The Queensland Itinerant Teacher Service 1901-1930 [microform] / M. F. Fogarty.

The historical review outlines the activities of the Queensland Itinerant Service from 1901-1930. The report begins with an account of the Service's first traveling teacher, Mr. Johnson, who in his first year of duty visited 103 homesteads that housed 113 families having 319 children of school...

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Main Author: Fogarty, M. F.
Corporate Author: North Brisbane College of Advanced Education. Department of Teacher Education
Format: Microfilm Book
Language:English
Published: [S.l.] : Distributed by ERIC Clearinghouse, 1980.
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Summary:The historical review outlines the activities of the Queensland Itinerant Service from 1901-1930. The report begins with an account of the Service's first traveling teacher, Mr. Johnson, who in his first year of duty visited 103 homesteads that housed 113 families having 319 children of school age; of its peak period in 1921 when there were 18 teachers; and of its decline as correspondence schools began to replace itinerant teachers. Additional sections cover: mode of operation, modes of transport and equipment carried, quality of the men, physical hardships, a profile of the parents, satisfying the educational desires of outback parents, effectiveness of the service, indirect influences, and the Primary Correspondence School. (AH)
Item Description:ERIC Document Number: ED229185.
Physical Description:13 p.
Reproduction Note:Microfiche.
Action Note:committed to retain
Preferred Citation of Described Materials Note:Teachers' Forum (Australia), v3 n3 p10-14 Nov 1980.