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Do you find that they have sufficient occupation now?
They have.

At present how often do they visit each school on the average?

Once a year.

Do you think that is sufficient?

No; I think they should visit each school twice a year.

Do you think they have time, at present, to visit each school more than once a year?

I think they have not, provided they examine the school with the attention that we require.

Supposing a school of 150 to 200 pupils; what time do you think an efficient inspection would take?

An efficient inspection would take the best part of the day. Is the duty of the inspector extended to the examination of the pupils ?

He should put general questions to the pupils, without any fixed course of examination, to ascertain their proficiency.

Do you hold the inspectors responsible for ascertaining that the pupils, generally, have made the progress that is expected during the period?

Certainly; and to report to us accordingly.

Do you require the inspector to furnish you with minutes of the kind of inspection he has made?

He has a form of report, which he is obliged to make to us upon each school.

4.-NORMAL SCHOOLS.

What progress have you made in the establishment of Normal Schools?

We have agreed for the purchase of Tyrone-House and grounds, in Dublin, where we intend establishing a National Normal School.

In the estimates remitted to Parliament this year, for the expenses of your Board, there is an item amounting to £11,000, for the purchase of a house for the purpose of establishing a Normal School; does not that appear a very large sum?

The house and land taken together, I do not think purchased at a high rate; there are, I think, four acres of land within the city of Dublin, annexed to the house. The purchase was made for us through the Architect of the Board of Works. He settled the price, and he it was, who first informed us that we could purchase the place in question. We had requested him previously to look out for a suitable place for us. He is a person of

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Houses for Schoolmasters.

very extensive information, who has, I believe, rendered very great service to the public, in reducing the expense of public works in Ireland.

What are the accommodations in Tyrone-House? How many pupils of the Normal School do you think it will accommodate?

We expect to have 400 teachers at a time; in addition to which, we shall have a vast number of children, I have no doubt, attending our Model Schools.

• What additional buildings will be necessary to carry into full effect, the plan of this extensive Normal School?

We shall require lecture-rooms and school-rooms; the house itself, I think, will be required for the official establishment, and for ware-rooms, &c. It must be borne in mind, that we, in effect, carry on an extensive trade in books and school requisites, for which we require very considerable accommodations.

Would the Normal schools, in the provinces, be of an inferior kind to the great Normal school in Dublin?

Yes; we propose having 32 Normal schools for Ireland. How many masters would you contemplate for the whole of your schools?

Five thousand.

How many would it be necessary to supply from the Normal schools every year?

At first, till we got them completed, we should require to bring out 500 a year; and afterwards, to keep the number to 5000, it would be necessary, I conceive, to bring out from 100 to 200 a year.

Would you require 22 Normal schools?

Those Normal schools will be model schools also, for each county, or rather district schools. We propose to have one chief school for each county, and that the master there should have £100; that would be an advancement beyond the primary school. Then we propose that he should have two assistants, who should have £52 a year each; thus there would be about 90 places of advancement.

Do you find that, at present, there is a great demand among the people for the situation of teacher in the several schools which you have established?

There is; but the candidates are not at all of the class that I I could wish them to be.

5.-HOUSES FOR SCHOOLMASTERS.

In what way is the land provided for the erection of schoolhouses?

The applicant for the land is obliged to provide the land as

How much Land to a School House.

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well as he can. There are frequently great difficulties in obtainng land for the purpose.

But the Board is at no expense in procuring the land upon which the schools are to be built?

No.

Would you give authority to the Board to procure the necessary land, either by purchase or otherwise, for the purpose of erecting schools?

I would; in like manner as authority is granted to different public Boards to take land where necessary for public purposes, paying a due price for it.

Do you think it would be the more judicious arrangement that the land for schools should be vested generally in the hands of the Board in trust for the public, or in the hands of private trustees, under the direction of the Board?

I think it would be best to vest the whole of the school houses in the Board, as a corporate body, having perpetual succession. Would you add to that, schoolmasters' houses?

Yes.

Might there not be many cases in which an individual would be willing to give up the use of a house, to a schoolmaster gratuitously, who yet might not be willing to make a grant to a Board in perpetuity; and equally so with respect to school-houses?

No doubt there might be such cases; but I think that the Board should be authorized to deal with any unwillingness, by having a power of compelling persons to convey land for the purpose, at a fair price, guarding at the same time, the owners or proprietors of land from having their parks or their gardens entered, and so forth, in the usual way in which powers given to public bodies to take lands for public purposes are qualified. Of course it should be subject to the obligation of giving it back to the owner, in case of the school not being continued? I see no possible objection to that provision, he paying back a fair price for it.

