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Kiwi of the Week

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    Vincent Aspey

    When nine-year-old Vincent Aspey persuaded his mother to buy a violin he had spotted in a second-hand shop she was dubious that he would practice, let alone come to be described as ‘synonymous with orchestral development in New Zealand’.

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Today in History

1907 First School Journal published

In May 1907 New Zealand pupils were able to read a schoolbook published in their own country for the first time. The School Journal was initiated by Inspector-General of Schools George Hogben to provide schoolchildren with a free publication containing information on history, geography and civics. This was a cheaper option than publishing several separate textbooks.

Until 1939, when a School Publications Branch was formed, the School Journal was the Department of Education’s sole publication for children. Today the School Journal is published by Learning Media for the Ministry of Education. Believed to be the longest-running serial publication for children in the world, the Journal continues to provide 7–13-year-olds with New Zealand-based reading material that is relevant to their lives. Around 750,000 copies of the School Journal are published annually in four parts.

Many of New Zealand’s foremost authors and illustrators have had their work published in the School Journal over the past 100 years. They include Rita Angus, James K. Baxter, Alistair Campbell, Russell Clark, Jack Lasenby and E. Mervyn Taylor.

How to cite this page: 'First School Journal published', URL: /page/first-school-journal-published, (Ministry for Culture and Heritage), updated 30-Mar-2011