS 81, 103-104, 107
DEMONSTRATION SCHOOLS 97
DEPARTMENTAL COMMITTEE ON SALARIES 95
DOMESTIC SUBJECTS 23, 88, 129-133
EDGE HILL TRAINING COLLEGE 108
EDUCATIONAL EXHIBITION 83, 121
EDUCATION "WEEKS" 121
ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS, General character 52-54
EXAMINATIONS, see under FIRST SCHOOL, SECOND SCHOOL, CERTIFICATE, FINAL, INTERMEDIATE, DEGREE
[page 192]
EXAMINING BOARDS, Joint 108
EXETER UNIVERSITY COLLEGE 18, 107
FEES 101, 137, 144-147, 148-149
FINAL EXAMINATION FOR STUDENTS IN TRAINING COLLEGES 61, 81, 85, 91, 94, 103, 107, 108, 129
FINANCE 9, 10, 11, 23, 31, 32-33, 69, 75, 80, 96, 101, 125, 134, Chapter XI passim, 135-151
Aid up to 16 35-36
Aid from 16-18 15, 36-38, 74
Further aid Chapter XI passim 135-151
FIRST SCHOOL EXAMINATION 14, 16, 17, 47, 56, 58, 64, 65, 67, 69, 70, 76, 80, 84, 93
FITNESS FOR TEACHING, Evidence as to 72, 74
FOUR YEAR COURSES 17, 19, 20, 24, 31, 69, 75, 77, 78, 79, 87, 92, 103-106,107, 111-113, 115, 133, 134, 135, 151
FREEDOM IN TEACHING, Importance of 41
GOLDSMITHS' COLLEGE 18, 79. 104, 107
GRADUATE TEACHERS 48-49, 56, 76-79, 92, 104, 111-112, 114-115
GRANTS 20, 23, 24, 33, 74, Chapter XI passim, 135-151
Basis of need 136-138
Fourth year 151
Local Education Authority Colleges 144-151
HANDICRAFT and HANDWORK 23, 25, 82, 89, 100, 101, 123-129
Aberystwyth Diploma in 125
City and Guilds of London Institute 125
HOLIDAY COURSES 119-120, 125, 133
HOSTELS 65, 79, 113-114
HYGIENE and PHYSICAL TRAINING 83, 89, 90, 113, 133-134
IMPERIAL EDUCATION CONFERENCE COMMITTEE 122
INTERCHANGE OF TEACHERS 99, 122
INTERMEDIATE EXAMINATION 81, 85
JOINT EXAMINING BOARDS 108
KING'S COLLEGE, HOUSEHOLD AND SOCIAL SCIENCE DEPARTMENT 131
LANCASHIRE 65
LEAVE OF ABSENCE:
For Training College staff 96
Third Year abroad 100
LEEDS TRAINING COLLEGE 105
LEEDS UNIVERSITY 105
LENGTH OF TRAINING 84-86, 87
LOANS 139, 141, 143
LOCAL EDUCATION AUTHORITY TRAINING COLLEGES 18, 19, 23, 24, 82, 125, 136, 144-151
LONDON 65, 72, 144
LONDON, UNIVERSITY OF 18, 21, 79, 103, 104, 107, 108, 109
[page 193]
MAINTENANCE ALLOWANCES 11, 15, 23, 31, 32, 35, 37, 38, 51, 74, 135, 137, 141, 142
MEN TEACHERS 25, 26, 29, .38, 41, 55-56, 60, 123-129
MINISTRY OF AGRICULTURE 98, 120
MINISTRY OF LABOUR COLLEGES 22, 45, 125, 126
MIXED COLLEGES 101-102
NEEDLEWORK 52, 89, 132
NEWCASTLE COMMISSION 87
NOMENCLATURE OF TEACHER GRADES 25, 62
NOTTINGHAM UNIVERSITY COLLEGE 18, 107
NUMBERS OF STUDENTS 17, 18, 19, 22, 23, 46, 67, 78, 86, 102, 104, 111, 114,
NUMBERS OF TEACHERS 25-30, 45-46, 58, 123, 126, 132
NURSERY SCHOOLS 53
ONE YEAR TRAINING COURSES 21, 80, 84, 85
PHYSICAL TRAINING 83, 89, 90, 133-134
PRACTICE (teaching) 71, 74, 83, 87-88, 91, 97, 99, 117-118
PRELIMINARY EDUCATION OF INTENDING TEACHERS 10-17, 43, 66-67
PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION FOR CERTIFICATE 70
PROBATIONARY SERVICE 117-118
PROFESSIONAL TRAINING 17-20, 24, 30, 31, 56 57, 86-94
Grants in aid of 20
Of Uncertificated Teachers 60
PUBLIC ESTIMATE OF TEACHERS 40-42
PUBLIC HONOURS 42
PUPIL TEACHER CENTRES 11-14, 24, 63, 67-69
PUPIL TEACHER SYSTEM, History of 18
PUPIL TEACHERS 11-14, 22, 24, 25, 31, 35, 37, 38, 47, 61, 63, 66-69, 70, 135
QUALIFICATIONS OF TEACHERS 56-57, 61-62, 68-70, 75, 76-77, 79-81, 90, 92-93
QUALITIES REQUIRED FOR TEACHING 54-55
READING UNIVERSITY COLLEGE 18, 107, 134
REGULATIONS:
Code 23, 25, 43, 52, 54, 55, 58, 61, US, U8, 125, 127
Maintenance Allowances 141-143
Training 20, 66, 89, 90, 98, 112, 131
