264 INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF EDUCATION.
Here is what has been done in France about our school curriculum, or,
as we call it, new programme d’études primaires.
For time’s sake, I shall not preface it by a short sketch of our educa-
tional reforms in general, which I think are pretty well known. After the
'mportant bills which do so much honor to the republican government,
and by which all necessary schoolhouses and training colleges, even of
the higher order, were created, and education was made free, unsectarian,
compulsory, after the example of America, our educators and school
authorities had to face the theory problem of the curriculum.
I must say that they took great pains over it ; and here I think it is not
>ut of place to describe shortly, to those who are less familiar with our
modern French institution, a most important one in regard to educational
matters : I mean our Conseil Supérieur de instruction publique, a kind
sf semi-elective council of advisers of the Minister of Education, whose
orincipal function is precisely to prepare or revise school programmes,
school curricula of all grades.
This assembly, which is unique, as far as I know, in the world, 18 most
liberal and representative in its composition. It was created by a law
(1880), and includes, besides nine high functionaries of the education
department appointed by the head of the state, forty-five members
elected by the universities, learned societies and schools and colleges of all
grades. The elementary teachers themselves elect six representatives in the
council, which is really a parliament of education, and perhaps the only
one in Europe.
Now, it is those gentlemen, presided over by the Education Minister, who
sat together and slowly, carefully elaborated our curriculum, which is surely
aot perfect, but which was the object of much thinking and talking over.
[ need not say that it goes much beyond the three »’s. The lucky
phrase which the legend attributes to a well meaning, if not well spell-
ing London alderman, is not known in France; but we have also the
equivalent, viz., reactionary advocates of the so-called strict minimum,
which means the unprogressive school politicians of the type of those
whose faces and secret motives Colonel Parker unmasked the other day
with such power and eloquence.
But happily their voice did not prevail in the Council Supreme.
On the contrary, the programme they adopted was a very comprehen-
sive—perhaps a too comprehensive—one.
It embraces morals and civics, reading, language (with object lessons,
of course), arithmetic, geometry, elements of natural science, elements of
national history, geography, writing, drawing, singing, and gymnastics,
with the addition of manual work graduated so as to continue what was
already begun in kindergarten (cardboard, sloyd in small schools, bench
and metal work in large ones) and also elements of commercial tuition and
elements of agriculture.