Controls and Conflicts in Welsh Secondary Education, 1889-1944
By (Author) Gareth Elwyn Jones
University of Wales Press
University of Wales Press
13th April 1982
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
373.429
Hardback
244
Width 140mm, Height 220mm
"Overpowered and outnumbered as it was from the beginning, the anglicization of Welsh education was inevitable, concludes the author . . . His account of developments between the 1889 Act, which established a distinctive system of `higher grade' intermediate schools, to the Butler Act of 1944, which sought to impose a selective tripartite pattern alien to the spirit of the Welsh nation - dedicated to the cause of y werin, the common people - is exhaustively documented and impeccably selective in its use of a wide range of sources...it remains absorbingly readable throughout and, in view of the frustrating controls and bitter conflicts with which it is concerned, admirably neutral in its judgments..." -British Book News
-- "British Book News""This is certainly the most sophisticated history of a Welsh educational topic yet to be published, both in the detailed use it makes of public records, and in the acuteness of its political and social analysis." -Welsh History Review
-- "Welsh History Review"Professor Gareth Elwyn Jones was a lecturer and reader at Swansea University for almost two decades and chair of education at the University of Aberystwyth. He was made an MBE in 2007 for his services to education.