723501-1859-GOVERNMENT-NOTIFICATION-NO-11 — Page 1

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Hongkong

THE

Government

NEW SERIES.

GAZETTE.

VICTORIA, SATURDAY, 12TH FEBRUARY, 1859.

GOVERNMENT NOTIFICATION.

VOL. IV. No. 195.

The Contract for publishing this Gazette, entered into on the 24th September, 1853, was terminated on the 30th ultimo ; and notice is hereby given, that a NEW SERIES of this Gazette will be published hereafter, to commence from the 7th instant, under a New Contract, and that

“THE HONGKONG GOVERNMENT GAZETTE” will, as before, be the only Official Organ for PROCLAMATIONS, NOTIFICATIONS, and PUBLIC PAPERS, of this Government,

W. T. MERCER, Colonial Secretary.

By Order,

Colonial Secretary's Office, Victoria, Hongkong, 2d July, 1855.

No. 11.

GOVERNMENT NOTIFICATION.

It is hereby announced, that His Excellency The Governor, with the, advice of the Executive Council, has determined that a Rate of Eight-and-a-half per Cent be paid, for the Year commencing from the 1st January 1859, ta Property within the Colony, valued as liable to Police Assessment.

By Order,

Colonial Secretary's Office, Victoria, Hongkong, 10th February, 1859.

No. 12.

GOVERNMENT NOTIFICATION.

W. T. MERCER, Colonial Secretary.

The subjoined Report, for which the thanks of this Government are due to the Members of the Committee for Superintending Government Schools, is published for general information.

By Order,

Colonial Secretary's Office, Victoria, Hongkong, 11th February, 1859. *

W. T. MERCER, Colonial Secretary.

The Committee for superintending the Government Schools in the Island of Hongkong, in presenting to His Excellency the Governor their Report for the year 1858, have but few facts of any special interest on which it is necessary to make any lengthened remarks.

The aggregate number of Scholars attending in the Schools has, during the past year, increased from about 420 to 675, in the five months of January to May 1858 inclusive

The number of Schools is fifteen as in 1857; and the Inspector Rev. W. Lobscheid has male application for permission to establish three additional Schools in the present current year, all of which are intended to promote the instruction of the Hakha population, who emigrate from their homes on the mainland, and dwell for longer or shorter periods in Hongkong. One of these Schools is proposed to be near the Mahomelan Mosque in Victoria; another at the Stone-cutters' Village to the West of the City; and the third is designed for the Village of Tung-lung-chow near East Point. There are three Hakha Schools, in the Villages of Sai-wan, Shaou-ke-wan, and Tai-tam-tuk, included in the fifteen Schools already established.

During the summer months of the South-West monsoon, the fishing season greatly diminishes the number of Scholars, especially in the villages of Shik-pai-wan, (Aberdeen,) Tung-lung-chow, and in a less degree at Shik-ow. This, together with the poverty of the parents, is a great difficulty in the successful promotion of Education.

*

The severe epidemic an 1 mortality at Aberdeen and other parts of the Island during the past year, serve to break up many Native The threatening edicts of the Mandarins, and the consequent exodus of a large part families, and seriously affected the Government Schools of the Native population of Hongkong, still further served to thin the attendance of the Scholars, The Chinese have, however, now generally returned; and under Mr Lobscheid's efficient Inspectorship, marked improvement has taken place. The Committe notice especially the large attendance of 80 pupils in the School at Chung-wan (Central Victoria), and the presence of a few girls at some of the Schools.

The course of instruction pursued is the general routine of Native Chinese books, with an endeavour to impart at the same time the meaning of the sentences or words more fully than is usual in purely Native systems of teaching at School.

The Pupils learn also portions of the New Testament in Chinese. The meaning is explained, and passages are committed to memory. The first rudiments of spelling and reading English are also taught in the larger schools; and a few facts of Geography are learnt by their finding places on European Maps.

There is the continued difficulty in raising the moral and intellectual tone of the Native teachers. Being dependent on their neighbours, and often having opportunities of adding to their income by drawing un petitions and legal documents, they are frequently in danger of having their attention absorbed in the law-suits and altercations of the Villagers; and to watch over this source of inconvenience a close oversight is required. They are represented by the Inspector, however, as willing and docile; and as not excluding the hope of eventually being elevated and improved.

The Committee feel, that it is no part of their province in the establishment of Government Schools, to discourage or to supersede private Native Schools. Their aim and endeavour is rather to raise the educational standard, and not to place themselves in antagonism to voluntary efforts to provide for themselves a good education for their children on the part of the Chinese population.

It is, however, a natural expectation on the part of the Committee, that the system of Governinent Free Schools, while it confers the boon of education on those who cannot afford to pay for it, will also, as an inevitable result, if they are carried on by efficient Chinese Teachers, and ruperintended and visited frequently by a European Inspector, with the additional advantage of junior Chinese Teachers in some of the Schools, able to impart the first elements of English reading, tend gradually to attract Chinese Children from private Schools, and to diminish the prospect of any but the most efficient Chinese Teachers being able to support themselyes by their independent efforts.

With respect to the expense of the Schools, the Committee have to observe, that during the past year special causes have operated to retard the increase in the attendance of Scholars; and that in ordinary years the number of Pupils may be expected in future to amount to upwards of 1,000 boys. The sum of £1,500 granted by the Colonial Government for the ensuing year, will thus provide education for each Day-Scholar, at the rate of £1 to £1 10s.—a cost not unreasonably large amid the necessary expenses of European Inspectorship and the scattered position of the Schools.

With the view of rendering their supervision more complete, the Committee have requested Mr Lobscheid to furnish them with a Monthly Journal of his visits; and hope to arrange frequent periods of individual visits from one or another of their number to the outlying Schools, which most need the moral support of such countenance from Europeans.

G. VICTORIA. W. R. BEACH, JOHN CHALMERS. JOHN SCARTH.·

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