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Authority record
Agency461 · Advocacy group · 1973-

The Australian and South Pacific External Studies Association (ASPESA) was established in 1973.
Its first objectives were to: 1) promote understanding and cooperation among those concerned with the improvement of external studies in Australia, New Zealand, the South Pacific, and other neighbouring countries; 2) foster a high standard in the practice and study of external studies at post-secondary level; 3) hold forums on various aspects of external studies; and 4) disseminate information about research and practice in external studies. [1]
The association was reconstituted in 1993 as the Open and Distance Learning Association of Australia, Inc.

References:
[1] ODLAA - Open and Distance Learning Association of Australia. (n.d.) Our History. https://odlaa.org/who-we-are/our-history/

Agency298 · Community group · 1986-1992

The Riverina Regional Council of Adult Education was formed by the NSW Board of Adult Education, as part of a move to "establish regional level co-ordination and communication between government, institutional and non-institutional providers of adult education". The objectives of the Council were to "promote, encourage, develop and co-ordinate" adult education in the Riverina. In real terms, the Council provided advice and assistance to Riverina adult education providers, as well as some funding. [1]

The inaugural meeting of the Riverina Regional Council of Adult Education was convened on 24 September 1986. The first Council members were: Mrs Beryl Ingold (president), Mr Edward Reid-Smith (Secretary-Treasurer), Mr Jack Faulkner, Mr Alan Le Marne (Riverina-Murray Institute of Higher Education), Mr Richard Jordan (Dept. of Technical and Further Education - TAFE), Mr Richard Stevenson (Dept. of Education), Mr Dennis Toohey (Dept. of Agriculture), Mr John Harding (Dept. of Sporting and Recreation), Mr Brian Tutt (Dept. of Health), Ms Robyn McPherson (Riverina Regional Evening College), Mr Jim Saleeba (Albury-Wodonga Post School Education Council), and Mr Frank Skinner (Community Adult Education. [2]

The Council was dissolved on 31st December 1992. [3]

References:
[1] Riverina Regional Council of Adult Education. (1988, September). Newsletter No.1. Charles Sturt University Regional Archives (RW2053 item 52), Wagga Wagga, NSW.
[2] Riverina Regional Council of Adult Education. (1986, September 24). Minute book, 1986-1989. Charles Sturt University Regional Archives (RW2053 item 1), Wagga Wagga, NSW.
[3] Riverina Regional Council of Adult Education. (1993, March 8). Correspondence from Mrs Beryl Ingold, President, to Ms Jan Smith, Executive Director of the NSW Board of Adult Education. Charles Sturt University Regional Archives (RW2053 item 40), Wagga Wagga, NSW.

Riverine University League
Agency064 · Advocacy group · 1952-1981

The Riverine University League was a single issue regional pressure group, based on and funded by local government organisations. Originally known as the Riverina Councils' University League, it changed its name to the Riverine Councils' University League within months of its establishment in 1952 in the hope of attracting support from councils in north east Victoria as well as from those in southern New South Wales. Although it attracted some Victorian backing, most of the League's forty six institutional members were from New South Wales. In 1959, when it was incorporated as a company limited by guarantee, it took the name Riverine University League.

Under the leadership of Dr William Andrew Merrylees (1900-69) the League come close to securing the establishment of a Riverina University College in 1966-67, and was instrumental in persuading the New South Wales Government to establish the Riverina College of Advanced Education in 1971 as a genuinely regional institution, with campuses initially at Wagga Wagga, Albury and Griffith.

The largest and most important accessions of the League's records at CSU Regional Archives (RW74, RW624) comprise the papers of the president, Dr Merrylees, who served until his sudden death in 1969. A Rhodes Scholar and former senior lecturer in philosophy at the University of Melbourne, Merrylees had been involved since 1936 in the management of a family property, Groongal Station, Hay (RW75), becoming widely known for his pioneering experiments in large scale irrigation. Active in a number of regional development organisations - among them the Murrumbidgee Valley Water Users' Association, the Murray Valley Development League (RW214) and the Lachlan Valley Development League - Merrylees was a prolific pamphleteer and writer, who maintained an extensive correspondence with many key figures in Australian politics and education. His correspondents include Sir Kenneth Bailey, Professor J.P. Baxter, C.E.W. Bean, Sir John Behan, A.G. Enticknap, MLA, Sir John Gorton, Eric Hoare, Sir William Hudson, G.V. Lawrence, Sir Leslie Martin, Sir Robert Menzies, Professor E. Morris Miller, R.W. Prunster, Hugh S. Roberton, MHR, Sir Ian Wark, Sir Alan Watt, and E.R. Wilson.

History compiled by Don Boadle (c.2001).

Sources : Boadle, Donald, Selling the Rural University: W.A. Merrylees' Writings for the Riverine University League, Wagga Wagga, 1986; ____, 'The Idealist as Lobbyist: W.A. Merrylees and his Campaign for an Australian University' in D. Stockley (ed.), Melbourne Studies in Education, Melbourne, 1989-90, 34-48; ____, 'Critics of Australia's Binary Policy: the Riverina University College Debate, 1965-67', History of Education Review, 23 (2), 1994, 18-31; ____, 'William Andrew Merrylees (1900-1969)' in John Ritchie (ed.), Australian Dictionary of Biography, vol. 15, Melbourne, 2000.