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CHAPTER VIII
APPLICATION OF THE COMMITTEE'S SCHEME WITH REGARD TO CHILDREN SUITABLE FOR DAY SCHOOLS OR CENTRES, AND THE PROBLEMS WHICH IT PRESENTS
149. Having described in the preceding Chapter the general scheme which we recommend in regard to the allocation of responsibility for subnormal children between Local Education and M.D. Authorities and in regard to the education and training of the groups of children for whom each Authority would be responsible, we must now proceed to consider in some detail the manner in which this scheme can be applied in areas of different types and sizes, and to indicate some of the special educational problems which it presents.
The scheme we propose involves to some extent a fresh orientation in our conceptions and a fresh terminology. We are no longer concerned only with children who have been actually certified as mentally defective under Section 55 of the Education Act, 1921 - indeed we contemplate the abolition of such certification; as already indicated we have in mind also all those other children of similar grade and educational capacity who, according to the findings of our investigation, are properly certifiable under that Section, and further the still larger group of dull or backward children. For the purposes of this chapter we propose to use the term "retarded"* as applying to all these children, and to confine the term "mentally defective" to those children, whether feeble-minded, imbecile, or idiot, who have been notified by the Local Education Authority to the Local M.D. Authority as "ineducable" in the sense in which that term is used in the preceding Chapter,† or as in immediate need of care and control under the Mental Deficiency Acts.
The principal object we have had in view in formulating the scheme set out in the preceding Chapter has been to secure better educational facilities for this comparatively large group of children for whom, under the present system, little special provision has been or could be made. But at the same time, we have aimed at facilitating provision for the training of the smaller group of lower grade children, whose presence in the ordinary or Special Schools has been a hindrance to the education of those of higher grade. This latter problem is of narrower scope, but it is one which by reason of the small number of children concerned presents peculiar difficulties.
*This group of "retarded" children will of course contain a certain number of children who are mentally defective in the sense in which that term is used in the Mental Deficiency Acts, i.e. incapable of independent social adaptation, and who will subsequently require to be notified to the Local M.D. Authority.
†Chapter VII, paras. 117, 118 and 122.
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The following discussion of the detailed working of our scheme in the light of the findings of our investigation and of the extent to which it can be generally applied throughout the country will relate to both these groups.
Our proposals are we believe in conformity with the general trend of events in the educational world since they centre upon the educational break at about the age of 11 and the reorganisation of education for the post-primary school child, and they contemplate that the normal age range for compulsory school attendance will in future extend generally from 5 to 15. In discussing the application of our scheme, we will accordingly deal separately with junior and senior pupils, applying the term junior to children between 5 and 11 years of age and senior to those between 11 and 15. We will further divide these children into the two groups already mentioned, namely, the "mentally defective"- mostly lower grade - children, and the "retarded" children.
We propose to deal with our subject under four main heads:
I. The detailed working of the scheme in areas of different types and sizes.
II. The standards to be observed for the administrative disposal of children.
III. Description of that part of the group of "retarded" children which is known as the "dull or backward" group.
IV. The educational problem of the retarded child.
I. Detailed working of the Scheme*
150. In the following pages we propose to describe the general educational organisation that we contemplate for the older and younger children in these two groups, to estimate the total numbers of children falling into each of the groups and their subdivisions and to indicate the form of provision which will be practicable in areas of different types and sizes. The first part of our discussion will relate to the country generally, and we shall consider later the particular form in which our scheme can be applied to the largest towns. Our estimates of numbers are in the main based upon the findings of our investigation, but as this was confined to children who could be regarded as certifiable under the Mental Deficiency and Education Acts, we have co-ordinated these findings so far as the higher grade children are concerned with those of previous investigations made by Professor Cyril Burt, in order that we might deal with the whole range of educationally retarded children for whom special provision is required. Our estimates are necessarily based on averages and are intended to be applied to what may be termed "typical" urban and rural areas respectively.
*A diagram illustrating the general educational system contemplated for defective and retarded children is given at the end of Appendix I.
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In order to assist Local Education and M.D. Authorities in applying our scheme in the event of its being adopted to their own areas or to separate portions of those areas, we have included in an Appendix* to this Report a full and detailed statement of the methods of calculation which have been followed and of the basis on which our estimates have been framed. We have also set out at the end of that Appendix in tabular and diagrammatic form the broad conclusions we have reached with regard to the disposal of children at various schools and centres.
(1) IN THE COUNTRY GENERALLY
(a) MENTALLY DEFECTIVE CHILDREN
151. We will deal first with the mentally defective children, not because we consider their training more important than that of the educationally retarded, but rather because as already stated, the very smallness of their numbers renders the organisation of that training peculiarly difficult. Among these children we include all those who can be certified as idiots or as imbeciles, that is, broadly speaking, children with mental ratios under 50, though in the case of those over 11 years of age we shall further include most of those with mental ratios between 50 and 55 and possibly a few of those with mental ratios between 55 and 60†.
152. (i) Junior Children. We estimate that there are in the whole country some 13,000 mentally defective children in the school population between the ages of 5 and 11. The financial responsibility for dealing with these children will rest with the Local M.D. Authority, but the duty of providing for the training of those who do not require institutional treatment will rest with the Local Education Authority. It is assumed that practically all the idiots and approximately half of the other children in this group will have to be sent to institutions and the total number for whom it is desirable that provision should be made by means of some sort of Day School or Centre will therefore be about 5,000. Some of these children are at present attending Occupation Centres where these have been organised; a larger number are attending Day Special Schools; a still larger number in the country generally are attending ordinary Elementary Schools; while probably the largest group remain at home and receive no special training. It is
*Appendix I.
†Suggestions as to the criteria which should be applied in determining whether a child should be dealt with by the Local Education Authority or by the Local M.D. Authority and whether it should be trained or educated in an Occupation Centre or in a School are made in para. 163, which should be read in conjunction with Chapter 2 and Appendix B of the Investigator's Report. While the children have for the purpose of this Chapter been divided on the basis of mental ratios, since this is the only basis on which estimates of actual numbers could be made, it should be clearly understood that all the other criteria would have to be taken into account by Authorities in applying our scheme to their own areas.
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proposed that in future it should be the duty of the Local Education Authority (in return for payment by the Local M.D. Authority) wherever practicable to establish centres, on the lines of existing Occupation Centres, for these younger lower grade children who, though not requiring institutional treatment, are able to derive little or no benefit from the instruction and training given in any ordinary school or in the schools now known as Special Schools, and whose presence often impedes the work of these schools.
The smallest number of children for whom a full time Occupation Centre could be provided with due regard to economy may probably be put at 20 on the roll, since the cost of staffing alone for anything less than this would be excessive. Although we consider however that it would be advantageous for Occupation Centres to remain open both morning and afternoon, we believe that for financial and other reasons the establishment of half time centres will be not uncommon. In some of the larger towns there might well be two Occupation Centres each open for half time and the two centres might have a common staff. In this event and also in cases where, as should usually be possible, the person engaged for training the children at the centre can be employed in some other way during the rest of the day, as for example on visiting defectives in their homes, giving instruction to children who cannot attend the centre, or on other suitable work, the cost of staffing the centre would be halved. We accordingly contemplate that where an enrolment of 20 children is not practicable half time centres for not less than 10 children will be established. The smallest town or urban area in which a centre even for 10 children could be established would be one with a population of some 85,000. The total population of all the towns of this size in England and Wales is nearly 17 millions. So far therefore as mere numbers are concerned, and irrespective of travelling and other difficulties, we conclude that the establishment by Local Education Authorities of Occupation Centres for younger mentally defective children would be theoretically possible in areas containing in all about 43 per cent of the whole population of the country.
If this is the case the possibility of the Local Education Authority setting up Occupation Centres for the younger children alone will be excluded in the smaller towns and in all rural areas, and some other means of providing for the training of these children will have to be devised. Some who are quiet and well behaved may safely be allowed to attend the ordinary schools including special classes for retarded children where these have been established; some may be left at home and provided with such training as can be given by home teachers appointed by the Local M.D. Authority or by mental welfare visitors or social workers or by the staff of part time Occupation Centres in neighbouring towns; but in some cases the only practicable means of obtaining training for these children will be to send them to institutions.
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153. (ii) Senior Children. The number of mentally defective children, that term being used here to denote all children with mental ratios under 55, over 11 and under 15 years of age in England and Wales is estimated at nearly 20,000. Our scheme contemplates that the whole responsibility for dealing with these children should rest with the Local M.D. Authority and that that Authority should provide not only institutional care for those who require it, but also training at day centres for those who can safely be left at home. The number of this latter group may be taken as about 11,000*.
In the case of these children also it is suggested that the minimum enrolment for an Occupation Centre should be 20 if the centre is to be full time or 10 if it is only to be open for one session each day. On this basis it will be possible to establish full time centres for older children alone in towns or urban areas with a population of 80,000 or more and half time centres in towns of half this size. The population of the 137 towns of 40,000 inhabitants and upwards amounts to nearly 21 millions, and the Local M.D. Authority could therefore establish Occupation Centres for older mentally defective children in areas comprising in all about 54 per cent of the total population of the country.
In the small towns and in rural areas provision for these older children would have to be made in some other way either by absorbing them into the Industrial and Handicraft Centres which the Local M.D. Authority may establish for defectives over school age (though the training and employment of older children with adults is open to objection), by providing them with some home training or by sending them to institutions.
154. (iii) Junior and Senior Children together. While we consider that the general principle of our scheme is fundamentally sound, namely that the Local M.D. Authority should be responsible for all mentally defective children of whatever age and at the same time that the Local Education Authority, in return for payment by the former Authority, should have the duty of providing training facilities for the younger, but only the power of making this provision for the older of these children, we believe that in practice it will be found to be the most convenient course, in all but the largest towns, for the Local Education Authority, who under our scheme will already have provided training facilities for the younger children, to extend their provision to the older children also. If both Authorities confine themselves to their proposed statutory duties only, some 60 per cent of the younger children and 50 per cent of the older children in the country will fail to obtain the benefits of Occupation Centre training. If, on the other hand, the Local Education Authority are willing to exercise their powers of providing
*This estimate is based on the assumption that all the idiots, one half of the imbeciles and one fifth of the feeble-minded children included in the 20,000 older mentally defective children will be sent to institutions. For detailed calculations see Appendix I.
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for the older children, the proportion of children who will be able to receive this training will be appreciably increased. We estimate that where the training facilities for all the children are provided by a single Authority it should be practicable to establish full time centres in towns with from 50,000 to 60,000 inhabitants and half time centres in those with a population of from 25,000 to 30,000, while part time centres might be practicable in a few rural areas containing a small town, with a total population of some 16,000*. There are no less than 323 towns with 25,000 inhabitants and upwards and the total population of these towns is 23,700,000, that is approximately 60 per cent of the population of England and Wales. While the large majority of the Committee feel convinced that it would not be advisable to place an obligation on Local Education Authorities to make the provision for older children, they believe that practical considerations will often in fact lead to agreements being reached between the two Authorities whereby the Education Authority will provide training facilities for all the children in those areas where separate provision for older and younger children is not possible†.
