Annual Report of the Common, Superior, Academic, and Normal and Model Schools in Nova Scotia for the School Year ...A. Grant, Printer to the Queen, 1879 - Education |
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... Cape Breton . Colchester ... Cumberland • Clare .... Digby- ( No Report Received ) . Guysboro ' Halifax .. Hants .... Inverness Kings . Lunenburg Pictou Queens . Richmond . ·· Shelburne . Victoria ... Yarmouth .. Halifax City Schools ...
... Cape Breton . Colchester ... Cumberland • Clare .... Digby- ( No Report Received ) . Guysboro ' Halifax .. Hants .... Inverness Kings . Lunenburg Pictou Queens . Richmond . ·· Shelburne . Victoria ... Yarmouth .. Halifax City Schools ...
Page xii
... Cape Breton .... 748,000 120 26,454 6774 10572 75 1 56 Colchester ... Cumberland 837,000 116 23,331 1,031,875 143 23,518 6515 6806 9701 55 1 42 9653 16 1 48 Digby .. .... 653,000 74 17,637 4814 5773 88 1 20 Guysborough ... | 1,060,000 ...
... Cape Breton .... 748,000 120 26,454 6774 10572 75 1 56 Colchester ... Cumberland 837,000 116 23,331 1,031,875 143 23,518 6515 6806 9701 55 1 42 9653 16 1 48 Digby .. .... 653,000 74 17,637 4814 5773 88 1 20 Guysborough ... | 1,060,000 ...
Page xiii
... Cape Breton with $ 554.20 , and Annapolis with $ 523.47 ; Shelburne drew only $ 83.27 ; next lowest are Antigonish with $ 156.31 , and Queens with $ 159.41 . I call attention to the fact , patent from an inspection of Tablet XVI , that ...
... Cape Breton with $ 554.20 , and Annapolis with $ 523.47 ; Shelburne drew only $ 83.27 ; next lowest are Antigonish with $ 156.31 , and Queens with $ 159.41 . I call attention to the fact , patent from an inspection of Tablet XVI , that ...
Page xv
... Cape Breton 46 34 10 . 2 Cumberland 63 47 15 1 Digby " " 60 45 11 1 Guysboro ' 54 47 7 Lunenburg " 6 36 26 10 Richmond " " 27 25 1 1 Queens 46 35 10 1 Shelburne ( C 48 44 4 Victoria 58 42 14 2 Total .... 660 472 177 11 Special Academies ...
... Cape Breton 46 34 10 . 2 Cumberland 63 47 15 1 Digby " " 60 45 11 1 Guysboro ' 54 47 7 Lunenburg " 6 36 26 10 Richmond " " 27 25 1 1 Queens 46 35 10 1 Shelburne ( C 48 44 4 Victoria 58 42 14 2 Total .... 660 472 177 11 Special Academies ...
Page xxv
Nova Scotia. Superintendent of Education. PART II . STATISTICAL TABLES . PUBLIC SCHOOLS , SPECIAL ACADEMIES AND COLLEGES . TABLE I. - PRELIMINARY . Antigonish . Cape Breton Colchester PART II-STATISTICAL TABLES.
Nova Scotia. Superintendent of Education. PART II . STATISTICAL TABLES . PUBLIC SCHOOLS , SPECIAL ACADEMIES AND COLLEGES . TABLE I. - PRELIMINARY . Antigonish . Cape Breton Colchester PART II-STATISTICAL TABLES.
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Albro Street Annapolis Antigonish Antigonish County Arithmetic Baddeck branches building candidates Cape Breton Cape Breton County City of Halifax Clare Colchester Common Schools Council of Public County Academies County Fund Cumberland DAVID ALLISON Decrease Digby District East Hants examination Expenditure Female Teachers full term Grade of License graded schools grand total days Halifax County High School improvement Inspector Institution large number Lunenburg Male Teachers Miss Normal School Nova Scotia number of pupils number of schools number of teachers Parrsboro Pictou Pictou Academy poor sections Provincial Grant Public Instruction Public Schools Pupils daily present pupils registered Queens rate-payers Received Grade registered pupils Regulations Richmond salaries scholars School Commissioners school houses school sections session Shelburne Special Academies statistics Street School Summer Term Superintendent of Education TABLE taught teachers employed teaching tion total number Truro trustees upwards Victoria visited West Hants Winter Term Yarmouth
Popular passages
Page xvi - Several objections to the teaching of trades in the public school may thus be stated : (1) It is impossible for the public school to teach a tithe of its pupils the pursuit or occupation by which they are to earn a living. A glance at the list of occupations given in the report of the census of 1870 will satisfy any one that but very few of the three hundred and thirty-eight occupations therein named can be made a part of the public school course. Of the one hundred and seventy-two occupations classed...
Page 27 - ... the chairman presiding at such meeting shall require the person so offering, to make the following declaration : " I do declare and affirm that I am, and have been, for the thirty days last past, an actual resident of this school district and that I am qualified to vote at this meeting.
Page xvii - ... to all youth would exhaust the present resources of the public schools. 2. The teaching of a few trades to all pupils would crowd these pursuits with workmen and reduce the compensation of skilled labor therein to the wages of common laborers.. The turning of the pupils in the public schools of our cities and towns into a few channels of industry, would glut these occupations and leave many skilled workmen without employment. The training of all the boys to be carpenters and blacksmiths, for...
Page xvi - Of the one hundred and seventy-two occupations classed as "manufactures and mechanical and mining industries "not a score can be taught in a school shop, and but few of these can thus be taught with any efficiency. The public school would make a large contract if it should undertake to train its pupils to be bakers, bleachers, dyers, bookbinders , brewers, brick and tile makers, butchers...
Page 56 - Educate all the men of a generation, and leave the woman uneducated, and every child under their influence begins his public education with all the disadvantages of his father. Educate all the females, and you will give a permanent impulse to the onward movement of the race, which it can never lose. Each individual begins his progress from a higher level, and, with equal exertion, will bequeath a richer inheritance of knowledge and wisdom to his successors.
Page 77 - To read a short paragraph from a book not confined to words of one syllable.
Page xvii - ... into a few channels of industry, would glut these occupations and leave many skilled workmen without employment. The training of all the boys to be carpenters and blacksmiths, for example, would be worse than industrial folly. Not a tithe of them could earn a living as hand-tool mechanics. Handicraft is fast disappearing and more and more mechanical work is done by machinery. The coming artisan will be the master of the machine, as has been clearly shown by Professor THOMPSON, of the Technical...
Page 56 - an impulse has been given to society by the education of women ; yet no truly womanly duty has been neglected, nor are women less disposed to accept the cares of domestic life, or yield to the claims of conjugal or maternal affection.