Report, Volume 29

Front Cover
Department of Science and Art., 1882 - Manual training
 

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Page 318 - the Government School of Mines, and of Science applied to the Arts...
Page xxiv - Ireland in 1 88 1 was 84,949, showing an increase of 760 over that ot last year. The museums and collections under the superintendence of the department in London, Dublin, and Edinburgh were last year visited by 2,464,538 persons, showing an increase of 132,095 on the number in 1880.
Page 30 - Government, 1 am directed by the Lords Commissioners of Her Majesty's Treasury to transmit...
Page 8 - ... a half. Three or four exhibitions are therefore generally open for competition each year. They are competed for at the May examinations of the Science and Art Department, and are held from year to year, on the condition that the holder attends the courses regularly during those years, complies with all the rules laid down for his guidance, and passes the examinations required for the associateshij«.
Page 4 - By the Lords of the Committee of Her Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council on Education.
Page 329 - Poor where drawing is taught concurrently with reading and writing, and is specially directed to the improvement and refinement of the perceptive powers of the children ; Second, to Diocesan and other Training Colleges, in which...
Page vii - Aid given towards the promotion of instruction in Elementary Drawing as a part of National Education, and in Fine Art as applied to Industry.
Page 2 - Pupil-teachers engaged in schools at which drawing is taught by a qualified teacher should be examined at their own schools in March.
Page 4 - While the school is primarily intended for the instruction of teachers, and of students of the industrial classes selected by competition in the examinations of the Science and Art Department...
Page 46 - ... purposes. It may be used wholly, or in part, during the year in which it is made, and the balance, if any, may be carried over by the Society to the next or even to succeeding years. The latter is a vote to the Science and Art Department, on the disposal of which the Society is consulted. Like all other similar votes, any unused balance reverts to the Treasury, and is to that extent lost to the purpose for which it was intended. I cannot help thinking that, if any such balances could be reserved...

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