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Title
History of African education in Nyasaland, 1875-1945 A history of African education in Nyasaland, 1875-1945 |
Full text
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/6822 |
Date
1969 |
Author(s)
MacDonald, Roderick James |
Abstract
For the half-century spanning the years 1875 to
1926, African education in the territory known for the
latter portion of that period' as Nyasaland was solely in
the hands of Christian missionaries, sent out to this
comparatively small, land-locked British Protectorate,
from Europe, from the United States and from the Union of
South Africa. Those missionaries who had
the greatest influence educationally came from Scotland and represented
that country's Established Church as well as its United
Free Church.
In 1907, shortly after responsibility for the
administration of this British Protectorate was transferred
from the Foreign Office to the Colonial Office,
and at the behest of the representatives-of the Protestant
missions represented in the Protectorate, the Nyasaland
Government agreed to the distribution among the several
Christian missions of the sum of £1,000, per annum as a
grant-in-aid to their educational activities. This granti-n-
aid, doubled to £2,000 per annum in 1920, represented
until the mid-1920's the sum total of Government participation
in the educational process, apart from a
series of strictures designed to-limit the autonomy of
African school teachers within the overall framework of
European administered missions. These strictures, to no
small degree, stemmed from the impact upon the European
community in Nyasaland of the unsuccessful Rising in the
southern portion of the Protectorate in the early weeks of
1915, led by the Reverend John Chilembwe.
Following the conclusion of the First World War,
as part of the general re-examination of-Great Britain's
responsibilities in the field of social services to her
dependent peoples scattered throughout the world, a
Department of Education was established within the
Protectorate in 1926. From this point onwards, the
Nyasaland Government, in line with Great Britain's evolving
Colonial policy, assumed the determining role in the
shaping of educational development within the Protectorate.
A series of Education Ordinances were passed by the territory's
Legislative Council, a skeleton staff of able
administrators was appointed, and the grant-in-aid to
education to be distributed annually among the missions
operating in the Protectorate was raised to £11,000. These
measures were designed to impose a degree of uniformity
upon the educational practices of the several missions.
Educational opportunities for Africans throughout the whole
of the inter-war period in Nyasaland continued to be confined
to the primary level, together with a series of
courses designed to prepare numerous individuals for careers
either in primary school teaching or in a variety of industrial
vocations.
Throughout this period, the missions continued to
play an overwhelmingly preponderant role in the day-to-day
conduct and supervision of virtually all of the educational
institutions in the Protectorate. In addition, they continued
to contribute a measure of support for educational
activity in terms of manpower and of finance, disproportionate
to the degree of control they exercised over the
determination of educational policy. The mission, nonetheless,
enjoyed a substantial degree of support for their
educational endeavours from the Government's educational
officers. Mission representatives also possessed a numerical
majority on the prestigious Advisory Committee on
Education, whose influence on the determination of educational
policy in Nyasaland was substantial.
The effects of the world-wide economic depression
had a markedly depressive effect throughout the 1930'o in
curtailing the anticipated' growth of educational opportunity
throughout the Protectorate. With the onset of the Second
World War, however, and the establishment of the Colonial
Development and Welfare Fund, the Nyasaland Government was
able to inaugurate a number of improvements. Secondary
education was initiated on a very modest scale with the
opening of two Secondary Schools in 1940 and 1942. In 1941
an official Standard VI, primary school-leaving examination
was introduced throughout the Protectorate. During the
closing years of the war and in the wake of a visit paid
to the territory by the Educational Adviser to the
Secretary of State for the Colonies, an initial five-year
plan for education was drawn up, and endorsed. in 1945 a
now Education Ordinance replaced the one which had operated
since 1930. With the very considerable increase in Government
funds now available, the way lay open for more rapid
advance upon a broad front.
This thesis attempts to examine in some detail and
in chronological sequence, the developments outlined above.
Within the limitations imposed by the availability of
sources, it attempts to examine the interaction of Government
and the missions throughout the period under examination
with particular reference to"the variety of influences
brought to boar upon the question of education throughout
the 1920's, the decade that saw the guidelines laid down for
future development. Financial limitations severely slowed
the pace of implementation of these recommendations, however,
and changing colonial policies altered their priorities
somewhat with the passage of years.
In addition to this general chronological narrative
of educational development, this thesis attempts to examine
the reaction of NyasalandIc African peoples to the creation
of anew social, economic and political milieu, as reflected
in their acceptance or rejection of the educational influences
to which they were exposed. An important corollary
of this last theme is the development from a very early
stage of an African educated class. This numerically small
elite, employing its newly acquired knowledge and skills to
good effect, attempted by a variety of means both to speed
and to shape the development of the educational process.
How far they succeeded,. and to what extent they influenced
Governmental and mission policies, represents the concluding
aspect of this theme. |
Subject(s)
History; Education; Culture; Africa |
Language
eng |
Publisher
University of Edinburgh |
Type of publication
PhD Doctor of Philosophy |
Format
application/pdf; application/pdf |
Identifier
504527 |
Repository
Edinburgh - University of Edinburgh
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Added to C-A: 2022-05-23;09:16:05 |
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