By Public Record Office Victoria (State Archives of Victoria, Australia)
Technical schools welcomed students that didn’t want a university education. Their closure in the 1990s is still hotly debated.
Athenaeum Theatre, the old Mechanics' Institute (1930/1940) by Education Department, VictoriaPublic Record Office Victoria (State Archives of Victoria, Australia)
The beginning
Days were long for Melbourne's working class in the 1800s, many began work as children toiling 14 hours a day, six days a week. Stonemasons had enough in 1856 and took to the streets demanding an eight hour day. Mechanic's Institutes like the Athenaeum soon filled their time.
Mechanics Institutes flourished across Victoria, the term mechanic meaning artisan or trade worker. These volunteer-led organisations provided adult education classes for local communities. There were practical classes alongside chess clubs and debates.
“Has the pen of the novelist been a benefit or injury to the mind?” or “Is America or Australia the most advantageous to immigrants?” Debate topics at Prahran Mechanics' Institute, 1856.
Melbourne’s first technical school
In 1881 Francis Ormond, a philanthropist and MP, proposed a training institute be built in Melbourne, called The Working Men's College (RMIT). The Victorian Trades Hall Union rallied their working class members amassing thousands of small donations to match Ormond’s $5000 pounds.
The Working Men's College opened in June 1887, and despite its name, provided education for both men and women. Students could learn architectural drawing, mechanics, plumbing, carpentry, arithmetic, shorthand, physics, physiology and photography. Enrolments superseded Ormond’s expectation, reaching 2000 in just the first two years.
Over the years the College changed names eventually becoming the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology University (RMIT) in 1992.
Ballarat School of Mines (1930/1940) by Public Works Department, VictoriaPublic Record Office Victoria (State Archives of Victoria, Australia)
School of mines
In regional Victoria a shortage of mine managers for the goldfields sparked the Schools of Mines, established from Daylesford, Ballarat and Bendigo to Bairnsdale. Ballarat School of Mines opened in 1870 and is still a part of Federation University.
Junior Tech School 1910-1920
"There is a need for trained intelligence in every branch of industry...and to bring the work of the schools into closer relation with the requirements of everyday life.'" T. Fink, 1901. Royal Commission on Technical Education
Photo: Collingwood
One of the first tech schools for teenagers was Collingwood Junior Technical School on the corner of Smith and Johnston streets, which opened in 1912. It is now an arts precinct called Collingwood Yards.
This industrial part of the city had a large manufacturing base among working class families so courses included furniture and shoe making. Alfred Whybrow's boot factories were famous for employing Collingwood Tech School graduates.
Attracting teenagers to study is never easy, as new principal Alexander Strang discovered arriving one evening to no students. He proceeded to ring a large bell at the front gate "…and to the assembled crowd expounded the advantage to be derived from a course of study in the local technical school." (Harrison) By August, 57 students had enrolled in evening classes.
The preserved art deco entrance to former Collingwood Tech remains an iconic landmark for this part of inner Melbourne.
Millinery Class at Emily MacPherson College (1950/1960) by Education Department, VictoriaPublic Record Office Victoria (State Archives of Victoria, Australia)
Domestic studies 1920s
“A carpenter only dealt with dead wood but a woman dealt with live material and if her work was wrong then the live material was wrong for a lifetime.” Ethel Osbourne, 1924
The 1920s saw a growing acknowledgement of women earning their own living in retail or hospitality.
Technical schools for girls were often single-sex, for example Box Hill Technical School for Girls and Women which opened in 1924 with a fee-free junior school (12-14 years) and a senior school for girls over 14 years, offering both day and evening classes.
The vocational subjects generally prepared them for the hospitality and clothing industries, with classes in dressmaking, millinery, cookery and even laundry on offer.
These subjects also served as education towards life as a wife and mother, classes were even named as such, housewifery or household management. While classes on folding laundry may seem trivial, in the 1920s a woman’s home duties were linked to the health of the nation.
"Domestic work was just as much a trade as carpentry or the work of a blacksmith…The population of a country relied more largely on skilled domestic work than any other factor.” Dr Ethel Osborne, Council President of the College of Domestic Economy. 1924
Significant Buildings for Significant Work
The design of Technical Schools reflected their importance to the Department Of Education. The significance of women’s education, for example, is seen in the grandiose architecture of the new College of Domestic Economy which opened in 1926 by The Duchess of York.
