Page 131 - Constructing Craft
P. 131

Dr Clarence Beeby. Photo: Alexander
                                          Turnbull Library.


               When Beeby was promoted from Assistant Director of Education to Director in 1940
               and Fraser was replaced by H. G. R. Mason it appeared that Beeby was the sole

               driver of education change. However, this perception was deceptive as Fraser and

               the new Deputy Prime Minister Walter Nash, according to Beeby, finally determined
                                   6
               educational policy.  Nevertheless, Beeby continued to advance the programme that
               Fraser had set in place and increasingly art and craft became a focus for the
               reforms which were inspired by the 1937 New Education Fellowship (NEF)

               conference.


               The New Education Fellowship Conference

               Beeby played a major role in planning the NEF conference, which was held in the
               four largest cities. Fraser agreed the government would pay the cost of transporting

               the guests around the country and would act as guarantor up to £500. Schools were

               closed during the conference; attendance by teachers cost a nominal one pound for
               a week of lectures and enrolments reached 5,883. The importance of the

               conference lay in the official sanction it gave to new ideas on educational practice
               that were to become the feature of post World War Two education. A group of

               distinguished overseas educationalists were invited to present their ideas.





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