학술논문

NAMBOUR: THE MODEL RURAL SCHOOL.
Document Type
Article
Author
Source
Australian & International Journal of Rural Education; 2012, Vol. 22 Issue 3, p87-99, 13p
Subject
Rural education
Rural school administration
Aggregated data
Agricultural education
Fruit growing
Australia
Language
ISSN
18397387
Abstract
This paper examines the Rural Schools of Queensland. Starting with Nambour in 1917, the scheme incorporated thirty schools, and operated for over forty years. The rhetoric of the day was that boys and girls from the senior classes of primary school would be provided with elementary instruction of a practical character. In reality, the subjects taught were specifically tailored to provide farm skills to children in rural centres engaged in farming, dairying or fruit growing. Linked to each Rural School was a number of smaller surrounding schools, students from which travelled to the Rural School for special agricultural or domestic instruction. Through this action, the Queensland Department of Public Instruction left no doubt it intended to provide educational support for agrarian change and development within the state; in effect, they had set in motion the creation of a Queensland yeoman class. The Department's intention was to arrest or reverse the trend toward urbanisation — whilst increasing agricultural productivity — through the making of a farmer born of the land and accepting of the new scientific advances in agriculture. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]