Tallong Public School: Difference between revisions
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The railway ensured the survival of the village (renamed Tallong in 1906) and during the steam era and the advent of the motor era, when other small towns were folding, the school at Tallong was sometimes the only education available in the area. | The railway ensured the survival of the village (renamed Tallong in 1906) and during the steam era and the advent of the motor era, when other small towns were folding, the school at Tallong was sometimes the only education available in the area. | ||
In 1979, the Tallong Public School became the first school in the state of New South Wales to use computer-assisted learning. | |||
As of 2004, the school averaged about 40 students per term. Specialist teachers visit the school during the week to instruct students in subjects such as music and science. | As of 2004, the school averaged about 40 students per term. Specialist teachers visit the school during the week to instruct students in subjects such as music and science. | ||
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==Further reading== | ==Further reading== | ||
*The Tallong Public School, Peter Westren, ed., privately published, Tallong: 1990. | *''Tallong: A Heritage.'' Tallong, NSW: Tallong Community Focus Group Inc., 2010. ISBN: 9780646545547 (pbk.) | ||
*''The Tallong Public School'', Peter Westren, ed., privately published, Tallong: 1990. | |||
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Latest revision as of 16:01, 24 October 2024
The Tallong Public School in Tallong, New South Wales is the oldest surviving single-teacher schoolhouse in Australia. It was established in 1865 in what was then Barber’s Creek. Workers on the Great Southern Railway were engaged in building a viaduct at Barber’s Creek, and since the nearest government school was five miles away at Marulan, they built the schoolhouse and in July 1865 75 persons signed a petition to the National Board of Education, requesting that the board pay the salary of a teacher whom they had already hired; the parents paid fees to the teacher but could not afford an adequate salary.
The railway ensured the survival of the village (renamed Tallong in 1906) and during the steam era and the advent of the motor era, when other small towns were folding, the school at Tallong was sometimes the only education available in the area.
In 1979, the Tallong Public School became the first school in the state of New South Wales to use computer-assisted learning.
As of 2004, the school averaged about 40 students per term. Specialist teachers visit the school during the week to instruct students in subjects such as music and science.
Further reading
- Tallong: A Heritage. Tallong, NSW: Tallong Community Focus Group Inc., 2010. ISBN: 9780646545547 (pbk.)
- The Tallong Public School, Peter Westren, ed., privately published, Tallong: 1990.