155. We have so far confined ourselves to the consideration of the problem of the younger mentally defective children with a mental ratio of under 50, and the older children with a mental ratio under 55. We are doubtful whether the inclusion in these Centres of older children with still higher mental ratios would be found desirable as a general rule; provided however that all children of objectionable habits or behaviour were rigidly excluded and were either left at home or sent to institutions, we should see no objection to the admission of some older children with mental ratios up to 60 in those areas (particularly the small towns and certain rural or semi-rural districts which contain a small town or urban centre), where the numbers of children would otherwise be insufficient to justify the establishment of an Occupation Centre. It is a matter in these areas for consideration by the Local Authorities concerned and we do not wish to make any recommendation on the subject. We need only say that we estimate that, if these children were included, full time centres for older children only could probably be set up in urban areas containing a population of some 46,000, and in rural‡ areas with some 25,000 inhabitants, and half time centres in areas with half these populations; while full time centres taking children of all ages would be practicable in towns of say 35,000 and rural‡ areas of say 20,000 inhabitants and half time centres in areas of half these sizes.
*The incidence of mental deficiency in respect of children in rural areas was, as already stated, found by our investigation to be practically twice as high as in urban areas. For a full explanation of the calculations see Appendix I.
†See discussion in paras. 120-127 in Chapter VII.
‡See first note on this page and also Appendix I. This calculation does not take account of distances and transport facilities, on which the possibility of conducting centres in rural areas would largely depend.
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It should be repeated that in making the above calculations we have assumed that one half of the total number of imbecile children will be sent to institutions, since it was found in our investigations that almost exactly this proportion of the imbecile children ascertained were, in fact, definitely in need of institutional care. The present shortage of institutional accommodation, however, will clearly make it impossible for Local Authorities to send all these children to institutions for some years to come, and it may well be found that for the time being the only way in which these Authorities can make any provision for them will be by means of Occupation Centres.
(b) RETARDED CHILDREN
156. The children whom we describe as retarded will, broadly speaking, have mental ratios between 50 or 55 and 80. As we are now considering day school accommodation only, we exclude from this category for present purposes those children (probably amounting to one-fifth of those now certifiable as feeble-minded) who for various reasons should be sent to Boarding Schools or Residential Institutions, and also those under 7 years of age, since these can as a rule be fitted into the Infants' Departments or Kindergarten classes of Public Elementary Schools, provided that the classes are not too large and that special individual methods of instruction are adopted.
According to the findings of our investigation it is estimated that there would be no less than 75,000* children in the school population of England and Wales between the ages of 7 and 15 who could properly be certified as mentally defective under the Education Act, 1921, and regarded as suitable for admission to Day Special Schools. On the basis of surveys carried out by Professor Cyril Burt† it is further estimated that there are some 300,000 other children whose mental ratios range from about 65 to 80‡, children who may be regarded as requiring special educational provision similar to that required by the mentally defective and who can properly be taught with them. The problem we have to consider concerns therefore some 375,000 retarded children in all, half of whom are between the ages of 7 and 11 and half between 11 and 15.
In the largest towns considerable numbers of the mentally defective children are at present in attendance at Day Special Schools, and it is the unanimous opinion of the Committee that the development of this type of educational provision offers the best
*Table 13 figures applied to estimated school population 7-15 (less 1/5th).
†See Appendix I to the Committee's Report.
‡Children with mental ratios between 80 and 85 must also be regarded as retarded children requiring some measure of special educational provision, but these could not be suitably taught in classes containing children with mental ratios below 55 or 60 according to age.
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solution. Therefore, we have considered how best to arrange that this much larger group of retarded children may have the advantage of training and instruction similar to that so far restricted to children attending Special Schools; and we have made two proposals which if adopted will probably do much to ensure this. The first has already been mentioned in this Chapter, namely the removal of lower grade defectives to Occupation Centres. If this is done one of the chief factors that has hampered the growth and efficiency of Day Special Schools will be eliminated. The other proposal, namely that the children admitted to these schools need not in the future be certified as mentally defective, is of still greater importance. If this proposal be accepted we believe that it will result in suitable provision being made for far larger numbers of retarded children who are known to require more individual attention and special methods of instruction. The removal of certification will result in the advantage of Day Special School education being extended to retarded children; and this is all to the good provided the mental capacities and temperamental characteristics of the children are not too varied to allow them to be taught in the same school. Not only will the schools now described as Day Special Schools receive many more pupils, but Education Authorities who hitherto have felt that there were not sufficient children whom they could certify as mentally defective to form such a school, will no doubt adopt a different view and make special provision for retarded children. The enlargement of the scope of these schools will also enable them to be more closely associated with the ordinary elementary schools, with mutual benefit. The general method of training and instruction will develop along the lines of the best Day Special Schools of the present, but the increase in the numbers and in the variety of pupils admitted in the future will inevitably call for a new orientation in some respects. All these children will have the advantage of being no longer associated with the lower grade children, and the suggested raising of the upper limit will automatically raise the general educational attainments of the school; all the children will moreover have the stimulus of the possibility of returning to the ordinary school if they make sufficient progress.
Again we shall discuss the younger and older children separately.
157. (i) Junior children. We do not contemplate that Local Education Authorities will as a rule set up separate schools or departments for the younger retarded children except in the largest towns to which we shall refer later. We rather assume that they will adopt one of the alternative methods which have been tried in some areas, as already described in a previous Chapter*. Where the numbers are very small, they may group the children within the class or separate particular children for particular subjects. Where
*Chapter VI, para. 107.
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the numbers are larger, they may group the retarded children in one or more separate classes or possibly in separate departments for the whole or part of the time, while still retaining them within the ordinary school. Now the smallest unit which can be economically grouped or efficiently taught in this way consists we believe, of not less than 20 children. This number of younger retarded children sufficiently equal in grade and capacity to he taught together will generally be found in any urban area with a population of not less than 5,700 and in most rural areas* with anything between 2,000 and 2,500 inhabitants. In larger towns two or more separate classes could be formed at a single school or in different schools, or separate schools or departments could, if thought fit, be established. If reasonable transport facilities are available the suitable grouping of younger retarded children in separate classes should accordingly be practicable, if considered desirable, in all but the more sparsely populated parts of county areas.† Again the increasing attention which will, we hope, be given in urban areas throughout the country to the problems of the mentally defective and retarded children will undoubtedly stimulate the interest of the rural teachers in these children. Moreover the general adoption of the expedient which has been tried with marked success in one or two places, that of appointing peripatetic teachers specially trained in methods of dealing with retarded children, to visit periodically the schools in a rural area will assist the teachers in these schools to deal more effectively with the retarded and defective children remaining under their care.
158. (ii) Senior children. It is this group of children that is likely to benefit most by the proposal we have made, namely that retarded children should be transferred at the age of 11+ to schools or classes where they will receive education and training along lines similar to those already followed in the existing senior schools for mentally defective boys and girls in our large towns. The best achievement of these schools in the past has been not so much the proficiency of the day training given, efficient as this has been, but the general stabilising influence they have brought to bear upon defective and retarded boys and girls, and this has been achieved because teachers and social workers have taken a comprehensive view of all aspects of the children's activities, at school, at home and at recreation. The general re-organisation of post-primary education that is likely to occur in the near future, taken in conjunction with the enlarged view of the term "retarded
*These urban areas would on the average contain a school population of some 800 children between the ages of 5 and 15, and the rural areas one of about 350.
†The solution of the problem of day school provision in the scattered rural areas will in part depend upon the extent to which Local Education and M.D. Authorities avail themselves of any powers which they possess or may be given to board out retarded and defective children near suitable schools or centres.
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children", that we suggest should be adopted will give Education Authorities the opportunity of making suitable provision for older retarded children in many areas where hitherto this has been impossible. This provision will be made not only for the majority of children of the grade now attending these senior day Special Schools, but also for large numbers of other retarded children who show no aptitude for the ordinary school subjects; and these latter children can be included in the future because under our scheme there will be no necessity for certification. The schools we contemplate will form one group of the post-primary or central schools. Even areas where it would not be possible to establish separate schools for the younger retarded children will be able under the new system to establish these schools for the older retarded children, because the older pupils in all the schools in the area will be grouped, according to their natural capacities and interests, in secondary, or selective or non-selective senior schools.
The retarded children will not necessarily be grouped in separate schools. We anticipate that different Authorities will adopt different policies, but that in all areas some special provision will be made for these children. The senior school course for normal children will extend over four years and the children will usually be grouped in four classes or forms, one for each year of the course, so that no form will contain children differing from one another by more than one year in age. We believe however that it will be found practicable to organise senior schools for retarded children in two classes only, and that a unit of this size could provide suitable and efficient education and training for all the children attending it, since with two classes the educational attainments and capacity of the oldest of these retarded children in each class are not likely to be more than two years in advance of those of the youngest. The range of their mental ratios will of course to some extent depend upon the ratio taken as the upper limit for older children admitted to occupation centres. If the mental ratios are restricted to a range of from 55 to 80, provision could be made for a unit of 40* children in two classes in an urban area containing some 12,000† persons or a rural area with a population of 4,500.
(2) SPECIAL ORGANISATION SUGGESTED FOR THE LARGEST TOWNS
159. We now turn to the largest towns, that is to say broadly towns which contain a population of 200,000‡ and upwards within the administration of a single Local Education and M.D. Authority.
*While we suggest a minimum enrolment of 20 for a single class or 40 for a two-class unit, we contemplate that the classes for the retarded in urban areas should normally contain about 30 children.
†These areas would contain a school population between 5 and 15 of approximately 1,800 and 700 children respectively.
‡There are nineteen towns in England and Wales with a population of 200,000 and upwards and the total population of these towns amounts to nearly 12,000,000.
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The application of our scheme in the cases of these large towns will be somewhat different in form, though the principle of the scheme will remain the same. The larger numbers of children living in these towns will permit of a greater differentiation than is possible elsewhere in administrative methods in regard to the education of the new unit group of retarded children which forms the basis of our scheme.
It is important when applying a new scheme to ensure that it should develop and not destroy the good features of the present system. The value of the work done by the day Special Schools which have been established in all these towns, has been emphasised throughout this Report. The existence of these schools will facilitate considerably the application of the proposed scheme to the large towns, as the scheme is to a great extent a development of this type of school. At the same time it is necessary to emphasise that this development should be made judiciously and cautiously so as to ensure that the special features of these schools, which have enabled the teachers to achieve such good results, may be retained. Therefore whilst our recommendations envisage the extension of the educational advantages which these schools have afforded in the past to the much larger group of retarded children in the future, we would urge that in the larger towns where the day Special Schools have been thoroughly organised they should continue to function on similar lines to the present, although under modified and, as we think, more advantageous statutory provisions.
The greater differentiation possible in the larger and more densely populated towns will enable Local Education Authorities to subdivide the unit group of retarded children into two sections, which we shall name (1) the more retarded* and (2) the less retarded.* Accordingly in the large towns the whole body of children who require special provision for education or training will be classified as follows:
(a) Mentally defective - (i) junior, (ii) senior, or (iii) all ages together.
(b) Retarded children -
(1) More retarded - (i) Junior, and (ii) senior.
(2) Less retarded - (i) junior, and (ii) senior.
Each of these sub-groups we shall now discuss separately in the light of our recommendations, All the statistical references in the following paragraphs relate to a town with a population of 200,000.†
*The "more retarded" section corresponds broadly with the group of children who are now certifiable as mentally defective under the Education Act; the "less retarded" section comprises those children who are generally known as "dull or backward".
