WilliamsH. S.“The Role of Technical Education in Great Britain, the United States, and Australia”. SandersC. (Ed.), Technical Education for Development. Nedlands: University of Western Australia Press, 1966, 34–37, and King, Kathleen C. “The Role of Technical Education and Training in Developing Countries”. Ibid., 49–51.
2.
KingH. M.“The Administration and Organisation of Australian Technical Education”. Ibid., 67–97.
3.
SeeDepartment of Labour and National Service, “Training for Skilled Occupations”, Melbourne, 1962.
4.
Evidence in Western Australia suggests that there is commonly a range of I.Q. from 80–120 in any one trade and educational background ranges from somewhere in the second year of high school to completion of the fourth year.
5.
Report of Committee, Commonwealth State Apprenticeship Enquiry, Melbourne: W. M. Houston, Government Printer, 1954.
6.
“Report of the Fact Finding Committee on Apprenticeship in the Building Trades”. Bowen, I. K. (Chairman), Perth: Government Printer, g1962.
7.
“Report of the Fact Finding Committee into the Apprenticeship System in Western Australia”. Bowen, I. K. (Chairman), Perth: Department of Labour, 1964.
8.
Statistics on tertiary technical courses have been difficult to gather because of the different systems operating in each State. However, the Martin Report (p. 21) shows that students in technical colleges in courses with some tertiary content (which however includes more than the professional courses) multiplied two and a half times from 23,000 in 1954 to 57,000 in 1962, whilst university students little more than doubled from 29,000 in 1954 to 63,000 in 1962.
9.
Report of the Committee on the Future of Tertiary Education in Australia to the Australian Universities Commission (L. H. Martin, Chairman), “Tertiary Education in Australia”. Melbourne: Government Printer. 1, 1964, 127.
10.
WilliamsH. S.“Tertiary Technical Education in Australia”, The Australian University, 1, 1, July 1963, 89–119.
11.
WoodJ. F. D.TyleeA. F.EvansS. I.“Technical and Technological Education”. WheelwrightE. L. (Ed.) “Higher Education in Australia”, Melbourne: Cheshire, 1965, 192–244.
12.
Report of the Committee on the Future of Tertiary Education in Australia. Op. cit., 153–164.
13.
WilliamsH. S.“The Technical Colleges”. Australian Institute of Political Science. “Tertiary Education in Australia”, Sydney: Angus & Robertson, 1965, 66–95.
14.
Report of the Committee on the Future of Tertiary Education in Australia, Op. cit., 171.
15.
Ibid., 171.
16.
Ibid., 165.
17.
Ibid., 184.
18.
WilliamsH. S.“Tertiary Technical Education in Australia”, The Australian University, 1, 1, 1963, 98–100.
19.
RoutleyV. C.“Future Supply and Demand for Technical Manpower in Australia”. SandersC. (Ed.) “Technical Education for Development”, Nedlands: University of Western Australia Press, 1966, 99–114.
20.
WilliamsH. S.“Technical Education—State or National?”. The Australian Journal of Higher Education, 1, 2, 1963, 98–103.