E.—B
1909. NEW ZEAL AN D.
EDUCATION: ANNUAL EXAMINATIONS. [In continuation of E.-1a, 1908.]
Presented to both Houses of the General Assembly by Command of His Excellency.
The Inspectok-Genekal of Schools to the Hon. the Minister of Education. ". — Education Department, Wellington, 3rd August, 1909. I have the honour to present the following report of the annual examinations conducted by the Department for the various purposes of Junior National Scholarships, Junior Free Plac. secondary schools, district high schools, and technical schools, Senior Free Places in secondary schools and district high schools, for admission to or promotion in the Civil Service, and for teachers' certificates. The examinations were held between the 9th and the 19th days of December, 1908, and between the sth and the 18th days of January, 1909, at the thirteen'towns which are the seats of Education Boards, and also at Alexandra, Aratapu, Arrowtown, Ashburton, Balclutha, Chatham Islands, Dannevirke, Gisborne, Gore, Hamilton, Hastings, Hawer'a, Lawrence.' Levin, Marton, Masterton, Naseby, Oamaru, Opotiki, Pahiatua, Palmerston North, Paparoa, Patea| Kangiora, Beefton, Eivertou, Stratford, Takaka, Tapanui, Tauranga, Thames, Wairoa, Westport' Whangarei. The total number of candidates entering for the December and January tests jointly was 6,117, or 573 more than in the preceding year. Of this total the number actually present at examination was 5,519, the difference (598) being accounted for partly on the usual grounds, and partly by the operation of a new clause in the Begulations for Senior Free Places, under which a number of candidates recommended on an accrediting principle therein embodied were exempted from examination, and accordingly did not present themselves. In the several examinations the following were the numbers present: For the Junior National Scholarship and Junior Free Place Examination, 1,765; for the Civil Service Junior and allied examinations, 2,158; for the Civil Service Senior Examination, 373; for Certificate Examinations, 1,223. It may further be noted that thirty-eight of the candidates so recorded were candidates for both Senior and Junior Civil Service Examinations, and that one of the candidates for a teacher's certificate was also a candidate for the Civil Service Senior. The Department's examination for Junior National Scholarships is now used by all the Education Boards of the Dominion for the award of their Junior Scholarships, superseding thus without exception any examination locally conducted in earlier years for this purpose. For the award of their Senior Scholarships the Boards commonly, but not exclusively, use the Civil Service Junior Examination. Apart from this extension of its functions, the Civil Service Junior Examination is employed for a variety of purposes. Either in its proper competitive form, or with certain modifications in selected subjects to meet the needs of a non competitive qualification, it is thus used not only as an entrance examination for the Civil Service of the Dominion, but as a scholarship examination, an examination for the Senior Free Place qualification in secondary schools and district high schools, an examination for pupil-teachers of the second or third years, and a qualifying examination for the probationer appointments recently instituted under an amendment of the Education Act. The following table gives a comparative statement of the number of candidates examined under the principal groupings during the past four years :— 1905-6. 1906-7. 1907-8. 1908-9. Junior National and Education Board Scholarships and Junior Free Places 790 1,458 1,475 1,765 Civil Service Junior, Senior Free Places, Education Board Senior Scholarships, First Pupil-teachers ... 1,305 2,123 2,173 2,158 Teachers D and C ... ... ... 749 1,051 1,184 1,223 Civil Service Senior ... ... 141 JB3 231 373 2,985 4,815 5,063 5,519
I—E. 8.
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