†See Table B in Appendix I to this Report.
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(a) MENTALLY DEFECTIVE CHILDREN
160. (i) Junior children, i.e. children between 5 and 11 years of age with mental ratios under 50. On the basis of the figures of mental defectives ascertained in the present investigation in the urban areas, it is estimated that there will be about 25 children of this category who should attend an occupation centre.
(ii) Senior children, i.e. children between 11 and 15 years of age with mental ratios under 55. We estimate the number of children in this category to be approximately 50.
(iii) Junior and Senior children together. A town of 200,000 would have 75 children between the ages of 5 and 15 who could attend occupation centres. Classification for training purposes would be easier if all these could attend a centre that was centrally situated. But it is unlikely, especially as many of these children would be of a low mental grade, that it would be possible to collect them into one centre. Two or at most three centres will however be ample to meet the needs of this group of children.
(b) RETARDED CHILDREN
(1) The more retarded
161. (i) Junior children, i.e. children between 7 and 11 years of age, with mental ratios between 50 and 70. The establishment of Occupation Centres in the larger towns should obviate one factor that has proved a serious handicap to the present system of Day Special Schools, namely the presence of the lower grade mentally defective children in these schools. The allocation of these children to Occupation Centres will make it possible to transfer a number of the more retarded children, who up to now have remained in the ordinary elementary schools, to junior schools or classes which will correspond with the present Special Schools for junior mentally defective children.
We estimate that in a town of 200,000 there will be about 170 children in this category. It will probably be impossible to collect all these younger children in one central school as this would necessitate some of them travelling long distances. Two small schools would however meet the needs of this group, or alternatively some half-dozen special classes in the ordinary schools might be formed.
(ii) Senior children, i.e. children between 11 and 15 years of age, with mental ratios between 55 and 70. Although a certain number of the children in the junior group of the more retarded will have failed to make any substantial progress by the time they reach the age of 11 and will therefore be transferred to an Occupation Centre, it is certain that a still larger number of the less retarded children also will have failed to such an extent that it will be desirable to transfer them to the schools for the senior more retarded children. Therefore this group will at any rate not be any smaller than the
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corresponding junior group; we estimate their number at about 180.* These children could be well provided for in one centrally situated school.
The junior and senior children in this group correspond largely with the group now certified as mentally defective under the Education Act. The chief proposals we have made in our Report in respect of this group are the abolition of certification and the cleavage at the age of 11. The first of these proposals would give much greater elasticity in dealing administratively with this group of children. It has already been the practice for many years in some of the largest towns to transfer these children at about the age of 11 to a senior department such as the elder boys' and girls' schools in the London area, and our proposal would be in harmony with this practice.
The Committee wish to urge that the special provision made in large towns for this group of children should still continue and indeed in some towns be further extended. There is nothing in the Committee's scheme that need in any way impede the development of the valuable work done by Special Schools. If any fear is felt that the large numbers of retarded children in the bigger towns may cause the special needs of the more retarded members of the group to be overlooked, such fear we believe to be groundless. Under our scheme it is assumed that the Education Authorities in these towns will continue to differentiate between the more and the less retarded children and will continue to make educational provision for the former in separate schools. Moreover, the existence of these schools, so far from resulting, as in the past, in the neglect of the dull and backward, should facilitate the establishment of suitably graded classes for the less retarded. These classes, moreover, will be better adapted to the needs of these children and will be more satisfactory educationally, since the children attending them will be of a more or less uniform grade.
(2) Less retarded children, i.e. those with mental ratios from 70 to 80
162. (i) Junior children. It is estimated that a town with a population of 200,000 would contain almost 550 children of this category.
(ii) Senior children. The numbers in this group correspond approximately with those in the junior group. The schools for these children, as well as those for the elder boys and girls of the more retarded group, will form a part of the post-primary school system of the future. Whereas the curriculum in these schools will be more practical in character than that in the schools for normal children, the basis will be decidedly wider than that adopted in senior schools for more retarded children.
*This number does not tally with the figure given in Appendix I, Table B, since for the purposes of that Table no account could be taken of the fall in mental ratios in this group of retarded children. See Chapter 4, pages 100 and 101 of the Investigator's Report.
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The numbers in each of these groups are large enough to enable the Education Authority to establish one or two separate schools for each. Probably it would be found desirable to admit to these schools some children with mental ratios between 80 and 85; if this were done the numbers would be considerably increased.
II. Suggested standards to be observed for the administrative disposal of children
(1) IN THE COUNTRY GENERALLY
163. In the event of our scheme being adopted Local Education and M.D. Authorities may find it convenient to have before them some indication of the standards and borderlines which we suggest should be used for determining questions relating to the administrative disposal of children under that scheme. Our suggestions should be read in conjunction with Chapter 2 of our Investigator's Report, which contains a full description of the standards observed in his inquiry, and with Appendix B to that Report which gives a summary of the actual tests applied by him.
The standards here laid down are average standards, not invariable standards; that is to say, they give a concrete expression to the general borderlines that we have in mind, but are not to be rigidly enforced for every particular case. The formulation of psychological standards in no way implies that the diagnosis of deficiency or mental retardation can be reduced to the mechanical application of a series of tests; and accordingly, in considering the standards suggested in this Chapter, the cautions laid down in Chapter 2 of our Investigator's Report must be carefully borne in mind.
The person whose duty it is to determine whether a child can be regarded as mentally defective or as retarded must necessarily be concerned with the child's mind as a whole. In assessing the intellectual aspect of it, however, he will, in the main, rely upon standardised tests, while in assessing the temperamental aspect he will be largely guided by observations and reports on the child's general behaviour. Responses to test questions and to test situations can be standardised only in the roughest way. Hence the examiner will do well to assess the intellectual and the temperamental aspects separately, and then consider the two together before arriving at a final decision. The fact, therefore, that we formulate our standards in terms of tests of intelligence and educational attainments only, should not convey the idea that these are the sole criteria to be considered.
BORDERLINES TO BE OBSERVED
There are two main borderlines with which we are concerned - first that which separates the retarded* child, who should remain within the province of the Local Education Authority and be provided with special educational facilities, from the mentally defective* child who should be notified to the Local M.D. Authority and sent
*See first footnote on page 126 for an explanation of the sense in which these terms are used in this chapter.
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to an Occupation Centre or to an Institution; and secondly the line to be drawn between the retarded child who requires some special educational provision and the normal child who can remain in the ordinary school. These lower and upper borderlines again will differ according to the age of the child.*
(a) Borderline, between Retarded and Notifiable Children
(i) For Junior children. In the case of younger children, that is to say children under 11 years of age, we have suggested a mental ratio of 50. At the age of 7 this ratio would imply a mental age of 3½. Such a child will probably be able to repeat a sentence of 6 to 8 syllables and to enumerate a few objects in a picture; he may be able to choose the longer of two sticks, but will probably fail to give the right responses required by the Seguin[*] form board or to choose the prettier of two faces or to copy a square.
We contemplate, however, that in some cases it will be necessary to notify children before the age of 7. At the age of 5 a mental ratio of 50 would imply a mental age of 2½; and this in turn means that, even if the examiner is successful in getting a response, the child will do no more than answer the two or three easiest questions in the whole Binet Scale[*]. He may perhaps be able to name one or two objects in a picture, to give his own name, and in response to such questions as "Show me your eyes", "Show me your mouth", point to the correct part of his face. At this stage however the emotional response of the child and his environmental conditions may make all the difference to his replies.
(ii) For Senior children that is to say for those between the ages of 11 and 15 we have suggested a slightly higher mental ratio, namely 55 per cent. At the age of 11 a mental ratio of 55 would be practically equivalent to a mental age of 6 years. As regards intelligence, this means that the child might be able to reply to all, or nearly all, of the test questions set out in Appendix B of our Investigator's Report for a child aged 6, but would fail in all, or nearly all, the tests for aged 7 and upwards. Thus he may know the 4 commonest coins, repeat 5 numbers, give simple descriptions of pictures and define well-known objects in terms of their use. It would be beyond him to state the differences between concrete objects, to add up 3 pennies and 3 halfpennies, or to repeat 3 numbers backwards.
As regards educational attainments such a child is likely to be well below the level of an average child of 6. Hence ability to do the work of what is generally known as Grade iii will be exceptional. The best of these children will seldom be able to read more than simple 3 letter words and a few familiar longer mono-syllables by the look-and-say method. They will only be able to scrawl 3 or 4 letters with a pencil, they will hardly be able to spell a single word and rarely be able to add and subtract beyond 5 or 6.
*See Chapter VII, para. 115, where this point is discussed.
[*Edward Seguin, 1812-1880, French educationist who devoted himself to the education of 'mentally defective' children. For more on Seguin, Binet and Terman (all mentioned in this chapter) see Chapter I of the 1924 Hadow Report on this website.]
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Broadly speaking any child who falls below the standards we have briefly sketched above should be notified and should be provided with training in an Occupation Centre, while those who attain these standards may, as a rule, properly be kept within the educational system and afforded some form of special teaching. The former will correspond with the definition we have given earlier in this Chapter of "mentally defective" children, the latter to our definition of "retarded" children.
(b) Borderline between Retarded and Normal Children
For the upper borderline for retarded children of all ages we suggest a mental ratio of 80 per cent.
(i) For Junior children a mental ratio of 80 at the age of 7 will give a mental age of from 5½ to 6 years. The responses of a child of this mental grade are again indicated by the tests given for the age 6 group of the children in Appendix B of our Investigator's Report. A child of 7 who grades to age 6 on tests could, as a rule, be properly kept in the ordinary school with normal children.
(ii) For Senior children a mental ratio of 80 at the age of 11 would give a mental age of a little under 9. A child of this grade will probably give correct responses to most of the tests in the age 8 group of Appendix B; that is he would be able to count backwards from 20 to 1, state the similarities between two concrete objects, give change out of one shilling, and would have a vocabulary equivalent to the first 20 words of Terman's test[*]. He would possibly be able to repeat 6 digits, or 4 digits backwards, but would be incapable of naming all the coins or of re-arranging a simple mixed sentence. Educationally he would just manage to read most of the words of the age 7 group, but would fail with most of those in the age 8 group of the reading tests. His educational attainments in respect of spelling and arithmetic would be of a corresponding level.
(2) SPECIAL BORDERLINE TO BE DRAWN IN THE LARGEST TOWNS
We have already indicated that in the largest and most populous towns further differentiation may be possible and the retarded children may be divided into two sections with an education more specifically adapted to the particular needs of each. The lower of these sections will correspond generally with the type of child now attending the Day Special Schools in the larger towns, while the higher section will consist generally of what are now known as dull or backward children. The lower borderlines which we have suggested for use in the country generally will apply in the largest towns also but the upper line may be somewhat extended in these towns, possibly up to 85.*
*See para, 162 above, and also para. 164 below.
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There remains to be discussed the borderline that should be drawn in the largest towns between the two sections of retarded children. For all ages we would suggest for this borderline a mental ratio of about 70 per cent. In the case of a child of 7 a mental ratio of 70 would correspond with a mental age of nearly 5, while at the age of 11 it would correspond with a mental age of rather less than 8. The educational attainments of such a child at the age of 7 would be practically negligible, though he would show some promise of capacity for educational progress. He might be able, for instance, to copy and even recognise a few letters or to count 3 or 4 objects. At the age of 11 his educational attainments would be below those of a normal child of 7.
