THE INDUSTRIAL SCHOOLS.
The industrial schools now in operation, the details of the inspection of which will be found in table VII., appended to this report, are eight in number, and, as has been already pointed out, have been carried on, some of them since 1884 at the cost of the government, and with a large aggregate annual expenditure. The total amount
expended upon those in operation was $134,635.98 in 1905–6. The original idea seems to have been to have them fairly convenient to the railway, and yet at points about which there would be a group of reserves, and from which their pupils were to be drawn.
As has been already statistically pointed out, there has been a very notable falling off in the number of pupils since 1901, and this tendency seems rather to increase than diminish. The reasons seem chiefly to be:—
- The distance of the schools from the reserves.
- The ineffectiveness of the staff in several instances.
- The lack in practical success of the pupils after graduation.
- The dependence of the number of pupils upon the co-operation of the staffs of the boarding schools and upon the canvassing activity of the principals of the industrial schools.
- The lack of interest of Indian agents in schools at great distances from their particular reserves.
- The dislike of the parents to have their children so far from home.
- The great increase and enlargement of the boarding schools on or near the reserves.
With, perhaps, the exception of that of Brandon school, every principal expressed the same opinion regarding the difficulty of obtaining and retaining pupils, and all seem to feel that the obligation, in practice if not in theory, which is placed upon them of gathering pupils is not only disagreeable, but is further one which takes them from their proper duties as administrators of the school. However much force there may be in this contention, the fact yet remains that it is only in four instances, those of Qu’Appelle, High River, Brandon and Elkhorn, that the schools as regards either numbers or effectiveness can be said to have held their own, and that it is only in these that efficient staffs, energetic principals and good discipline are to be found. When so remarkable and successful a principal as Rev. Father Naessens, of High River, has to say that he finds it difficult to maintain the number of his pupils, although situated within the area whence he can draw from three of the largest reserves, the Blackfeet, Bloods and Peigans, on all of which there are Roman Catholic boarding schools, and when he says he is now convinced that his school in order to do the best for his pupils, ought, contrary to his former view, to be situated on or adjoining some reserve, it seems evident that with boarding schools increasing in numbers and in efficiency, the successful continuation of the industrial schools under the present form must become increasingly difficult and expensive.