[Ireland In The New Century by Horace Plunkett]@TWC D-Link book
Ireland In The New Century

CHAPTER X
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We know pretty well what we want to do, for we are dealing with an existing industry, and with known conditions.

The productivity of the soil, the demand of the market, the means of transport from the one to the other, are all easily ascertainable.

What most needs to be provided in Ireland is a much higher technical skill, a more advanced scientific and commercial knowledge, as applied to agricultural production and distribution.[49] This, in our belief, depends, more than upon any other agency, upon the soundness of the education which is provided to develop the capacities of those in charge of these operations.

Our chief difficulty is that of co-ordinating our teaching of technical agriculture with the general educational systems of the country--a difficulty which the other educational authorities are all united with us in seeking to remove.
When, on the other hand, education--again, I believe, the chief agency for the purpose--is considered as a means for the creation of new industries, we come face to face with a wholly different problem.

We have no longer an industry which we are seeking to foster and develop going on under our eyes, steadying us in our theorising, and in our experimenting upon the mind of the worker, by bringing us into close touch with the actual conditions of his work.


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