III. The Committee's conception of that section of Retarded children which is generally known as "dull or backward"
164. The Chapter in our Investigator's Report which describes the Standards adopted in his inquiry indicates clearly the types of child whom he classified respectively as imbeciles and as feeble-minded, and the account that he gives of the borderlines followed by him in distinguishing between these two groups, when read in conjunction with the description in the preceding Section of this Chapter of the lower borderlines to be observed in future, should afford a fairly clear conception both of the type of child to be trained in an occupation centre, namely that which we have defined as the "mentally defective" child, and also of the lower grade members of the group of "retarded" children who could be retained within the elementary education system. This latter group, as already stated corresponds broadly with the type of children now attending Day Special Schools.* The retarded group as we have seen however contains a still larger proportion of children who could not be certified as mentally defective under the Education Act, but who can certainly be described as dull or backward. These children did not come within the scope of our Investigator's inquiry and his Report consequently contains no description of them. It is of this group therefore that we now propose to give some definition and description.
This definition must for present purposes be based upon practical needs. Recent educational surveys have shown that the mental differences between individual children are far wider than had previously been suspected. No longer do we expect all children to progress at the same average speed - one standard per annum; the cleverest child will progress nearly twice as fast, and the dullest twice as slowly. Other things being equal, the class that is most easy to teach is the class that is most homogeneous. Hence, in the
*i.e. feeble-minded children. There are of course at present a number of lower grade children also at these schools, but they do not belong to the type of child for whom the day Special Schools are intended and should be excluded from them.
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interests both of the pupils and of the teacher, a differential scheme of classification is required. These individual differences, moreover, increase progressively from year to year. Children as they grow older diverge more and more the one from the other; the child who is backward by one year at five, is likely to be backward by two years at ten, and by three years at fifteen. Hence, it is during the final years of school life, between the age of eleven and puberty, that a maximum degree of differentiation is essential.
The Report on the Education of the Adolescent* has drawn attention to the need for classifying normal children according to their educational capacity, and educating each group in schools of an appropriate type. Here we desire to insist on the equal need for grading the subnormal, and providing each section with the kind of instruction that fits it best. Special provision is plainly needed both for the dull or backward and for the more seriously retarded child. But not every child who is retarded a fraction below the general average is in need of special instruction in a Special School or Class. The boy who is backward by no more than one year can well be accommodated in a class whose average age is a little younger than his own. This is everywhere a common practice which brings little or no disadvantage, so long as the ages are not too freely mixed. The children belonging to a single age-group - those aged ten last birthday, for example, may easily be spread over three consecutive standards† - Standard III (whose average is 9.5), Standard IV (whose average age is 10.5) or Standard V (whose average age is 11.5). Accordingly in educational articles, in official reports and in teachers' discussions on the subject, the phrase "backward child" is usually restricted to mean one who is backward by about two classes or two years. Where schools or classes specially designed for the backward have already been instituted and exact measurements made of the children's intelligence, we find that the mental ratios of the pupils usually range between 70 and 85, that is to say, a mental age of 7.0 to 8.5 at the chronological age of 10.
We suggest that the trend of the teachers' spontaneous selections in the past may form a rough guide for similar selections in the future. The ground for these limits is obvious from what has just been said. Let us consider more closely the classification of pupils in the middle of the present senior‡ departments. Those
*Report of Consultative Committee of the Board of Education, under the Chairmanship of Sir W. H. Hadow. Published by H.M. Stationary Office in 1926, price 2s.
†We use the word "standard" simply to indicate a class in which the educational capacity and attainments of the children correspond roughly to that of a single year of development, Standard I to age 7 to 8, Standard II to age 8 to 9, and so on. Even if their classes are not organised on this basis, most teachers still attach a fairly definite meaning to the levels so named.
‡i.e. where there is no educational break at the age of 11+ and where the school is organised in (a) an Infants department and (b) a mixed department or departments for older boys and girls separately.
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aged 10 last birthday should normally be taught in Standard IV. If retarded by but a single year, they can be placed in Standard III without detriment to their fellows. If retarded by two years, they would (if strictly classified according to their attainments and capacity) be placed in Standard II. Standard II however should receive the cleverest children aged only seven or eight. Such an assortment of big and little, side by side in the same classroom, is not usually advisable and the drawbacks become more and more serious as the backward child grows older.
Now the average age of the normal ten-year-olds in Standard IV is 10.5 years: and Standard III ranges roughly from a mental age of 9.0 to 10.0. A ten-year-old, therefore, who is unfit for Standard III is retarded at least 1.5 years, or 15 per cent of his age. If he is retarded by 30 per cent of his age, he is usually deemed fit, not for a backward class, but for a Special School where Special Schools exist. These limits - a backwardness of 15 to 30 per cent - coincide with the limits just mentioned, namely, a mental ratio between 70 and 85, and correspond with what has been the interpretation usually given to the words "merely dull or backward" in Section 55 of the Education Act, 1921.
The children with whom we are concerned are therefore those who, without being mentally defective, are so deeply retarded in mental development or attainments that by the middle of their school career they are unable to profit by the instruction given even in the class below that which is normal for their age. And, generally speaking, it may be said that by a retarded child we mean one who is retarded by more than 15 per cent of his chronological age. While this figure may be taken as the upper limit of that group of retarded children with whom we are now concerned, it will be remembered that it is only in the largest towns where exceptional facilities for educational differentiation exist that it would be possible to extend the special provision to children with mental ratios between 80 and 85; and for practical purposes in the greater part of the country the upper limit of children included in our retarded group will be about 80.
This definition, though given in quantitative terms, is not meant to be pedantically pressed. Every area will adopt the lines of classification most suited to its needs. We have attempted a precise definition solely because it has been necessary to give calculations of the probable numbers. If the limits be expressed in terms of the mental ratio, then a range of 70 to 85 will perhaps be most convenient in the larger towns, where the numbers are high enough to make such a classification desirable. In the smaller towns and in rural areas the classification will doubtless be less finely differentiated.
Our scheme, of course, rests on the assumption that the educational system will be reorganised on the basis of a clean cut at the age of 11+ and we have advocated the institution of a special survey
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of children at this age with a view to the selection of pupils for classes or courses of instruction suited to their special abilities. Not for one moment however do we suggest that the backward child should be ignored until he reaches the age of 11 and his backwardness becomes a conspicuous handicap both to himself and others. This is like waiting until the consumptive breaks down at his work before giving a thought to his trouble and its treatment. The sooner the retarded child is discovered and the sooner he receives a special measure of attention, the greater is the hope of remedying or compensating for his particular disability. If scientific methods of case-study are employed, the majority of those who are likely to be dull or backward can be detected soon after the age of seven. One of the greatest obstacles to accelerating the progress of the retarded child is the child's growing consciousness of his own inferiority. Before the age of eleven he may hardly have realised his unfortunate position. But with the increase of self-consciousness that the approach of puberty brings, he begins to contrast himself with his normal fellows and strongly resents the babyish methods that are used in trying to teach him the elements of reading and of number. Here lies one of the most important reasons both for attacking his difficulties at an early age, and for placing him when he is older with those who are on a level that more nearly corresponds with his own.
We feel then that the recognition of the dull and backward as a definite group needing special attention, and the systematic organisation of schools and classes along the lines just described, form one of the most urgent educational needs at the present moment. In view of the suggested reclassification of children at different ages - at the age of seven or eight when the child leaves the infants' department and again at eleven when the whole school population is regrouped - such a plan should not present great difficulties. In support of our proposal we have already pointed out that recent inquiries have shown that it is chiefly from the ranks of the dull and the backward, rather than from those who are mentally defective in the stricter sense, that the majority of our criminals, paupers and ne'er-do-wells are drawn. The institution of special classes for the retarded child would lead to attention being drawn at an early age to the social, temperamental and intellectual difficulties of each one, and so save many from a life of hopeless poverty or crime.*
IV. The Educational Problem of the Retarded Child
165. While much thought has been given to the educational problems of those children who have been described in the past as mentally defective children, that is to say, the lower section of our
*In a recent survey of juvenile delinquency in London, it appeared that "nine out of every ten delinquent cases fell below the middle line of average educational attainment, and five out of every six were so far below it as to be classifiable as among the technically 'dull or backward'."
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group of retarded children. the special educational problems presented by the upper section of this group, namely the dull or backward, have hitherto been accorded but little consideration save in a few areas and in a relatively small number of more or less isolated schools. Though, as we have seen in an earlier chapter, valuable experiments have been and are being made here and there for dealing with these children within the Elementary School system, there has been little co-ordination of effort and little pooling of experience. The "dull or backward" class is, moreover, too often little more than a refuse heap for the rest of the school; the child is not selected on the basis of any systematic tests; he is not studied individually to discover the causes of his backwardness; no one troubles to find out whether his backwardness is remediable or not; and many a teacher, being human, instead of realising that he has been honoured with the most interesting psychological cases in the whole of the school, groans because he will have nothing to show for his efforts and longs to be relieved or promoted to the scholarship class instead.
Our reasons for referring in this Report to the special problems of the dull and backward are two-fold: first, because they are necessarily connected with those of the lower section of the retarded group, so that the one cannot be considered apart from the other and that there is no possibility of making satisfactory educational provision for the majority of the children in the lower section except in association with those in the upper section*; and secondly because, realising as we do their extent and some of their complexities, we wish to suggest certain aspects of these problems which we feel might well form the subject of a special investigation.
PROBLEMS CALLING FOR INVESTIGATION
(1) CAUSES OF EDUCATIONAL RETARDATION
166. Researches on this question have already been carried out in several urban areas, and a wide variety of causes has been revealed. While much further inquiry is needed, in particular so as to show in what way the known causes operate to produce their undoubted effects, to discover other possible causes and to indicate how these causes may most effectively be attacked either on a wholesale scale or in individual cases, we think it may prove helpful if we state here the commonest causes that have been brought to light by previous inquiries. It has been shown in the first place that a distinction must be drawn between (a) children suffering from an innate and permanent retardation, and (b) those suffering from an acquired and curable retardation; in other words, between those usually distinguished as the specifically "dull" and those more generally known as the "merely backward".
(i) Inborn inferiority in general intelligence, that is in all-round intellectual capacity, appears to be the commonest cause of all. In such a case, not the child, nor the teacher, nor the parent, but nature is
*See Chapter VII where this question is fully discussed.
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to blame. The dull in fact are suffering from a mild form of that congenital inferiority which differs in degree, but not in kind, from mental defect: it is useless to expect such children ever to reach beyond the level of Standard IV.
As we have seen, there are all degrees of dullness. In some the dullness may be so extreme as to amount to mental defect in the sense implied in the Education Act, in that the innate condition of the child is of itself sufficient to render him incapable of profiting by instruction in the ordinary school. In others the dullness is not grave enough to prevent the child from being kept within the ordinary elementary school system, but other factors, combined with the innate inferiority, hinder the child's progress and call for special attention.
