[At Last by Charles Kingsley]@TWC D-Link book
At Last

CHAPTER XIV: THE 'EDUCATION QUESTION' IN TRINIDAD
9/31

There were no funds at all, indeed, which would enable them to set up in remote forest districts a religious school side by side with the secular ward school; and the colony could not well be asked for Government grants to two sets of schools at once.

In face of these circumstances, the late Governor thought fit to take action on the very able and interesting report of Mr.J.P.Keenan, one of the chiefs of inspection of the Irish National Board of Education, who had been sent out as special commissioner to inquire into the state of education in the island; to modify Lord Harris's plan, however excellent in itself; and to pass an Ordinance by which Government aid was extended to private elementary schools, of whatever denomination, provided they had duly certificated teachers; were accessible to all children of the neighbourhood without distinction of religion or race; and 'offered solid guarantees for abstinence from proselytism and intolerance, by subjecting their rules and course of teaching to the Board of Education, and empowering that Board at any moment to cancel the certificate of the teacher.' In the wards in which such schools were founded, and proved to be working satisfactorily, the secular ward schools were to be discontinued.

But the Government reserved to itself the power of reopening a secular school in the ward, in case the private school turned out a failure.
Such is a short sketch of an Ordinance which seems, to me at least, a rational and fair compromise, identical, mutatis mutandis, with that embodied in Mr.Forster's new Education Act; and the only one by which the lower orders of Trinidad were likely to get any education whatever.

It was received, of course, with applause by the Roman Catholics, and by a great number of the Protestants of the colony.

But, as was to be expected, it met with strong expressions of dissent from some of the Protestant gentry and clergy; especially from one gentleman, who attacked the new scheme with an acuteness and humour which made even those who differed from him regret that such remarkable talents had no wider sphere than a little island of forty-five miles by sixty.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books