Difference between revisions of "Anarchy 103/The business and politics of education"
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{{tab}}Beyond these human activities were the never-<wbr>ending open meetings thrashing out every conceivable problem from the organisation of courses to the function of the art college, in this democratic power-<wbr>hugging official-<wbr>ridden Obedient Society. | {{tab}}Beyond these human activities were the never-<wbr>ending open meetings thrashing out every conceivable problem from the organisation of courses to the function of the art college, in this democratic power-<wbr>hugging official-<wbr>ridden Obedient Society. | ||
− | {{tab}}''The Hornsey Affair'' covers the whole story with detail and insight, revealing the nature of our institutions of education, based as they are, on authority and power. It is the more impressive for being written by a group of students and staff, not simply one pen, one idea. The sections of the book begin with quotations from {{l|Proudhon|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre-Joseph_Proudhon}}, {{l|Wilhelm Reich|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilhelm_Reich}}, {{l|Victor Serge|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victor_Serge}}, {{l|Debray|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R%C3%A9gis_Debray}}, {{l|McLuhan|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marshall_McLuhan}}, {{l|Gramsci<!-- 'Gransci' in original -->|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antonio_Gramsci}}, {{l|Saint-<wbr>Just|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Antoine_de_Saint-Just}}: (“Those who make a revolution by halves are only digging their own graves”), but beyond these thinkers and agitators are the students’ ''own'' statements. Their very own manifestos. Their own experiences within their very own quiet and drab buildings transformed into loud and colourful rooms of a living commune. A community based on real interests and common purposes. In miniature an example of the growing conflict between official man and unofficial man. Between the institution and the institution’s victims/<wbr>students/<wbr>patients/<wbr>tenants/<wbr>workers/<wbr>prisoners. Between the administrators and the | + | {{tab}}''The Hornsey Affair'' covers the whole story with detail and insight, revealing the nature of our institutions of education, based as they are, on authority and power. It is the more impressive for being written by a group of students and staff, not simply one pen, one idea. The sections of the book begin with quotations from {{l|Proudhon|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre-Joseph_Proudhon}}, {{l|Wilhelm Reich|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilhelm_Reich}}, {{l|Victor Serge|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victor_Serge}}, {{l|Debray|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R%C3%A9gis_Debray}}, {{l|McLuhan|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marshall_McLuhan}}, {{l|Gramsci<!-- 'Gransci' in original -->|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antonio_Gramsci}}, {{l|Saint-<wbr>Just|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Antoine_de_Saint-Just}}: (“Those who make a revolution by halves are only digging their own graves”), but beyond these thinkers and agitators are the students’ ''own'' statements. Their very own manifestos. Their own experiences within their very own quiet and drab buildings transformed into loud and colourful rooms of a living commune. A community based on real interests and common purposes. In miniature an example of the growing conflict between official man and unofficial man. Between the institution and the institution’s victims/<wbr>students/<wbr>patients/<wbr>tenants/<wbr>workers/<wbr>prisoners. Between the administrators and the inso­lent, unmanageable, self-<wbr>confident people who have outgrown administra­tion.</div> |
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Latest revision as of 13:37, 24 September 2016
There is a vicious circle, from school to college of education back to school, which goes on repeating a poor an unhelpful pattern of human relationships—the teacher afraid to relax, simply because he does not know how to do this without losing his authority; the child longing to break through, to find in this person who is so important to him more than the frosty player of a narrow role. |
and politics
of education
THE SCHOOL THAT I’D LIKE (Penguin Education Special), 4s.
THE HORNSEY AFFAIR (Penguin Education Special), 6s.
But the excitement of this selection of thoughts and ideas on school is the maturity and individuality of the young writers.
The social structure of colleges of education, the attitude of staff towards students, the apathy and acceptance of the authoritarian basis by the students, the school atmosphere of compulsory continuous lectures, bulwarked by the step from school to college—which is no step at all—all this creates the dull, conformist and petty personality of the majority of teachers in their “probationary” year. The majority is not all, but the minority are a handful, and are pushed around if they have their own ideas and strong convictions.I met five of the most independent students of one Midlands college of education, all of whom had been in difficulties with their course or their tutors and lecturers because of their independence. They were quite obviously students with their very own ideas, able to discuss and argue their views, and in doing so coming into conflict with staff members who were unable to accept, or who found ways to trivialize, any such personal but controversial views, let alone to listen to students as an organised body with rights and demands of adulthood.
Still less were these staff members able to comprehend the necessity for political societies within the college: political societies less concerned with party-
However, just as the students and supporting staff kept the college open 24 hours-
Beyond these human activities were the never-
s3 It is a truism in colleges of education that the child, youth, or student must be the centre of the educational process. Yet sometimes in the past students have been made to feel like things that exist for the convenience of academics, or uninteresting by-—richard bourne on Hornsey in the Guardian
s4 I have discussed so far the impact of the Hornsey revolt on the established order. I suspect its impact on the Left will be just as great and just as necessary. With a few exceptions (Wilde, Morris) the British Left has shared the philistinism of society as a whole; indeed this is one reason why its urge to transcendence has been so feeble in the political sphere. If the promise of this book is fulfilled, then it will release the student movement from this dismal inheritance. It has also been supplied with a splendid example of the truth that reforms, if implemented by direct mass action, are far more subversive than the most “revolutionary” of abstract programmes.
—robin blackburn on Hornsey in The Listener
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