Name: West End State School
Time: 1875 - Current
Epoch: Late 19th Century
Category: State Primary School
Institution Category: Education
Institution Group: Primary
Coordinates: -27.479555, 153.007945
Street Address: 24 Vulture St, West End
Suburb: West End
Sector: State
Local Study Area: West End-South Brisbane-North Woolloongabba
Study Stage: MBSH Stage 3 Local Study Areas
West End State School built 1875. Although Queensland education was influenced by the earlier establishment of National and Normal school system primary education was shaped by the Department of Public Instruction under the Education Act of 1875, whereby:
Primary education for children aged from 6 to 12 was to be compulsory.(This provision was not fully implemented until 1900.)
Education was to be secular, i.e. under the control of the State. (Inconformity with this policy, all assistance to non-vested schools was withdrawn in 1880. This provision occasioned considerable ill-feeling among Roman Catholics and some Anglicans.)
Primary education was to be free.
A Department of Public Instruction was established to administer the Act.
The colonial curriculum drew on reading, writing, and arithmetic (the ‘3Rs), with object lessons (‘show and tell’ lessons), drill and gymnastics, and vocal music were supposed to be taught, but in practice these relatively new subjects were often ignored or poorly taught. Geography, needlework, grammar, history and mechanics were also included in the curriculum at various levels. While some of these subjects were included for their practical usefulness, the main criterion for inclusion of subjects in the curriculum was not their practical value, but their value in disciplining (‘sharpening’) mental faculties such as ‘memory’ and ‘reasoning’.
By 1905, when important syllabus changes were made, the value of subjects was increasingly assessed in terms of their everyday usefulness, and ‘learning by doing’ was stressed. The child rather than the teacher, was becoming the centre of the learning process, at least in theory. These changes in the philosophy of education, combined with attempts to mould the content and methods of teaching to the peculiar geographic conditions of Queensland, were major influences on education for the next six decades.
Geographic Description 1: Inside The Green Belt
Geographic Description 2: Brisbane River
Geographic Description 3: Flood Plains; Hills (Hill End); Ridgeline (Short; leading into Highgate Hill)
Entry extracted from Queensland Department of Education document, Primary Education, undated.
Addison Gardens School Empire Day celebrations when a Queensland flag sent from West End State School was presented and unfurled by Major Sir T.B. Robinson, Agent General of Queensland, 22 May 1914. Queensland State Archives, Digital Image ID 26934