Are you aware of any difficulties or inconveniences from the present system of vesting schools in other trustees than the Board?

There is always a degree of inconvenience produced by vesting lands in trustees for those purposes: the lands may become vested in persons who are not fit to be trustees, and who are unwilling to act as trustees; and then one may be driven to the necessity of applying to a court of equity to compel the person in whom the land is vested to do the necessary acts, either for maintaining the school, or having trustees appointed.

What would you consider a proper quantity of land to be purchased for the purposes of those schools in each case?

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The New England Academy.

In general, I should say, sufficient to afford a site for a school house, and teacher's apartments, and about an acre of land for a garden.

Would you, in some particular cases, extend the quantity of ground which it should be in the power of the Board to procure for the erection of schools; such for instance, as in the case of agricultural schools in rural districts?

I think there should be a garden annexed to every rural school, in which the children may receive information on points of agriculture and gardening. I think it very desirable that there should be agricultural schools, to each of which there should be annexed a farm of not less than 100 acres ; but I do not consider that there would be more than 10 of those required for the whole country. The land required for those purposes might be taken on lease.

THE NEW ENGLAND ACADEMY.

THIS is the name which it has been proposed to give to an institution, which at present exists only in the mind, and on the manuscripts of its projector, but which we should rejoice to see in actual operation. The intention is to have it located in the township of Cohasset, eighteen miles south-east of Boston. We have been permitted to examine numerous drawings of the buildings proposed; and to make from the manuscripts of the proprietors several extracts. The following are among the number. 'We wish to see an Academy established, which shall prove at once the best means of education, as well as exhibit the happy results which appear in the employment of them. We wish to see a system of instruction in operation which shall educate the whole being of the individual pupil, and render him fit, in all respects, to enter upon the varied duties of life. To do this, we must erect our buildings, lay out our grounds, engage able instructers, and secure every influence which tends to develop and exalt the mind of the pupil.

He should be taught the courtesies of life, and be permitted to participate in the social circle. He should be led to honor his father and mother, and to appreciate domestic happiness. He should be taught the nature of business relations—the duties of men in their common transactions with each other. He should be taught the nature of crime, and the reward of virtue, and be led to practise the principles of Christianity as a privilege.-He

Proposed Course of Instruction.

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should be taught the various processes of manufacturing, and the extent of production and consumption. He should be taught the advantages of commerce, and of national treaties regulating trade and the rights of citizens. He should be taught the properties and capabilities of the soil, and the extent of its rich and diversified products. He should be taught the laws of his country, and the duties of citizenship; and be made acquainted with the forms and principles of foreign governments. He should be taught the natural economy of the animal creation, and be made familiar with the intellectual, moral, physiological, anatomical and organic laws of his own system. His education should have reference to the exertions and sacrifices which life requires; to self-command and benevolence; to whatever confers dignity or ornament on human nature-whatever opens pure and innocent sources of enjoyment-whatever contributes to elevate man, as a thinking, social and accountable being, for undying growth and improvement. And as he is led to observe and understand all those principles and things, he should be instructed in the sacred laws of obedience and dependence, which the Creator has established throughout the moral and physical world, and the inevitable suffering which follows every abuse and violation of them.'

Such, then, are the results at which the friends of the New England Academy dare to aim. The course of instruction proposed, is presented in the following outline of studies.

'I. INTELLECTUAL.-Reading, Writing, Arithmetic, Mathematics, Drawing, Book Keeping, Geography, History, Natural History, Botany, Physiology, Anatomy, Natural Philosophy, Chemistry, Mineralogy, Geology, Agriculture, Mental Philosophy, Grammar, Rhetoric, Logic, Elocution, Music, Ancient and Modern Languages.

II. MORAL.-Moral Philosophy, Religion, (not doctrines) Natural Theology, Biography, History of Man and of Sects. III. PHYSICAL.-Dancing, Fencing, Riding, Swimming, and such exercises and games as health may require.'

The following farther remarks and explanations of the principles and plan of the proposed institution, are from the same source with the former.

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A plan contemplating so much, may be objected to, as being too extensive for persons in ordinary circumstances; but such an objection has no bearing whatever on the subject. If education be important, then to provide any thing short of the best, is to sanction a work imperfectly done. If all cannot afford to pay the price of that course of instruction which our natures and the good of society demand, then it becomes the duty of the

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