Page images
PDF
EPUB
[graphic][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed]

"NOIRE IMPERIALE."

Such is the name given by the Lyons manufacturers to a new shade of Black Silk. By the side of other black Glacés it will be found brighter, and, owing to its being made of more valuable raw silk, it will wear much better than the old black, never changing colour. The price is very little higher than the commoner black Glacé.

MESSRS. JAY have imported, and will continue to import, the "NOIRE IMPERIALE" GLACE during the season, and will be bappy to forward patterns for comparison with the old-fashioned Glacé to any part of the country.

JAYS',

THE LONDON GENERAL MOURNING WAREHOUSE, 247, 249, 251, REGENT STREET.

[graphic]

MANUFACTORY-BROAD STREET, BIRMINGHAM.-ESTABLISHED 1807.

OSLER'S Glass Chandeliers, 45, Oxford-Street, W. Wall Lights and Mantel-piece Lustres for Gas and Candles. Table Glass and Glass Dessert Services complete. Ornamental Glass, English and Foreign, suitable for Presents.

MESS, EXPORT, AND FURNISHING ORDERS PROMPTLY EXECUTED.

MACMILLAN'S MAGAZINE.

MAY, 1861.

SUPPLEMENTARY NATIONAL EDUCATION:

SUNDAY SCHOOLS, MECHANICS' INSTITUTES, AND NIGHT SCHOOLS.

BY THE REV. H. G. ROBINSON, TRAINING COLLEGE, YORK.

THE Country is, in one way or another, spending about two millions in the elementary education of the working classes. It will, of course, be understood that in this estimate are included as well the offerings of private benevolence as the funds derived from the parliamentary grants. Now, two millions are a large sum. They do not, indeed, make a very great show when compared with the amount annually expended on wine, spirits, and tobacco; they cut an insignificant figure by the side of army and navy estimates; but still, looked at in the abstract, they are not contemptible. Assuredly the country is entitled to expect some substantial return for them. And what is the real state of the case? Are these two millions well laid out? Is the work of education now going on a successful one? Is it producing any solid, permanent, beneficial results? The Report of the Education Commissioners makes its appearance very opportunely to answer that question; and the answer it gives is fairly satisfactory. It does indeed expose some defects and shortcomings. It warns us that in the majority of inspected schools more attention is paid to the superstructure than to the foundation; that reading and writing are too often slurred over in order that a very limited "First Class," into which few of the children find their way, may astonish inspectors and visitors by a display of multifarious acquireNo. 19.-VOL. IV.

ments. But, after all, the two millions are not begged, voted, volunteered altogether in vain; a good deal is in course of being done, though not perhaps quite as much as sanguine friends of education hoped-not quite as much as our elaborate educational machinery would seem to call for. The following facts cannot very well be disputed. A great many bad schools in different parts of the country have been converted into schools more or less good, and a great many good schools have been established in places where aforetime there were no schools at all, good or bad. Teachers regularly educated for their work have taken the place of teachers who knew very little and were unable to impart the little they did know; method and system have superseded haphazard and chronic irregularity; inspection and supervision have given a stimulus to exertion; and the countenance and sympathy of persons of influence are enlisted in the cause.

At the same time there is one circumstance which very seriously detracts from the efficacy of the work. Those for whose benefit it is designed are only willing or able to avail themselves of its advantages in a very limited degree. I refer, of course, to the well-known and oft-repeated complaint that children leave school at a very early age, and, while professedly at school, are often very irregular in their attendance. Now, as to the reality and extent of this evil,

B

there is by no means unanimity of opinion among the patrons and promoters of education. Some say that things are very bad in this respect-so bad as almost to nullify the advantage of improved methods of teaching, and to make the sums expended in highlytrained teachers and accomplished inspectors and elaborate apparatus, little better than a waste of money. Others go so far as to say that the outcry about the early desertion of school is a mere delusion, partaking in some sort of the nature of those general panics which are occasionally epidemic with the British public. I have heard both opinions stated ex cathedra with the most unhesitating confidence. That the truth lies mid-way between these two extremes seems in this case a very safe conclusion to arrive at. Let it be granted that children for the most part leave school at the age of eleven, and it does not therefore follow that the pains taken to teach them up to that age are altogether thrown away. The five years between six and eleven are surely worth something. It may be a mistake to endeavour to cram too much into that narrow interval; but powers may, during that time, be called forth which shall never become quite dormant again; impressions for good may be made which no future influences can altogether obliterate. On the other hand, to deny the fact that children are withdrawn from school at so early an age as greatly to interfere with the completeness of their education, is to deny what the statistics of any half-dozen neighbourhoods would most incontestably prove. As to irregularity of attendance, the question seems to admit of very easy settlement. Most people, doubtless, know that schools under government inspection are entitled to a capitation grant on account of every child who has attended during 176 days in the course of the year. In 1859 the amount paid in this form was 61,1837. The number of children on account of whom this sum was paid, was 247,691, while the average attendance was 599,903, and the entire number