Yallourn Technical School (1930/1940) by Public Works Department, VictoriaPublic Record Office Victoria (State Archives of Victoria, Australia)
Percy Everett the modernist 1930s – 1950s
Yallourn Technical School was the first of many designed by celebrated modernist and Chief Architect of the Public Works Department, Percy Everett. It was built to train State Electricity Commission workers for the Yallourn Power Station.
Percy Everett adopted a range of modernist styles, and for technical schools he liked Brick Expressionism, imbued with socialist ideals and often applied to working-class housing estates, and schools in 1920s Netherlands. It included bold streamlined forms and intricate geometric brick work. Firmly focused on the modernist ethos of functionality, Everett considered acoustics, sight-lines, airflow and above all else, the availability of natural light.
Upon his retirement in 1953, The Argus noted the contribution of Everett’s light-filled designs: “This new look ..has played no minor role in the healthy enthusiasm with which hundreds of thousands of children now go gaily to school. The black holes and the dark corners, which were used too often as places of punishment for children, were given notice to quit. Light replaced darkness!”
Percy Everett studied and later taught at The Gordon’s architecture school. As Chief Architect of the Victorian Public Works Department, Everett transformed Victoria’s architectural landscape, influencing educators and students for decades to come with his modernist ideas.
To service the boom in student numbers after 1950 Percy Everett designed a school classroom model that was cheap and repeatable: the Light Timber Construction school or an 'LTC' School. It was a group of single storey classrooms with sloping corrugated iron roofs, zigzag steel rafters connected by open pathways or long hallways which were notoriously cold in winter and hot in summer. They were described as "Not architectural gems…" by the Herald in 1954.
Modular Light Timber Construction Classroom (1950/1960) by Public Works DepartmentPublic Record Office Victoria (State Archives of Victoria, Australia)
Baby Boom 1950-1970
“I was a first born Australian from Dutch parents, and I was told if you were academic you went to a high school, but my father was a pastry cook by trade and we had a cake shop, which my mum served in and so my older sister and I went to Preston Tech.” Joanne Goldspring
By 1953 25% of students (14,000) were attending technical schools (Argus) and with immigration after World War Two the Department of Education needed to increase available schools. Stories of students being taught in the outdoors were common place. The grazing farm land north of the City was swallowed up by suburban sprawl and Preston Technical College and Preston Girls Technical College (1955) with 800 pupils each became the largest tech schools in the state.
“I was at Preston Technical College junior school in 1963 & 4. The girls school opened up on Cramer St. and bordered the park which was used for break times and sport. The park was divided by a 50m no man's land (NML) to separate the boys from the girls areas. Quite a lot of amorous messages wrapped around rocks were thrown across NML.”
Paul Clayton, Preston Tech College Alumni Facebook Group
“I was at the girls school ‘59 to ‘62. I vividly remember the ‘imaginary’ line moving closer & closer until we were pulled back. The sports grounds were great & being able to walk to the pool was good. It was a great setup & I loved my time at the school. Getting together for functions with the boys school was fun too.” Jude Muir, Preston Tech College Alumni Facebook Group
George Ioannidis and other ex-students from Collingwood Technical School share their memories. Produced by Tiny Empire Collective.
Horsham Tech School Motor Mechanics Class (circa 1960s) by Horsham Technical School and Department of EducationPublic Record Office Victoria (State Archives of Victoria, Australia)
Mechanics and Television Studies 1960-1980
In 1960 technical schools were being celebrated as a means to service emerging industries. Motor engineering was a good example and offered to students at Horsham Technical School in 1961 (and others) at a time when car production plants were ramping up across the country.
Television production and horticulture classes were also introduced around this time at Oakleigh Tech, and in 1961, forward thinking new principal Alan Warren reflected on his industry focused approach for the senior art class syllabus at Prahran Girls Tech “The least concern of an art school - to my mind - is to produce artists (by that, I mean oil painters). Creative designers, craftsmen and draughtsmen, Yes. Artists in a vacuum, No” A. Warren
Box Hill Girls Technical School Cookery Class (1970/1980) by Department of Education, VictoriaPublic Record Office Victoria (State Archives of Victoria, Australia)
Under criticism
Most technical schools divided the trades between mechanical or applied science for boys, and domestic sciences for girls, attracting criticism within the education system.