(ii) Special disabilities such as bad memory, unstable attention, poor auditory or visual imagery, incapacity for verbal or abstract symbols as distinct from practical or manual work, and
(iii) Temperamental defects such as emotional instability, emotional apathy, emotional conflicts, petty moral or disciplinary difficulties, worry about conditions at home, antagonism to a particular teacher or subject - may often aggravate the child's general incapacity, and perhaps in rarer instances be sufficient of themselves to turn a normal child into a backward child.
The remaining factors are either physical (arising within the child himself), administrative (arising within the school organisation), or environmental (arising mainly within the child's own home). The following are the commoner:
(iv) Physical handicaps, such as poor health, defective vision, defective hearing, defective speech, left-handedness, tonsils, adenoids, rickets, rheumatism, recurrent catarrh, minor ailments, malnutrition, lowered vitality from many different causes. These contributory causes are nearly all of them of a remediable type, and are often so slight as to escape attention and treatment unless an intensive study is made of each backward individual.
(v) Absence from school, including late entry and irregular attendance from a variety of causes - excusable and inexcusable - (illness of the child himself, infection in the home, migration from district to district, negligence on the part of the parents, dislike of school on the part of the child).
(vi) Defects within the school itself - bad teaching, uninspiring or ill adjusted teaching methods, too slow or too rapid promotion, sudden break in teaching methods (particularly when the child is transferred from the infants' to another department or from one school to another).
(vii) Social or environmental handicaps - poverty and its concomitants, insufficient or inappropriate food, lack of sleep, overcrowding, insufficient recreation, lack of culture in the home, lack of parental sympathy with the school and its work, overwork out of school hours.
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The teacher should be on the watch for causes of these various kinds, in every case. Usually he will discover in each instance not one cause but several, all co-operating to drag the child backward; and he will need the assistance of the School Nurse, the School Medical Officer, the Attendance Officer and the social worker to support his efforts in the classroom. Otherwise all that is done during five hours on five days each week may be undone directly the child leaves the school premises.
(2) SIZE OF CLASSES
167. The outstanding need of all retarded children is greater individual attention. Hence, the first requisite will be a small class. We have provisionally suggested that the class for the retarded should contain about 30 children. Is this the ideal or the best practicable size? Again should not the classroom itself be not one of the smallest but one of the largest in the department, so as to allow plenty of room for manual and practical work and for the children to move about more freely than the ordinary pupil engaged for the most part in reading, in sitting and listening to the teacher, or in doing written work at the desk? What name should be given to the class, so as to avoid casting any slur on the pupils or the teacher sent to it? Should it not be termed a "practical class", an "industrial class", an "opportunity class", "VI.c", or even (as in one department) "Ex-VII", or indeed be given any title rather than the "backward class", or "standard 0"?
When the retarded cases are not sufficiently numerous for the formation of a special class, the question of employing a visiting teacher specially qualified to give assistance or advice in methods of group or individual teaching might be considered.
How far children of different ages, sex, attainments and capacities can conveniently be housed together in a single room is a problem needing further inquiry. Experience points to the need for classifying the retarded amongst themselves; wherever possible, not one retarded class but several should be organised (not necessarily in the same school), so that the retarded as well as the normal can be graded and promoted according to age and progress.
(3) SELECTlON OF PUPILS
It is clear that as the causes of retardation are so numerous, retardation may be of many varying degrees and types. Of all the sources of failure in the backward class as it exists at present perhaps the commonest is the haphazard way in which the children are selected. Should it not be the general practice to use standardised tests both of intelligence and of educational attainments as the main basis of selection, and to keep case records or "progress-books" giving the results of subsequent tests or examinations and full details as to the case-history of each individual child - his home circumstances, his physical defects, his
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special disabilities, and his temperamental peculiarities? The appointment of a visiting psychologist, of an educational expert, or of an inspector of retarded classes trained in psychological methods, would be of great help to the teachers themselves. Of course all retarded children should, as we have already recommended, be submitted to special medical inspection and where necessary be referred to a mental expert. The institution of psychological clinics for child guidance would be of further assistance in this direction. Each of these plans has already been attempted in different schools and areas; and one of the most urgent questions for inquiry is that of determining the special merits and the special limitations of these different schemes.
(4) EFFECT OF PHYSICAL CONDITIONS ON MENTAL RETARDATION
It is clear that the selection of retarded children is primarily an educational problem. Yet, as we have just seen, physical defects so often constitute an important factor that a special and thorough medical examination of each retarded child is an indispensable preliminary to his proper treatment. One of the most important points, therefore, for further inquiry is the possibility of closer cooperation between the doctor, the teacher and the social worker in such cases. How far are measures of modern medicine, surgery and general hygiene followed by mental improvement, and how far can the effects be made permanent by more intelligent aid within the schoolroom when tonsils have been excised, spectacles prescribed, minor disabilities successfully cured? What, for example, is the value of the open-air class for children of this type?
(5) SOCIAL MEASURES
As we have seen, backwardness at school and poverty in the home are closely associated. In itself, no doubt, poverty may be an effect of the dullness of certain members of the family quite as often as its cause. Yet, directly or indirectly, poverty is undoubtedly a serious factor, nearly always aggravating any inherent backwardness in the child himself. It is in the poorest districts that backward pupils are most numerous. Hence there is a need for active social service in connection with the backward classes.* A systematic inquiry into what has already been done in this direction, and what is still needed and practicable, is greatly to be desired.
(6) TRAINING OF TEACHERS OF RETARDED CHILDREN
It is obvious that the teacher of the retarded child will need special qualifications. If he is to be successful he must regard his work,
*The need of social service, particularly in connection with the care and supervision of mentally defective children out of school hours, was emphasised in the Board of Education's Circular No. 1341 issued in September, 1924.
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not as a thankless burden, but as a privilege and as a unique opportunity for studying types of mind, at once the most puzzling and the most fascinating that the elementary school can show. He must be endowed with a peculiar degree of human sympathy and patience, and at the same time possess a scientific attitude towards his pupils and their difficulties. He must be familiar with modern educational methods for instructing the more immature minds and at the same time appreciate the more worldly interests possessed by the older. He must be capable of dealing with his class as individuals rather than in the mass, and have as great an interest and skill in manual work as in work of a more academic type.
Many of these qualifications are to be acquired, and often can only be acquired, through actual experience and training. An inquiry is therefore desirable to show how far existing courses organised by the training colleges or otherwise meet, or should be modified for, teachers of experience and others who intend to specialise in this kind of work. The impending reorganisation of training college courses makes the present moment opportune for calling attention to this special aspect.
Several methods of training teachers for the retarded have been tried -
(a) by Training Colleges
(i) as part of the ordinary training course;
(ii) as a third year or deferred third year course;
(b) by Training Colleges and other Organisations in short intensive courses of varying lengths;
(c) by Local Education Authorities for their own teachers.
As experience of teaching ordinary children for at least two years is in our view an essential preliminary to work in schools or classes for the retarded, the first plan, (a) (i) above, would seldom prove suitable. Is a whole year course such as that referred to in (a) (ii) above really required? Would not an extension of the system of shorter courses, possibly of three months' duration, possibly longer, possibly shorter, meet the need? What should be the content of the courses and what types of lecturers would be required? The experience of the Central Association for Mental Welfare in conducting short courses would no doubt point the way to the solutions of some of these problems and would probably suggest further lines of inquiry.
(7) CURRICULA
It is obvious, and universally admitted, that the curricula of these classes should devote less time than the ordinary school to formal subjects such as reading, writing and arithmetic, and more time to practical subjects, such as bear directly upon the
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child's future life, either in the home, or in industry, or in his hours of leisure. Here is one of the most urgent problems for future investigations.*
(8) TEACHING METHODS
Even when the retarded child is being taught the more abstract academic subjects, they should be presented to him in a concrete and practical way. What is the special value to such a child of expressive and aesthetic work, such as that involved in homely crafts, in decorative art of various kinds, in music, dancing and dramatic display? Mechanical work seems to keep the mind occupied, but actually allows it to daydream and often does more harm than good. How can all the work be made active, stimulating, provocative; made to appeal to the child's special interests; to encourage him to feel the joy of success; and be so graded throughout as to lead him by easy stages to higher, harder and more abstract work? The answers to these and kindred questions are no doubt familiar to the best teachers. Could not the knowledge and experience of these be placed more readily at the disposal of others?
By what particular methods, and with what degree of success these various aims may be achieved are problems that require a far greater amount of experience, experiment, collaboration, and discussion than has hitherto been allotted to the problem. They point to the urgent need for systematic inquiry into the whole situation.
*Detailed recommendations on these and kindred points have already been put forward in the Board's recent Handbook of Suggestions to Teachers.
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CHAPTER IX
SUMMARY OF CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
168. In the course of this Report we have described the nature of mental defect, the existing statutory provisions with regard to mentally defective children and the administrative arrangements made for their care, training and education. We have reviewed the findings of the special investigation held by Dr. Lewis into the incidence of mental defect in certain urban and rural areas, and have discussed the application of those findings to England and Wales as a whole. We have considered the problems submitted to us in the light of those findings, and have set out fully in the appropriate chapters of this Report the conclusions we have reached and the recommendations we make in regard to each of the questions that we have had under review so far as children are concerned. We propose here to confine ourselves to a concise statement of our main conclusions and recommendations, indicating in respect of each of them, for convenience of reference, the numbers of the relevant paragraphs in the body of our Report. Our conclusions and recommendations relating specifically to adult defectives are given in Part III.
I. PRINCIPAL CONCLUSIONS ARISING OUT OF THE COMMITTEE'S REVIEW OF THE PRESENT POSITION AND OF THE FINDlNGS OF THEIR SPECIAL INVESTIGATION
1. THE MEANING OF MENTAL DEFECT
Some doubt exists as to the meaning of the definition of "mentally defective" children in Section 55 of the Education Act 1921 and of "feeble-minded" children in Section 1 (c) of the Mental Deficiency Act 1927. It is sometimes held that the only criterion of mental defect for the purpose of these definitions is the educational one. In the light of all the other definitions contained in the Mental Deficiency Acts and of the best scientific opinion, we have taken the view that, whatever may be the correct legal interpretation of these definitions, the real criterion of mental deficiency is a social one, and that a mentally defective individual, whether child or adult, is one who by reason of incomplete mental development is incapable of independent social adaptation, (Chapter II, para. 21.)
2. POWERS AND DUTIES OF LOCAL AUTHORITIES
(a) We find that the powers and duties of Local Education Authorities with regard to the ascertainment and notification of children to the Local M.D. Authority are in some respects obscure,
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and in some respects more narrowly restricted than we believe to have been intended by Parliament:
(i) The terms of Provisos (ii) and (iv) of Section 30 of the Mental Deficiency Act 1913 - provisos which appear to be contradictory - throw considerable doubt on the question whether Local Education Authorities may ascertain, certify and notify children who are in the hands of the Poor Law Authorities. (Chapter III, paras. 37, 50 and 51.)
(ii) In the case of a child who is leaving an ordinary Public Elementary School at the age of 14, and is in the opinion of the Local Education Authority in need of supervision, guardianship or institutional care under the Mental Deficiency Acts, that Authority have no power of notification corresponding to the power they possess in the case of a child leaving a Special School at 16. (Chapter III, para. 41.)
