Abstract
In this paper, we analyse data from the University of Melbourne’s Matriculation
examinations around 1900. The analyses reveal that many schools cleverly developed and
applied strategies so that their Matriculation results would appear to be more impressive
than they really were. After “excellent†results had been achieved, the schools advertised
their Matriculation “successes†in ways which suggested that the schools’ “outstandingâ€
results derived from high-class teaching. In this paper, we argue that these tactics generated
artificially high “standardsâ€, and that throughout the twentieth century there was a tendency
to try to maintain those standards.
M. A. (Ken) Clements & Nerida F. Ellerton
The Argument From Matriculation Used By Proprietors Of Victorian Secondary Schools Around 1900