Difference between revisions of "Anarchy 43/Progressive experience"

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<div style="text-align:justify;">{{sc|Our four children, all girls}}, were educa&shy;ted at {{l|Burgess Hill School|http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2134332/Sixties-school-Burgess-Hill-let-pupils-smoke-class-zoom-motorbikes--wanted.html}}, where the three eldest stayed until they were ready to leave. The young&shy;est had to change to a more con&shy;ven&shy;tional school when she was thir&shy;teen, because Burgess Hill closed down.
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<div style="text-align:justify;">{{sc|Our four children, all girls}}, were educa&shy;ted at {{l|Burgess Hill School|http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2134332/Sixties-school-Burgess-Hill-let-pupils-smoke-class-zoom-motorbikes--wanted.html|Daily Mail article}}, where the three eldest stayed until they were ready to leave. The young&shy;est had to change to a more con&shy;ven&shy;tional school when she was thir&shy;teen, because Burgess Hill closed down.
  
 
{{tab}}Their father and I had been educa&shy;ted at Public Schools, where we had both been un&shy;happy. His was worse than mine and his un&shy;hap&shy;pi&shy;ness was more acute. I made a sud&shy;den un&shy;pre&shy;medi&shy;ta&shy;ted at&shy;tempt to run away when I was six&shy;teen but I was seen from afar (we wore red jerseys under our gym-tunics) and brought back by the matron in a taxi.
 
{{tab}}Their father and I had been educa&shy;ted at Public Schools, where we had both been un&shy;happy. His was worse than mine and his un&shy;hap&shy;pi&shy;ness was more acute. I made a sud&shy;den un&shy;pre&shy;medi&shy;ta&shy;ted at&shy;tempt to run away when I was six&shy;teen but I was seen from afar (we wore red jerseys under our gym-tunics) and brought back by the matron in a taxi.
  
{{tab}}When we had chil&shy;dren of our own, we cast about for hap&shy;pier ways of educa&shy;ting them. Through an article by [[Author:Marie Louise Berneri|Marie Louise Berneri]], we became inter&shy;ested in {{w|Wilhelm Reich|Wilhelm_Reich}}. Then in [[Author:A. S. Neill|A. S. Neill]]. Look&shy;ing for Neill{{s}} books led us to {{w|Free&shy;dom Book&shy;shop|Freedom_Press}}. Someone in the book&shy;shop recom&shy;men&shy;ded Burgess Hill School, then in {{w|Hampstead|Hampstead}}, as being co-educa&shy;tional, fairly free and un&shy;ortho&shy;dox. It was also one of the few schools that didn{{t}} mind taking weekly board&shy;ers. Our chil&shy;dren had never wanted to be whole-<wbr>time board&shy;ers at any school; partly, I think, because I{{m}} a good cook, and we have a small farm with our won cow, so that they had always been used to good food. It would have been dif&shy;fi&shy;cult to get them to school daily because the farm is very iso&shy;la&shy;ted and I can{{t}} drive a car. There was a vil&shy;lage school four miles away, but it was only a prim&shy;ary school and the head&shy;mistress used the strap.
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{{tab}}When we had chil&shy;dren of our own, we cast about for hap&shy;pier ways of educa&shy;ting them. Through an article by [[Author:Marie Louise Berneri|Marie Louise Berneri]], we became inter&shy;ested in {{w|Wilhelm Reich|Wilhelm_Reich}}. Then in [[Author:A. S. Neill|A. S. Neill]]. Look&shy;ing for Neill{{s}} books led us to {{w|Free&shy;dom Book&shy;shop|Freedom_Press|Freedom Press}}. Someone in the book&shy;shop recom&shy;men&shy;ded Burgess Hill School, then in {{w|Hampstead|Hampstead}}, as being co-educa&shy;tional, fairly free and un&shy;ortho&shy;dox. It was also one of the few schools that didn{{t}} mind taking weekly board&shy;ers. Our chil&shy;dren had never wanted to be whole-time board&shy;ers at any school; partly, I think, because I{{m}} a good cook, and we have a small farm with our own cow, so that they had always been used to good food. It would have been dif&shy;fi&shy;cult to get them to school daily because the farm is very iso&shy;la&shy;ted and I can{{t}} drive a car. There was a vil&shy;lage school four miles away, but it was only a prim&shy;ary school and the head&shy;mistress used the strap.
  