RESPONSIBILITY FOR SUPPLY, see under SUPPLY OF TEACHERS
RURAL PUPIL TEACHERS 13, 14, 36, 66-67, 69
RURAL SCHOOLS 53, 58, 59, 60, 65, 84, 98-100, 120
SALARIES:
Of Teachers 31, 37, 38, 39, 45, 59, 74, 101, 113, U7, 120, 135, 136
Of Training College staffs 95-96
SALTLEY TRAINING COLLEGE 105
SCHOOL AGE 28, 52, 53, 63
SECOND SCHOOL EXAMINATION 70, 80, 81, 84, 85
[page 194]
SECONDARY EDUCATION 10-17, 24, Chapter IV passim, 63-75, 84, 85, 93, 97
SECONDARY SCHOOLS 9, 10-17, 24, 40, 42, 45, 52, Chapter IV passim, 63-75, 76, 80, 81, 82, 84, 85, 95, 96, 101, 111l2, 113, 115, 126
SEGREGATION 64, 68, 86-88
SENIOR SCHOOLS 53, 133
SHEFFIELD CITY TRAINING COLLEGE 134
SHOREDITCH TRAINING COLLEGE 23, 125
SOCIAL SERVICE 34, 40, 42, 51, 54, 82-84
SOUTHAMPTON UNIVERSITY COLLEGE 18, 107
SPECIAL SUBJECT TEACHERS 23, 25, Chapter X passim, 123-134
SPECIALISATION OF TEACHING 53, 93-94, 133
STAFFING:
Of Public Elementary Schools 28, 29, 43, 48, 52
Of Training Colleges 82-83, 91, 94-96
STANDING ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON SUPPLY 50
STATE SCHOLARSHIPS 33
STUDENT TEACHERS 14-17, 25, 31, 37-38, 58, 60, 61, 70, 71-75, 135
SUPERANNUATION 29, 31, 39, 118
SUPPLEMENTARY COURSES 100, 118-121, 134, 135
SUPPLEMENTARY TEACHERS 25, 26, 29, 47, 48, 57-58, 99, 121, 123, 135
SUPPLY OF TEACHERS Chapter II passim, 25- 51, 135
Adjustment to demand 9, 27, 44-51
Attractions of profession 9, 30-35, 38-42, 73, 135, 136, 137, 140
Deterrent conditions 40-42, 46
Handicraft teachers 123-129
Numbers needed 26, 27, 28-30, 54, 64
"Open-market" 30-35
Oversupply 27, 44-47, 50, 61, 132
Principles for securing 30-42
Responsibility for 42-44, 51, 148
Source of 138
Wastage 26, 29, 50
TENURE 89
THIRD YEARS 20, 21, 22, 100-101, 103, 104, 109, 111, 125- 126, 131, 134, 135
TRAINING COLLEGES 31, 33, 44. 48, 61, 69, 71, 74, 75, 76, 78, 79, 135-136
Availability for various types of student 101
Building grants 18, 146
Connection with Universities 19-21, 79, 103-115
Cost of maintaining 143-144
Curriculum of 90-94, 113, 133-134
Degree courses in 103-106
Early history of 18-20, 24
Fees 137, 144-146, 147, 148-149, 150
[page 195]
Financial resources of students admitted to 138-140
Function of Chapter VI passim, 82-102
Length of course in 18, 48-49
Progress of 82, 83
Rural Pupil Teachers admitted to 67
Student Teachers admitted to 16, 60, 72
Staffing of 82, 83, 91, 94-96
Supplementary Courses at 120-121
Teaching practice 74, 97
Uncertificated Teachers admitted to 17, 62
Variety of courses 97-98
Women admitted to 38, 45, 65
(See also Local Education Authority Training Colleges, University Training Departments, Voluntary Colleges)
UNCERTIFICATED TEACHERS 16, 17, 22, 25, 26, 47, 57-60, 62, 65, 67, 69, 71, 72, 76, 99, 121, 123, 135
Professional training of 60
UNDERTAKING, STUDENTS 112
UNIVERSITIES 19 21, 24, 56, 69, 76-80, 84, 88, 100, Chapter VIII passim, 103-115, 120, 126, 150
Connection with Two Year Colleges 19-21, 79-80, 103-111
Grants in aid of professional training at 20, 24
Hostels at 79, i13-114
Third Years at 109
UNIVERSITY COLLEGES 18, 20, 21, 24, 78, 104, 107
UNIVERSITY GRANTS COMMITTEE 78, 107
UNIVERSITY TRAINING DEPARTMENTS 17, 19, 20, 22, 23, 24, 45, 76, 78, 105, 106, 111, 136, 139, 141
VOCATION, Sense of 84-86
VOLUNTARY COLLEGES 18, 19, 82, 139, 145
WALES 37, 46, 70
WARRINGTON TRAINING COLLEGE 108
WASTAGE, see under SUPPLY OF TEACHERS
WOMEN TEACHERS 25, 26, 29, 38, 41, 55, 58, 64, 73, 81, 88, 114, 134, 141
YORK TRAINING COLLEGE 105
YOUNGER CHILDREN, Training of Teachers for 97-98