(iii) Owing to factors which have arisen since the passing of the Mental Deficiency Act, 1913 and the interpretation which has been placed on the term "special circumstances" in Section 2 (2) (a) of that Act, little use has been made of the power of notifying educable mentally defective children of school age who are in need of care and control under the Mental Deficiency Acts. (Chapter III, para. 42)
(iv) There is some doubt whether a child who has left a Public Elementary School at 14 without having been certified as mentally defective can be so certified between that age and 16, and, if necessary, notified to the Local M.D. Authority. (Chapter III, para. 40.)
(b) In regard to the powers and duties of Local M.D. Authorities, we do not feel that the intentions of Parliament have been realised. It was no doubt anticipated when the Mental Deficiency Act of 1913 was passed, that most defective children would be notified by Local Education Authorities before they left school and that Local M.D. Authorities would consequently have to ascertain for themselves only those defectives whose need for care and control first manifested itself in later life. It was presumably in consequence of these assumptions that it was not thought necessary to widen the conditions rendering defectives subject to be dealt with under the Act or to give these latter Authorities any power or duty to ascertain or deal with defectives in the hands of the Poor Law Authorities, or with defective children between the ages of 7 and 16 unless notified by Local Education Authorities.
The facts:
(i) That only a small proportion of mentally defective children have been so notified;
(ii) That numbers of defective children are in the hands of Poor Law Authorities; and
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(iii) That the Local M.D. Authority can only themselves "ascertain" and provide for defectives who are "subject to be dealt with" under the Mental Deficiency Act by reason of having been found neglected or cruelly treated, or having come into contact with the law or got into serious trouble;
have restricted the field of the Local M.D Authorities' activities to a greater extent than we think was contemplated by Parliament. (Chapter III, paras. 44 and 45.)
(c) Though Poor Law Authorities have power to maintain children who are defective in their institutions, these institutions are not as a rule suitable places for their retention. Moreover, defectives so maintained are dealt with either as paupers or as persons of unsound mind and are deprived of all the benefits and safeguards of the Mental Deficiency Acts. (Chapter III, paras. 50, 51 and 52.)
(d) Defective children in Home Office Schools are also, broadly, outside the province of the Education and Mental Deficiency Acts, and though well looked after in the schools are to some extent debarred from the continuity of care which those Acts are intended to confer. (Chapter III, para. 53.)
3. NUMBERS OF DEFECTIVES ASCERTAINED AND DEALT WITH BY THE LOCAL EDUCATION AND M.D. AUTHORITIES
(a) Local Education Authorities have ascertained 33,000 educable mentally defective children in England and Wales and the total Special School accommodation available for these children consists of 1,800 places in Residential Schools and some 15,000 places in Day Schools, accommodation which is only sufficient for half the children hitherto ascertained. (Chapter IV, paras. 55 and 56.)
(b) The numbers of children notified by Local Education Authorities to Local M.D. Authorities amount annually to some 2,400 children between 7 and 16 years of age. (Chapter IV, para. 60.)
(c) Local M.D. Authorities' returns do not indicate how many mentally defective children have been reported to them. Their latest returns, however, show that they have knowledge of some 62,000 defectives of all ages, that is to say 1.57 per 1,000 total population. Only 39,000 of these (or 1 per 1,000 population) have been "ascertained" to be "subject to be dealt with" under the Mental Deficiency Acts. Of these some 20,000 have been sent to Institutions; 1,100 have been placed under Guardianship and the remainder numbering some 18,000 have been placed under supervision. (Chapter IV, paras. 60 and 61.)
(d) There are only 111 Occupation Centres, nearly all provided by voluntary bodies, though financed by Local Authorities, and the total number of defectives (most of them being children) who are being trained at these Centres does not exceed some 1,200. (Chapter IV, para. 73.)
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4. NUMBERS OF DEFECTIVES IN ENGLAND AND WALES CALCULATED OR ESTIMATED ON THE BASIS OF THE FINDINGS OF THE COMMITTEE'S SPECIAL INVESTIGATION
(a) The total number of children between the ages of 7 and 16 who are mentally defective within the meaning of Section 55 of the Education Act, 1921, is approximately 105,000, that is to say, rather more than three times as great as the number actually ascertained and certified by Local Education Authorities. (Chapter V, paras. 83 and 93.)
(b) The number of lower grade defective children, i.e. imbeciles and idiots, under 16 years of age on the actual basis of our investigation is at least 30,000. We are, however, convinced that this figure is an under-estimate, because the ascertainment of younger children was necessarily incomplete. (Chapter V, para. 97.)
(c) The total number of adult defectives of all grades in the whole country is certainly not less than 150,000. This number is two and a half times as great as that given in the returns submitted to the Board of Control of defectives of all ages brought to the notice of Local M.D. Authorities. (Chapter V, para. 83.)
(d) Of the 105,000 children referred to in paragraph (a) it is estimated that about one-third, or 35,000, are educationally rather than socially defective, while the remaining two-thirds, that is 70,000, are mentally defective within the meaning of the Mental Deficiency Acts. If we add to this figure (70,000) the 30,000 lower grade defective children and the 150,000 adult defectives, we find that the total number of persons of all ages in England and Wales who are mentally defective in the true sense, that is, who are by reason of incomplete development of mind incapable of independent social adaptation, is 250,000. We know that this number, which is based directly upon the actual numbers ascertained in this Investigation, is an under-estimate, and, after allowing for the inevitable incompleteness of the ascertainment and making certain corrections, we estimate that the total number of persons in England and Wales who are mentally defective in the true sense is at least 300,000*, which is equivalent to an incidence of mental defect of eight per thousand total population. (Chapter V, para. 83.)
(e) All these figures which are based on the findings of our Investigation show clearly that the numbers of defectives ascertained and provided for by Local Education and M.D. Authorities are far smaller than they should be.
5. OTHER FINDlNGS OF THE COMMITTEE'S INVESTIGATION AND CONCLUSIONS ARISING THEREFROM
(a) The incidence of mental defect as ascertained in the Committee's investigation is approximately twice as high as that found 20 years previously by the Royal Commission on the Care and
*This number (300,000) does not of course include the 35,000 children whose defect is educational rather than social.
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Control of the Feeble-minded. This increase is probably due in the main to greater thoroughness and improved methods of ascertainment. But, after allowing for these and other factors, we believe that the evidence available suggests that there may have been some increase in the incidence of mental defect even during the past 20 years. (Chapter V, paras. 84 and 86-90.)
(b) The Committee's investigation shows that there is a marked difference in incidence of mental defect between urban and rural areas. The mean incidence of defect for all ages in the urban areas was 6.49 per 1,000 population as compared with 10.66 in the rural areas. There is evidence that this disparity is connected with the problem of rural depopulation and with other important social problems. (Chapter V, paras. 88 and 91, and Investigator's Report Appendix A, Table 11.)
(c) In the investigated areas 77 per cent of the feeble-minded (i.e. educable mentally defective) children ascertained were found to be in attendance at ordinary Public Elementary Schools, and even in the two areas where unused Day Special School accommodation existed 69 per cent of the feeble-minded children were attending the Public Elementary Schools. The reasons underlying these facts, taken in conjunction with (i) the prohibitive cost of establishing Residential Special Schools for all feeble-minded children living in rural areas, and (ii) the impracticability, save in a strictly limited number of towns, of any material increase in Day Special School provision, have convinced us that a change of system is essential. The existing system has in fact broken down except in the larger towns and is, we believe, incapable of being applied in the country generally. (Chapter IV, paras. 64 and 65, Chapter V, para. 94 and Chapter VI, paras. 100-106.)
(d) Our Investigator had also presented to him large numbers of children who, though he could not class them as feeble-minded, were patently retarded both mentally and educationally, children who form the group generally known as dull or backward. No special educational provision was being made for the large majority of this marginal group, which is estimated to contain as many as 300,000* children between 7 and 15 years of age in the country as a whole. The close genetic as well as educational relationship between the "dull" portion of this group and the mentally defective makes it impossible for the Committee to overlook the problem which the whole group presents. (Chapter VIII, para. 156.)
*This figure is based on surveys carried out by Professor Cyril Burt and comprises children with mental ratios broadly between 65 and 80. If we took the whole group of children with mental ratios below 85, which would include all the dull and backward and all mentally defective children of whatever grade, we should find that it would comprise at least 10 per cent of the school population.
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II. RECOMMENDATIONS IN REGARD TO CHILDREN
In the light of the foregoing facts and conclusions we make the following recommendations for the modification of the present system of education for mentally defective and retarded children, for the redistribution of the functions of Local Authorities and for the amending of the law.
1. NEW EDUCATIONAL UNlT
(a) We recommend that all those children hitherto known as educable mentally defective children and all those known as dull or backward children (as defined in Chapter VIII)* should be regarded as a single educational and administrative unit, and should be given a similar type of education adapted to their degree of retardation. We suggest that this unit should be known as the "Retarded" Group. (Chapter VI, para 106.)
(b) We further recommend that all these children, except of course those who are in need of immediate care and control under the Mental Deficiency Acts, be retained within the Public Elementary School system and that Local Education Authorities modify the organisation of the schools in their areas so as to provide suitable education for the whole group. (Chapter VIII, paragraphs 156-162.)
2. CERTIFICATION FOR PURPOSES OF THE EDUCATION ACT
(a) We recommend the abolition of the requirement that the Local Education Authority should certify a particular type of child as mentally defective as a necessary preliminary to providing him with the type of education he requires.
(b) This recommendation involves a modification of the legal status of Special Schools for mentally defective children, though the substance of these valuable institutions should be retained. The schools should become part of the general Public Elementary School system, with appropriate modifications of curriculum and organisation.
(c) As the special powers and duties of Authorities and parents with regard to these Special Schools would lapse, it would be necessary to give Local Education Authorities a general power to enforce attendance in the last resort of individual children at whatever school was best suited to their educational capacity: The Local M.D. Authority should also be given power to compel the attendance of children at suitable Day Schools or Centres.
(d) The abolition of certification must not be taken as in any way diminishing the obligation of Local Education Authorities to discover, classify and provide suitable education for all retarded children of whatever grade. (Chapter VII, paragraphs 138-141.)
*Paragraph 164.
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3. ORGANISATION OF EDUCATION FOR RETARDED CHILDREN ON THE BASIS OF A BREAK AT THE AGE OF 11
(a) We understand that it is in accordance with the recommendations of the Hadow Report and the general trend of modern practice to make a break in the education of normal children at the age of 11. We consider that there are definite advantages in making a similar break in the case of retarded children both in the interest of these children and in order to bring this group into line with general educational administration.
(b) We recommend that, so far as practicable, separate classes or departments should be established for retarded children under 11, and that in all areas courses for retarded children over 11 should form an essential part of the Local Education Authorities' provision of Senior or Post-primary Schools. In the larger towns greater differentiation in classification will be possible, and we recommend that in addition to the establishment of separate classes or departments for the less retarded children under and over 11, Junior and Senior Schools for the more retarded, on the lines of existing Special Schools for the Mentally Defective, should be continued and extended. (Chapter VII, paras. 115, 120 and 121, and Chapter VIII, paras. 157- 159 and 161-162.)
