Page 266 - Bahrain Gov annual reports (V a)_Neat
P. 266

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                                     There are now 4 primary schools in Manama, 4 in Muharraq, 1 in Hedd, 1 in East and 1
                                  in West Rafaa and one Secondary School in Manama where the course is for four years. The
                                  Secondary School contains 40 students and the number will increase each year.
                                     At the end of the year a new school was under construction in West Rafaa as the existing
                                  school was regarded as being too far from the houses of the children.

                                     More teachers were enlisted from Jordan and Lebanon, most of them had higher quali­
                                  fications than those who were previously employed, many of them being capable of teaching
                                  English. A highly qualified head mistress was engaged for the Secondary School. Several
                                  married women, whose husbands were employed in Bahrain, were taken on as teachers, one
                                  being Egyptian, the others Palestinians.
                                     A more elaborate medical organisation was set up. It was arranged that a British woman
                                 doctor, a child specialist, who was living in Bahrain, should work in the schools assisted by an
                                  Indian and two Palestinian nurses. All children were examined and vaccinated and those
                                  in need of eye or dental treatment or other complaints which could not be dealt with on the
                                  spot were sent to the government hospital.

                                     The needlework exhibition was not held in April, as has been the custom in previous years,
                                  because it was thought undesirable to hold it so near the time of the final examinations, for
                                  this reason it took place in December. Some of the older girls have now developed a tendency
                                  to despise needlework and housecraft, which is a pity as both subjects increase their efficiency
                                 in their homes and are to many of them of more lasting value than book learning. These two
                                  subjects are given as lessons and form part of the curriculum and as girls are not allowed to take
                                  their needlework home with them it cannot be thought that needlework interrupts their
                                 homework.

                                     One of the two Government Scholarship Students at the British Lebanese Training o ege
                                 at Beirut was sent to London by the Government to train as a nurse at the Hammersmi
                                 Hospital. The other girl is still at school.

                                     At the end of the year there were 11 Primary Schools and one Secondary School containing
                                 3,386 girls staffed by 125 teachers. The nationalities of the staff were as follows:
                                           Inspectress                              1  Lebanese
                                           Teachers                                18 Lebanese
                                                                                    2  Indian
                                                                                   10 Jordanian
                                                                                    3  Syrian
                                                                                    3 Palestinians
                                                                                    1 Egyptian
                                                                                   87 Bahrainis
                                           Clerks                                   3 Bahrainis
                                            Doctor                                  1 British
                                           Nurse                                    1  Indian
                                                                                    2  Palestinian


                                                              Technical School
                                                   (Report by Mr. Said Tabbara, Headmaster)
                                             T?16 "umber of students registered in January, 1955, was 75, 23 in the carpentry
                                          d 52 m th® mechanical section; in addition to these, 12 students for the Bapco
                                  lOMrtL., ■ were attending ‘he school from November, 1954, to April, 1955. At the end of
                                           ,
                                            n“mber of students registered was 73, with an additional 15 students xn the new
                                 Bapco specxal class who were registered in November, 1955; this brought the total number
                                 of students attending the school in December, 1955, to 88.
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