MODERN PARENTS
CENSURED BY. HEADMASTER
Modern. parents indulge ...their boys too much, and are-apt to place them on a pedestal.■ Their .desire is,t6 -give them too much pleasure, arid' discipline is thereby sacrificed. In this.way, boys, and girls, too, are given a wrong, conception of life. - ■ - - • - ...
Fifty years of teaching boys, both of;. the modern and the ? pre-war, era, prompted Mr.Gresham Robinson,- retiring headmaster of Essendori Grammar School, Melbourne, to these .conclusions, states an exchange. ■ , ; -^
Mr. Robinson's experience tells him that there is always one subject in which a boy will do really Veil, and it is the duty of his teacher to find that subject. Boys, he said; should not be forced by parents to take'up a trade or profession for which they have no aptitude. , -
The boy should be allowed to take up the calling for which he shows » liking. If a boy desired to become a street sweeper, he should be allowed to do so, for if his enthusiasm runs that way, he will not remain a street sweeper for long. He would most likely end by being a city cleansing or sanitation contractor, or expert.
Mr. Robinson considers that boys and girls in Australia are allowed by their parents to see at too early ait age, talkies that are far too sophisticated. This, he says, develops restlessness, a wrong perspective of life, and often an idea of luxury that is incompatible with their surroundings.1
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Evening Post, Volume CXXIII, Issue 137, 11 June 1937, Page 14
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238MODERN PARENTS Evening Post, Volume CXXIII, Issue 137, 11 June 1937, Page 14
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