"Education department" Quotes from Famous Books
... cost another L50,000. This expense should be defrayed largely out of the local rates, one third, say L25,000, to come out of the estimates. There would also be the cost of supervision, etc., by the Education Department, amounting to about L5000 a year. Committees, as for school attendance, composed partly of representatives of school managers and partly of local authorities, could be ... — Against Home Rule (1912) - The Case for the Union • Various
... by the editorial and publicity staffs, respectively. Third come publications of a technical nature, like the official handbooks for scouts and officers and outlines for training courses. These form part of the work of the education department, which has general oversight of all that pertains to training for leaders and the development of standards of work, including the important feature of coordinating the girl scouts with the other educational ... — Educational Work of the Girl Scouts • Louise Stevens Bryant
... sections in question are the seventh, the fourteenth, the sixteenth, and the ninety-seventh. Of these, the seventh, the fourteenth, and the ninety-seventh deal with the subject-matter of education, while the sixteenth defines the nature of the relations which are to exist between the "Education Department" (an euphemism for the future Minister of Education) and the School Boards. It is the sixteenth clause which is the most important, and, in some respects, the most remarkable of all. It ... — Science & Education • Thomas H. Huxley
... the Education Department conditionally wants aid to Cookery Instruction in connection with State Aided Primary Schools under the following stipulations: what provision as to buildings, &c., has been made for Cookery Instruction in accordance with the conditions ... — The Art of Living in Australia • Philip E. Muskett (?-1909)
... fewer during the thirty-five years of Arnold's Inspectorship. A conspicuous service was rendered both to the cause of Education and to Arnold's memory when the late Lord Sandford rescued from the entombing blue-books his friend's nineteen General Reports to the Education Department on Elementary Schools. In those Reports we read his deliberate judgment on the merits, defects, needs, possibilities and ideals of elementary schools; and this not merely as regards the choice of subjects taught, but as regards cleanliness, healthiness, good order, good manners, ... — Matthew Arnold • G. W. E. Russell |