4. ALLOCATION OF RESPONSIBILITY FOR MENTALLY DEFECTIVE AND RETARDED CHILDREN WHO CAN ATTEND A DAY SCHOOL OR CENTRE
(a) Younger children. Children under 11 years of age, who are able to attend a Day School or Centre, would be divided into two groups, a higher and a lower, in accordance with the standards set out in Chapter VIII.* The Local Education Authority would remain entirely responsible for the higher group, i.e. broadly the retarded group, but would notify those in the lower group - that is to say broadly those who are now classed as idiots and imbeciles, and those feeble-minded children who are in immediate need of public care or control - to the Local M.D. Authority. This latter Authority would be responsible for these children, but it would be the duty of the Local Education Authority, in return for payment by the Local M.D. Authority, to provide for their education and training at suitable Centres or otherwise, in such a way as, having regard to local conditions, may best meet their needs. (Chapter VII, paras. 116-119.)
(b) Older children. At the age of 11+ when the normal period of primary education ends, there will be a general survey of all children whether normal or retarded, with a view to determining the type of post-primary education to which each child should proceed. This survey with the necessary modifications, including appropriate medical and psychological examination, should be used
*Paragraph 163.
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for sorting out the various groups of retarded children and determining what further children, being mentally defective, should now be transferred to the Local M.D. Authority. Those who are found to have made hitherto no substantial progress in scholastic or manual work, and are also found to require care and control under the Mental Deficiency Act, would be notified to that Authority who would become entirely responsible for their care, education and training.
While in the case of notified children under 11 the Local Education Authority would have the duty of providing for their education and training in return for payment by the Local M.D. Authority, in the case of notified children over 11 the Local Education Authority would have the power at the request of the Local M.D. Authority, but not the duty, to make such provision in return for payment. The arguments for and against thus differentiating in our recommendations in regard to the responsibility for notified children between those under and those over 11 years of age are fully explained in our Report. (Chapter VII, paras. 120-127.)
The notification of the lower group of children, whether under or over 11, if properly carried out in accordance with the standards and criteria indicated in our Report, will ensure that the children in the schools for the retarded group will not be brought into contact with low grade or detrimental children, whose presence has been a serious handicap to many Special Schools in the past. (Chapter VII, para. 128.)
5. ALLOCATION OF RESPONSIBILITY FOR CHILDREN WHO REQUIRE RESIDENTIAL OR INSTITUTIONAL TREATMENT
Those children who are of too low a grade to attend a Day School or Centre or are for other reasons unable to do so should be sent to Residential Institutions or Colonies, unless they can safely be left in their own homes. Residential accommodation should as a rule be provided by the Local M.D. Authority, though Local Education Authorities should be empowered to provide Boarding Schools for selected retarded children who are not likely to require permanent care and control. It should be open to either Authority to send children for whom they are responsible to institutions provided by the other Authority or by a Voluntary Body. The financial responsibility for notified children would rest with the Local M.D. Authority and that for non-notified children with the Local Education Authority. (Chapter VII, paras. 131-134.)
6. AGE LIMITS FOR COMPULSORY SCHOOL ATTENDANCE
On the assumption that the upper age limit for normal children will be raised to 15, there should no longer be any differentiation in age limits either upper or lower between normal children and those of the grade that has hitherto been certifiable as mentally defective under the Education Act. (Chapter VII, paras. 129, 130 and 135-137.)
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7. CERTIFICATION FOR PURPOSES OF NOTlFICATlON TO THE LOCAL M.D. AUTHORITY
The Local Education Authority should retain the duty of certifying those children whom it is proposed to notify, and their power to notify a child should not be limited to those over 7 years of age, but should be co-extensive with the ages of compulsory school attendance and should apply to all children within these ages whether attending school or not. (Chapter VII, paras. 142, 143.)
8. CERTIFICATION OF FEEBLE-MINDED CHILDREN UNDER SECTION 1(c) OF THE MENTAL DEFICIENCY ACT, 1927
In order to remove any obscurity in the law the wording of this Section should be amended so as to make it clear that the educational criterion alone is not sufficient and that the criteria applicable to feeble-minded adults apply also to feeble-minded children. (Chapter VII, para. 140.)
9. MENTALLY DEFECTIVE CHILDREN UNDER THE CARE OF POOR LAW GUARDIANS
We recommend that all the relevant provisions of the Education and Mental Deficiency Acts, in so far as these do not now apply to mentally defective children who are in Poor Law Institutions or otherwise dealt with by the Guardians (or the Bodies that are to replace them), should be made to apply to them and that the fact that a child is mentally defective should automatically bring him within the jurisdiction of the Local Education or M.D. Authority, as the case may be. (Chapter VII, para. 144.)
10. MENTALLY DEFECTIVE CHILDREN CHARGED BEFORE A COURT AND IN HOME OFFICE SCHOOLS
(a) We recommend that the Local Education Authority should be consulted in all cases of children or young offenders brought before a Court under conditions rendering them liable to be sent to a Reformatory or an Industrial School, and that such children should be subjected to a special medical and psychological examination.
(b) We further recommend that all children in Home Office Schools in whose case there is reason to suspect mental retardation should be examined in the same way as retarded children in Public Elementary Schools, with a view to proper educational classification and action under the Mental Deficiency Acts if necessary. (Chapter VII, paras. 145-147.)
11. ASCERTAINMENT AND NOTIFICATION
Finally we would urge in the strongest terms that Local Education Authorities should leave no stone unturned in their endeavours to ascertain all children in their areas who are in need of care and control under the Mental Deficiency Acts and that they
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should so organise their arrangements as to ensure that no child who requires such care and control should leave any school without having been notified to the Local M.D. Authority. Ascertainment and notification of all such children is fundamental to the successful functioning of the latter Authorities. (Chapter VII, paras. 120, 140 and 142.)
12. NEED OF FURTHER RESEARCH
We recognise that many of the problems which we have had under consideration require much further research before any final conclusions can be reached, and we recommend that special investigation and research be made particularly in regard to the causation and prevention of mental defect; the further elucidation of the difference of incidence of defect in urban and rural areas; the relationship between mental defect and other social problems; and the educational problems presented by the whole group of retarded children. (Chapter V, paras. 88-91, Chapter VIII, paras. 165-167).
169. Before concluding this Report the Committee wish to place on record their deep obligation to many persons who have helped them in their work.
As regards their Investigator, Dr, Lewis, the report which he prepared and which accompanies the Committee's own report, will speak for itself. The Committee would like however to express their own view that it is in every respect a document of the first importance. The data on which it is based were secured with great thoroughness in the face of great difficulties; they have been tabulated with extreme accuracy; and the general results of the inquiry have been described with a delightful lucidity. The Committee are profoundly indebted to Dr. Lewis for his work and they are confident that his report and his tables will be found a mine of useful information for many years to come by all who are concerned in the welfare of the mentally defective.
The Committee also desire to record their appreciation of the valuable work done by Miss S. Catherine Turner, as social investigator, and they heartily endorse the tribute to the value of her work paid in the covering letter which Dr. Lewis has addressed to the Committee with his report. The thanks of the Committee are also due to Miss M. O. Charlton and Mrs. N. Williams-Jones for their assistance as field-workers in some of the areas investigated.
They also wish to express their warm appreciation of the conscientious and valuable work done by Mrs. Lewis who not only acted as the Medical Investigator's personal Secretary throughout the whole investigation, but also herself took part in the preliminary selection of retarded and defective children in the schools.
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The Committee feel that special thanks are also due to the public Authorities of the areas selected for the special investigation, both for allowing the investigation to be made in their areas and for the whole hearted support which they and their officers - and especially their teachers - gave to the investigators. The investigations could not have taken place at all without their concurrence; they could not have been so successful but for their skilled and courteous assistance.
The Committee are also indebted to the Board of Education for the clerical assistance placed at their disposal. In particular they wish to record their appreciation of the work of Mr. Sage, whose marked ability was of great help to them and to their Investigator in the preparation of the statistical tables and their application to administrative problems.
Finally to their Secretary the Committee wish to express their warmest thanks. Throughout their inquiry his work on their behalf has been as indefatigable as it has been of uniform excellence. The Committee are unanimous in the view that they could not have had put at their disposal an Officer better qualified for the difficult work that was expected of him.
ARTHUR H. WOOD (Chairman)
RALPH H. CROWLEY (Vice-Chairman)
CYRIL BURT
C. EATON
EVELYN FOX
ELLEN F. PINSENT
HILDA REDFERN
FRANK C. SHRUBSALL
A. F. TREDGOLD
F. DOUGLAS TURNER
N. D. BOSWORTH SMITH (Secretary).
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APPENDIX I
EXPLANATORY NOTES ON THE ESTIMATES GIVEN IN CHAPTER VIII OF THE NUMBERS OF CHILDREN WHO CAN ATTEND DAY SCHOOLS OR CENTRES
It will be our purpose here to show in some detail the methods and calculations which have been adopted in estimating the extent of the provision required for mentally defective and retarded children of various grades, and in applying our proposals to areas of different types and sizes. These calculations, the results of which have been embodied in Chapter VIII, have been based almost entirely on the data relating to school children between the ages of 7 and 14. This group of children was most thoroughly and completely investigated, and we are consequently enabled to draw conclusions relating to the school population which we feel will be of considerable assistance to Local Education Authorities in applying our proposals to their own areas should our scheme be adopted.
We fully recognise, however, that this question of the organisation of education for defective and retarded children - involving, as it does, personal factors, psychological problems, questions of geographical distribution, communications, etc. - cannot be treated as if it were a simple problem of arithmetic. In discussing the possibilities of establishing Schools and Occupation Centres in different types of area, we have not lost sight of this consideration; but inasmuch as our estimates of the minimum sizes of urban and rural areas which will yield sufficient numbers of children of various grades to enable schools and centres to be established are perforce arrived at by arithmetical computation, the variations which will naturally occur from area to area scarcely warrant our figures being regarded as invariable standards to be applied indiscriminately to individual areas. We believe that they are fairly representative of the country as a whole; but it must again be emphasised that the areas which are described in this Appendix and in Chapter VIII as "urban" and "rural" can only be regarded as areas typical of their kind, and that in assessing the actual requirements of any one particular area, more especially if this should contain both urban and rural districts, it will be necessary for the Local Authority to apply our figures in the light of their knowledge of local conditions.
We have seen in Chapter V that the incidence of mental defect as revealed by the Committee's investigations differs widely in urban and rural areas. It is necessary therefore to consider these two types of area separately. We have adopted the census classification of districts; the "urban" areas are composed of the County Boroughs, Municipal Boroughs and Urban Districts, and the "rural" areas include all Rural Districts. Many Local Education Authorities' areas do not, of course, correspond with this classification, and in these cases it may be necessary for the Authority to determine, from their knowledge of local conditions, what modification of our incidence figures is necessary in order that they may be applied with reasonable accuracy to the area in question. Of course, if the population in an area of this kind can be divided with any degree of certainty between urban and rural districts, the appropriate incidence figures can be applied separately.
As we have already stated, our calculations are based on findings in respect of mentally subnormal children between 7 and 14 years of age who were included among the "school population".* Apart from these children
*For a definition of the" school population" see Footnote (*) to Table 1 in Appendix A of the Investigator's Report.
