Annual Report of the Dept. of Education of the Province of New Brunswick

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Department of Education, 1919 - Education
 

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Page li - School (if a graded one) or to the Board of Trustees, for advice and direction.* (8) Subject to the arrangements of the Board of Trustees, to see that the School house is kept in proper order in respect of cleanliness, neatness, heating and ventilation; and especially that the School-room is .ready for the reception of pupils at least twenty minutes before the time fixed for opening the School. (9) To regulate the temperature of the School-room by a thermomex.
Page 185 - America during the past ninety years has been admirable, but perhaps excessive. It has taught us a respect for fact and method which our earlier learning lacked. It has tended at the same time to encourage the notion that the object of all learning is the methodical collection of facts.
Page vii - I beg to submit, as required by law, my report on the public schools of the Province for the school year 1904-5. The tabular statements given in Part II are for the school year which ended June 30th, 1905. The Inspectors' Reports in Part III cover the whole of the Calendar year 1905.
Page li - Kxatuination should l>e addressed to the Inspector within whose Inspectoral District the Candidate wishes to write, not later than the 24th day of May in each year. The application shall state the Class for which the Candidate wishes te be examined.
Page li - Examination, or the Matriculation Examination shall send to the Inspector within whose inspectoral division he intends to write, not later than the 24th of May preceding, a notice stating the class of certificate for which he is a candidate, and what optional subject or subjects he has selected. Such notice shall be accompanied by a fee of $5.
Page xli - Fisher: That nation which employs the best teachers with the highest pay and as a part of the best school system will be the best governed and therefore the greatest nation.
Page xli - That nation which, after the war, employs the best teachers with the highest pay and as a part of the best school system, will be the best governed and, therefore, the greatest nation. Of that I am absolutely certain. No people which does not respect education will demand and support good government, and if there is not a vital impulse running through its education, the people of no nation can be expected to respect it.
Page 168 - JR INCH, Esq., LL. D., Chief Supt. of Education, Fredericton, NB SIR : — I beg leave to submit the following report for the year...
Page li - ... with or has been exposed to any contagious disease, until all danger of contagion from such pupil or from the disease or exposure shall have passed away, as certified in writing by a medical man.
Page 141 - I have the honor to submit, as required by law,- my Report on the Public Schools of the Province for the year 1893.

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