BOYS LEAVING SCHOOL
| NEED FOR CAREFUL CHOICE 5 , OF OCCUPATION Expectations, that because ol: the. high pay being offered, more boys than usual would this year be. leaving primary school to go straight to work, did not so far appear to have been fu'.lilled, said the vocational guidance officer at the. Government Youth Centre, Air A. A. lvirk. The centre, he added, always advised; that boys should have some suitable form of post-primary education. Even if a boy was not going to enter a profession or even become a skilled artisan, a. liberal education made him. a better citizen and gave him an opportunity of living a fuller life. If once boys 1 and their parents, had the right atr litudc to education, and later work, there would be fewer behaviour problems to contend with. "As so many occupations have now been declared essential, it is important that parents should come to the youth centre and discuss the conditions and requirements of the varis ous occupations, so that their children do not rush blindly into jobs which they find unsuitable and then o/ome to us for permits, to leave,/' said Mr Kirk. "We would far rather tell them all about their proposed job first*." Mr Kirk explained that officers of the Government Youth Centre were now acting for the manpower officer in handling all applications by employers to engage boys under 18 and girls under 20 in any other than essential industries, and also ' in issuing permits for them to- leave essential industries. A recent. Ministerial statement that the Government was considering the possibility of releasing young men of 20 and under from the armed forces to enable them to continue their civil training or education showed signs of closing up some of the openings for boys just leaving school, he said. Employers who might have a number of junior workers returned; to them were a little hesitant about engaging new staff.
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Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 6, Issue 48, 16 February 1943, Page 2
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322BOYS LEAVING SCHOOL Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 6, Issue 48, 16 February 1943, Page 2
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