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however, there are groups who attend preparatory or private schools, and there are also some in Poor Law Schools or Institutions or not attending school at all. The incidence of defect among the preparatory and private school children at any rate is no doubt considerably lower than that among the "school population"; but the lower rate of incidence in this group is probably more or less counterbalanced by the higher rate prevailing among the other groups of children outside the school population. However this may be, we are here considering administrative questions, and for this purpose we think that conclusions based on the numbers of defectives found among the school population will fairly represent the practical problems with which Local Authorities will be confronted.
The school population between 7 and 14 does not, however, include the whole age range of children with whom Local Education Authorities will have to deal. We have assumed for the purposes of our scheme that the normal school age will in future range from 5 to 15; and in order to estimate the numbers of children in the extended school population of the investigated areas we have increased the numbers given in Column (3) of Table 1 by one-ninth so as to include the children between 14 and 15. Similarly, to find the proportion which the school population between 5 and 15 will bear to the total population of England and Wales, we have taken the actual numbers of children whose names were on the registers of Public Elementary and Special Schools on 31st March, 1927, between the ages of 5 and 14, and have increased this number by one-ninth. The number thus arrived at is almost exactly 15 per cent of the total population of England and Wales in July, 1927, as estimated by the Registrar-General. In considering the size of town or rural district in which different types of schools and centres could be established, we have therefore assumed that the school population will be approximately 15 per cent of the total population, though we recognise, of course, that the proportion will vary in different areas. It may be mentioned also, as has recently been pointed out by the Board of Education,* that the number of pupils under 11 will increase and that of pupils over 11 will decline until 1930; the number of older pupils will then rise until 1933, in which year it is estimated that there will be 185,000 more pupils between 11 and 14 in the Public Elementary Schools than there are at present. These fluctuations in the school population will affect to a certain extent our estimates of the minimum sizes of areas in which Centres and Schools can be set up.
We will turn now to a more detailed explanation of the methods employed in estimating the numbers of defective and retarded children falling to be dealt with under our scheme and the minimum sizes of typical areas, the results of which are embodied in Chapter VIII. So far as mentally defective children are concerned, we have based our calculations on the data given in Tables 14 and 18 (A) and (B) in Appendix A of the Investigator's Report. Table 14 shows in respect of the investigated urban and rural areas, the actual rate of incidence of each of the three grades of mental defect in children between 7 and 14 years of age ascertained among the school population; Table 18 (B) gives particulars of the mental ratios of children ascertained at each year of age between 5 and 15, while the numbers of children whose mental ratios were not determined are given in the lower part of Table 18 (A). The figures in these latter Tables include a small number of children other than those ascertained among the school population; we shall, however, be making use of these Tables only so far as they relate to feeble-minded children,
*See the Board's Circular 1397, issued on 18th May, 1928, and their Educational Pamphlet No. 60 on "The New Prospect in Education". Reference should also be made to the report of the Government Actuary enclosed with the Board's Circular 1395 of 23rd January, 1928.
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and in fact the numbers of such children between the ages of 7 and 14 ascertained outside the school population were too small in proportion to all the feeble-minded children ascertained between those ages to affect our results to any appreciable degree.*
Our scheme contemplates the establishment of schools and classes not only for children who under the present system could properly be certified as mentally defective under the Education Act (that is to say, the children who were classified as feeble-minded in our investigation), but also for large numbers of dull and backward children. The figures given in Dr. Lewis' Report do not extend to children of a higher grade than the "feeble-minded", that is, to children with mental ratios up to 65 or 70.† For retarded children of a higher grade, Professor Cyril Burt has kindly supplied us with the results of extensive investigations carried out by him in London and Warwickshire relating to children with mental ratios up to 80. The data of these two independent investigations have been amalgamated, and from them we have been able to compile Table A, which shows the approximate distribution of mental ratios below 80 per cent among the general school population.
The percentages given in this Table will, we believe, apply with a reasonable degree of accuracy to typical urban and rural areas and to the whole school population of the future, that is to children between the ages of 5 and 15.
Table A‡
PERCENTAGES BASED ON FINDINGS IN REGARD TO MENTALLY DEFECTIVE AND RETARDED CHILDREN BETWEEN THE AGES OF 7 AND 14
We may now proceed to show, by means of a few detailed examples, the statistical methods which were employed in estimating the incidence rates and minimum sizes of areas for various groups of children which have been given in Chapter VIII of our Report and are summarised in Tables (B) and (C) at the end of this Appendix.
The following calculations refer only to children who are left in the general community. The provision of institutional care is discussed in Chapter 5 of the Investigator's Report.
*Out of 1,630 feeble-minded children ascertained between 7 and 14 only 23, or less than 1½ per cent, were outside the school population.
†See Table 18 (B) and the discussion of this Table in Chapter 4 of Dr. Lewis' Report, pages 99-101.
‡A chart based on the data in this Table appears on page 169 of this Appendix.
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(a) Occupation Centres
In discussing the applicability of our scheme to areas of different types and sizes, we propose to deal only with those lower grade children who can attend a day centre. Most, if not all of the idiots, and a proportion, which we will take to be about one-half,* of the imbeciles, will require to be sent to Institutions. Therefore, in any given urban or rural area the incidence per 1,000 school population represented by imbeciles for whom provision should be made in day centres will be approximately one-half that given in Table 14 (C). These incidence rates will have to be applied to the new school population from 5 to 15 years of age, which we assume to be the normal period of compulsory school attendance in the future.
To estimate the provision required for children under and over 11, it is necessary to arrive at a reasonable method of splitting up the incidence figures in question so as to get separate rates of incidence for the age-groups 5 to 11 and 11 to 15 respectively. We cannot adopt the simple expedient of apportioning the figures between younger and older groups in the proportion 6:4, because the numbers of imbecile children ascertained by Dr. Lewis varied appreciably according to their age, the rate of ascertainment in the older group being considerably higher than in the younger. Actually, 177 imbeciles were ascertained between the ages of 5 and 11, and 166 between 11 and 15. We think, therefore, that the division of the incidence rates in Table 14 (C) between the two groups should be based upon the relative proportion of the actual numbers of imbeciles ascertained in each of these groups. Applying this method, we find that after allocating one-half of the group to Institutions, the estimated rate per 1,000 total school population represented by imbeciles between 5 and 11 for whom provision should be made in Occupation Centres is 0.78 in urban areas and 1.24 in rural areas. The corresponding rates for the 11 to 15 group of imbeciles are 0.73 for urban areas and 1.17 for rural areas. On the basis of these rates of incidence the smallest urban area in which an Occupation Centre for 10 imbecile children between the ages of 5 and 11 could be established will be one containing a population of (10 x 1000/0.78 x 100/15) approximately 85,000 persons,
The next group referred to in Table B is that of children between 11 and 15 years of age with mental ratios below 55. We have already estimated the rate per 1,000 school population represented by imbeciles between the ages of 11 and 15 who will be suitable for training in Occupation Centres to be 0.73 in urban areas and 1.17 in rural areas, and to these must be added similar rates for the lower grade feeble-minded children of the same age with mental ratios between 50 and 55. Table 18 (B) gives the numbers of children ascertained between the ages of 5 and 15 together with their mental ratios, and we may safely assume that all children shown in this table to have ratios of over 50 were feeble-minded. It will be seen from this Table that the numbers of children aged 14 to 15 were considerably lower than in any single year in the 11-14 group. In order therefore to obtain a more accurate estimate of the actual numbers of feeble-minded children between the ages of 11 and 15 in the investigated areas, we will assume that the number in the 14 to 15 group was equal to one-third of the total number found in the 11-14 group. This gives us 69 children with mental ratios between 50 and 55 in the urban areas and 89 in the rural areas. A certain proportion of these children will, however, be more suitable for teaching in Residential Schools than in Occupation Centres, and the figures given in Table 24 (3) indicate that the numbers of such children will be about one-fifth of all the feeble-minded children ascertained. We will, therefore, reduce the numbers given above by one-fifth, which leaves us with 55 children in the urban areas and 71 in the rural areas, representing respectively 0.97 and 1.63 per 1,000 total school population.
*This assumption is broadly substantiated by the figures in Table 25 (A).
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We find, therefore, that when this group of feeble-minded children is added to the imbeciles between 11 and 15, the estimated rate per 1,000 school population represented by children with mental ratios under 55 who may be deemed suitable for training in Occupation Centres for older children will be about 1.70 in an urban area and 2.80 in a rural area. This means that in order to find 10 children of this grade we should require an urban area containing a total population of (10 x 1000/1.70 x 100/15) approximately 40,000 persons. In a rural area a population of about 24,000 persons would be necessary.
The more general scheme that we contemplate, however, is that provision will be made for younger and older children together. If similar calculations are made in respect of this composite group, consisting of children between 5 and 11 with mental ratios under 50 and children between 11 and 15 with mental ratios under 55, we find that an Occupation Centre for ten children can, so far as numbers go, be established in an urban area with a population of 27,000 and in a rural area containing some 16,000 inhabitants.
(b) Classes and Schools for Retarded Children
Here we are concerned with children between the ages of 7 and 15. The school population between the ages of 7 and 14 in the areas which were investigated is shown by Table 14 to be 37,743 in the urban areas and 28,637 in the rural areas. We will assume for the purpose of these calculations that the school population from 7 to 15 under the new system would be 8/7ths of these numbers, and that this population would be equally divided between the age-groups 7 to 11 and 11 to 15. This latter assumption may perhaps not be quite accurate at present, but it should be approximately correct when the birth-rate has attained some measure of stability.
The first group referred to under (2) of Table B is that of children between 7 and 11 years of age with mental ratios between 50 and 80. The method of arriving at an estimate of the proportion which this group of children bears to the total school population, together with the minimum population in urban and rural areas which will be necessary to yield sufficient numbers of feeble-minded and retarded young children, is as follows.
The percentage of children in urban areas with mental ratios between 50 and 70 is shown in Table A above to be 1.84. From this we will deduct one-fifth as representing the proportion of feeble-minded children who will need to be sent to Residential Schools. Adding the percentage for the 70-80 group (4.64) we get 6.12 per cent as the total for the whole group who may be deemed suitable for junior retarded schools or classes.
The school population between the ages of 7 and 11 in the investigated urban areas we will, as stated above, take to be (1/2 x 8/7 x 37,743) approximately 21,570. 6.12 per cent of this equals 1,320. The estimated school population between 5 and 15 in the investigated urban areas is (50,889 x 10/9) say 56,540. In other words, in a school population of 56,540 children we find 1,320 feeble-minded and retarded children between the ages of 7 and 11. On this basis therefore 23.35 out of every 1,000 children in the total school population in an urban area may be expected to prove suitable for instruction in junior schools or classes such as we contemplate.
The method of arriving at an estimate of the minimum total population of an urban area which may be expected to yield a sufficient number of children of this group to establish a class of 20 now becomes similar to that adopted in the case of occupation centres. The population of the urban area in question may be estimated at (20 x 1000/23.35 x 100/15) approximately 5,700.
Similar calculations to those detailed above have been used in assessing the sizes of areas necessary for the other group of children shown in (2) of Table B.
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Table B
TABLE SHOWING THE MINIMUM POPULATION REQUIRED TO PERMIT OF THE ESTABLISHMENT OF CENTRES AND SCHOOLS IN AREAS OTHER THAN THE LARGEST TOWNS
Table C
TABLE SHOWING THE ORGANISATION SUGGESTED FOR THE LARGEST TOWNS
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