[merged small][ocr errors]

a

In the face of such facts as these there is some ground for the objection that the system of national education now in course of development is all too vast and elaborate for the work it has to do. I do not, however, propose to discuss this question, but to make different use of the points to which I have been calling attention. The limited time during which children attend the day-school, and the irregularity of the attendance of most of them, make it very important to carry out some plan for supplementing ordinary school education. The demand for juvenile labour has been for some time increasing-is still on the increase-will continue to be so as long as trade and manufactures are prosperous, unless some unlooked for and unlikely contingencies should change the direction of events, and modify the laws which regulate employment. The school cannot compete with the labour-market. When the choice is between paying twopence for schooling and receiving four or five shillings for labour, the instincts of the great mass of unlettered English parents can only be expected to choose in one way. Children then must continue to leave school with a very slender stock of knowledge-with a few miscellaneous historical, geographical, and physical facts, not very clearly or coherently grouped in their minds, and with a moderate degree of skill in reading, writing, and ciphering. But how long, if left to themselves, will they retain these accomplishments? Will the boy who, at the age of twelve, is able to read a page of English prose with average fluency and intelligence, retain much of that ability at sixteen, supposing the intervening years are spent in a factory or at the plough? No attempt, as far

[ocr errors]

as I know, has yet been made to ascertain the present intellectual condition of those boys and girls who left our best national schools four or five years ago. The fact, indeed, that above forty per cent. of the marrying population still continue to make their mark instead of signing their names in the register is significant, but it must not be too strongly insisted upon. It indicates

imperfect skill rather than total inability to write. But, whatever advantages the national school may confer, it is certain that those advantages will be very imperfectly realized, and will in a very great degree become evanescent in the case of most of those who have enjoyed them, unless something can be done to carry on education concurrently with labour.

How is it again with the youth of the working classes generally, from fourteen years of age to twenty, as regards moral tone? Let those who know them speak, and they will confess that their condition is very unsatisfactory. They are difficult to get hold of, difficult to impress. They are fond of license, and call it liberty. They are rude, boisterous, given to appetite, fancying there is some connexion between manliness and vice. They are the despair of ordinary clergymen. They are seldom seen at church, but continually at the corners of the streets, though their occupation there is less edifying to their neighbours, and more unprofitable to themselves, than that of the Pharisees of old. There are, of course, very pleasing exceptions to this state of things, but in the main the description is neither exaggerated nor extravagant.

nothing of the darker phases of life and morals which too often grow out of thisjuvenile recklessness and roughness. Sottish intemperance and gross impurity too frequently characterize the social condition of the people, and are too constantly the theme of philanthropic lamentation to make it necessary for any one to prove their existence, or to enlarge upon their evil.

And where must we look for a remedy or a palliative? Undoubtedly

the first step towards finding one is to ascertain clearly the beginning of the mischief. Now, I would strongly insist upon it that the mischief takes its beginning from that age when the salutary influences of the national school are no longer in operation, and when no other checks and responsibilities have as yet been substituted. In the comparatively neglected condition of English lads from the age of thirteen to eighteen, lies the secret of a great deal of the vice of their maturity; and therefore we must somehow contrive to act vigorously on the young during this period of their lives, if we would infuse a better tone into the masses, and raise the standard of adult morality among them.

Now, what are the agencies at our disposal for effecting this?

I. There is, first of all, the time-honoured SUNDAY-SCHOOL. And this institution, which has been in existence for more than sixty years, is not without its merits. In some parts of the country— in Lancashire especially-it is by no means wholly inefficient, and certainly exercises a good deal of indirect influence over the young persons associated with it. At the same time there are many lets and hindrances to the thorough and substantial efficiency of the Sundayschool. One is the almost universal absence of method and organization. Little is taught, and that little is very imperfectly digested. The teachers are often very earnest and right-minded, but seldom very competent. Courses of instruction there can hardly be said to be, for in most cases the lessons consist of a chapter of the Bible selected for no particular reason, and on no particular principle; the book of Chronicles being, I believe, rather a favourite with volunteer teachers of the humbler class, as affording good scope for testing mechanical skill in reading hard words. But another hindrance to the usefulness of the Sunday-school is to be found in the fact that it is nothing more than a preliminary to attendance on a long service in church. Hence, not only is the time available for the Sunday-school contracted within the narrowest limits,

« PreviousContinue »