Retrospect and Prospect
Abstract
I CAME INTO technical education in 1924. At that time technical colleges were just beginning to emerge from a long period of being little more than ‘night‐schools’. World War I had given a severe jolt to our industrial and scientific complacency, and one result was an upsurge of interest in technical education. Day release was just beginning on a small scale; technical colleges were staffed by devoted but not always well qualified teachers; full‐time staffs were small, and there was an altogether disproportionate number of visiting teachers. Buildings and equipment were woefully inadequate; any building firmly rejected as being not good enough for primary or secondary purposes was allocated to technical; it was undoubtedly the Cinderella of the branches.
Citation
Anderson, D. (1960), "Retrospect and Prospect", Education + Training, Vol. 2 No. 9, pp. 4-8. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb014869
Publisher
:MCB UP Ltd
Copyright © 1960, MCB UP Limited