“You will no doubt comment mentally perhaps on the emphasis on boys syllabuses, but some of the girls are interested in Applied Science.” Miss J Williams, Teacher 1961, Sunshine Technical Girls School writing to the Headmistress of Prahran Girls Tech Miss McKemmish.
By the 1980s there was a growing belief across the government that co-educational comprehensive schools (a single high school system) would ensure that teenage boys and girls could both access mechanics and science.
Stigma
Technical schools had an unfounded reputation for attracting ‘less bright’ students (as if a trade based or practical education was a deficiency rather than a strength,) or students with behavioral issues. This impacted student's self-esteem and added to the growing criticism.
Collingwood Technical School Handwork Display (1950/1960) by Collingwood Technical SchoolPublic Record Office Victoria (State Archives of Victoria, Australia)
The end of tech
Victoria made sweeping changes to its school system around 1985 following the Ministerial Review of Post-compulsory schooling, chaired by Jean Blackburn, and 120 Victorian technical high schools were closed or re-purposed as technical tertiary colleges.
During the early 1970s a national technical training system at tertiary level called Technical and Further Education (TAFE) was introduced by the Whitlam Government. Large amounts of Federal Government funding went into tertiary (16 years +) technical education. This became the new pathway for learning a trade.
When the last technical high school closed in 1990 (apart from a handful) the need for servicing local industries wasn’t as necessary because off-shore manufacturing had forced factories to close.
Parallel to this was the rise of new universities and subsidised university fees so students were encouraged to pursue a career in the ‘knowledge based economy’ rather than a trade.
This era emphasised the completion of twelve years at high school and going to university became the dominant social expectation.
Northland Secondary College (1990) by Education History Unit, VictoriaPublic Record Office Victoria (State Archives of Victoria, Australia)
Community fight for Northland Secondary College
Northland Secondary College was an excellent example of a technical school tailoring its methods to meet local community needs, and it directly challenged the increasing trend towards the homogenization of the curriculum.
In 1991, Northland Secondary College (formerly Preston East Technical School) was named in the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody as a positive school model that valued Aboriginal knowledge systems and created an environment where Koori kids could succeed. It fostered harmony, far removed from the chronic racial abuse that Aboriginal children were finding at other schools. In fact, it made students from all different cultures feel as though they’d found a place to belong. Despite its success, Northland was one of hundreds of state technical schools ordered to close in 1992. The local community were outraged and defiant. Students Muthama Sinnappan and Bruce Foley immediately lodged a complaint with the Equal Opportunity Board claiming the State’s decision to shut down their school was an act of systemic racial discrimination. In 1995 they won the case in the Supreme Court and Northland Secondary College was re-opened. The school became the Northern College of the Arts and Technology in 2011.
Monash Technical School Hub Robotics (2021) by Department of Education, Monash Technical SchoolPublic Record Office Victoria (State Archives of Victoria, Australia)
A New Model of 'Tech' Returns 2018
“It is probably fair to say that we lost something when technical schools were closed previously. Yes, the facilities were not great, but we lost something that was important for young people”
L. Kosky. 2006
Fifteen years after the closure of Technical Schools, the late Victorian Minister of Education Lynne Kosky, expressed her opinion that some form of high school technical education was important. By 2015 a new model for high school technical education was unveiled by the Department of Education. New technical high school hubs were built across the state in 2018 offering courses in coding, smart farming, design thinking and sustainability (among other innovative technical focused courses). Students from either public or private schools can attend. The courses are unique to each region, but aim to future proof emerging industries in the areas of science, technology, engineering and maths (STEM).
When technical schools were closed, some of their records were transferred to Public Record Office Victoria for preservation, enabling this exhibition to be made possible using records from the Department of Education.
This exhibition is presented by Public Record Office Victoria.
Curated and Designed by Kate Follington, Natasha Cantwell and Andrew Joyce
Record appraisal by Kathy McNamara
Digitisation by Daniel Wilksch
Contributions made by Dr Lesley Preston and Dr John Pardy as well as Belinda Ensor from the Tiny Empire Collective.
Thank you to Elaine Si Leong and Nicole Finn from the Department of Education and Training, Clare Land from the Fight for Survival exhibition, Rafaela Galati-Brown OAM from Northland College of the Arts and Technology and former students from tech school alumni Facebook groups.