{{tab}}When we first saw Burgess Hill School, Geoffrey Thorpe was the head&shy;master. He inver&shy;viewed us, or we inter&shy;viewed him{{dash|I think it was mutual}}sitting on hard chairs in a big bare room heated by a very meagre gas-fire. After&shy;wards we went round the school and found it ugly, untidy, bare and com&shy;fort&shy;less. Only the walls, covered with paint&shy;ings and draw&shy;ings, showed signs of creat&shy;ive activ&shy;ity. At the back there was a sooty looking garden with huge leaf&shy;less trees. But some&shy;where behind this un&shy;pre&shy;ten&shy;tious and for&shy;bid&shy;ing ex&shy;terior, we smelt a whiff of the free&shy;dom and non-<wbr>con&shy;form&shy;ity which we so wanted to in&shy;cor&shy;por&shy;ate in our children{{s|r}} educa&shy;tion. At any rate, we ar&shy;ranged for our two eldest daugh&shy;ters to start the next term. The school, though ex&shy;tremely poor and without any finan&shy;cial aid from the State, did all it could to help the chil&shy;dren of artists, actors and musi&shy;cians, and for years we paid the{{p|265}} ridi&shy;cu&shy;lously low fee of &pound;30 per child per term.
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{{tab}}When we first saw Burgess Hill School, Geoffrey Thorpe was the head&shy;master. He inver&shy;viewed us, or we inter&shy;viewed him—I think it was mutual—sitting on hard chairs in a big bare room heated by a very meagre gas-fire. After&shy;wards we went round the school and found it ugly, untidy, bare and com&shy;fort&shy;less. Only the walls, covered with paint&shy;ings and draw&shy;ings, showed signs of creat&shy;ive activ&shy;ity. At the back there was a sooty looking garden with huge leaf&shy;less trees. But some&shy;where behind this un&shy;pre&shy;ten&shy;tious and for&shy;bid&shy;ding ex&shy;terior, we smelt a whiff of the free&shy;dom and non-con&shy;form&shy;ity which we so wanted to in&shy;cor&shy;por&shy;ate in our children{{s|r}} educa&shy;tion. At any rate, we ar&shy;ranged for our two eldest daugh&shy;ters to start the next term. The school, though ex&shy;tremely poor and without any finan&shy;cial aid from the State, did all it could to help the chil&shy;dren of artists, actors and musi&shy;cians, and for years we paid the{{p|265}} ridi&shy;cu&shy;lously low fee of &pound;30 per child per term.
  
 
{{tab}}When our two eldest daugh&shy;ters started, Burgess Hill was not as com&shy;pletely un&shy;au&shy;thor&shy;it&shy;arian as it became later. There was no school uni&shy;form, smoking and swear&shy;ing were al&shy;lowed, but a few simple rules had to be obeyed. Les&shy;sons were com&shy;pul&shy;sory, though games were not. There were fixed hours for going to bed and get&shy;ting up. If you went out in the even&shy;ing you had to get per&shy;mis&shy;sion and say where you were going and when you would be back. There were rotas for wash&shy;ing up and help&shy;ing to clear away meals.
 
{{tab}}When our two eldest daugh&shy;ters started, Burgess Hill was not as com&shy;pletely un&shy;au&shy;thor&shy;it&shy;arian as it became later. There was no school uni&shy;form, smoking and swear&shy;ing were al&shy;lowed, but a few simple rules had to be obeyed. Les&shy;sons were com&shy;pul&shy;sory, though games were not. There were fixed hours for going to bed and get&shy;ting up. If you went out in the even&shy;ing you had to get per&shy;mis&shy;sion and say where you were going and when you would be back. There were rotas for wash&shy;ing up and help&shy;ing to clear away meals.
  
{{tab}}The teach&shy;ing was of a very high stand&shy;ard and the teach&shy;ers were more imagin&shy;at&shy;ive and ori&shy;ginal and less neuro&shy;tic than in most State schools. A school meet&shy;ing was held every week at which the chil&shy;dren aired their grievan&shy;ces and settled dis&shy;putes. There were no marks, pun&shy;ish&shy;ments or exam&shy;ina&shy;tions, but if chil&shy;dren wanted to take the State exam&shy;ina&shy;tions before they left, and many did, they could get all the help they needed. The theory was that any lively-<wbr>minded child could pass an exam&shy;ina&shy;tion if it wanted to, without all the pres&shy;sure, forcing and stuf&shy;fing that most state-<wbr>educa&shy;ted chil&shy;dren have to put up with. This theory was borne<!-- 'born' in original --> out by our eldest daugh&shy;ter, an aca&shy;demic type, who in&shy;sisted upon taking her {{w|General Cer&shy;ti&shy;ficate|General_Certificate_of_Secondary_Education}} after five years at Burgess Hill. She want on her own to Hampstead Town Hall and in spite of the fact that she had never taken an exam&shy;ina&shy;tion in her life, passed in five sub&shy;jects, getting nearly 100 per cent in both the French papers and over 80 per cent in both English papers. This is not written in a spirit of pride (I per&shy;son&shy;ally abomin&shy;ate exam&shy;ina&shy;tions and have never cared whether my chil&shy;dren passed any or not) but to refute the charge that schools like Burgess Hill can never get exam&shy;ina&shy;tion suc&shy;cesses.
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{{tab}}The teach&shy;ing was of a very high stand&shy;ard and the teach&shy;ers were more imagin&shy;at&shy;ive and ori&shy;ginal and less neuro&shy;tic than in most State schools. A school meet&shy;ing was held every week at which the chil&shy;dren aired their grievan&shy;ces and settled dis&shy;putes. There were no marks, pun&shy;ish&shy;ments or exam&shy;ina&shy;tions, but if chil&shy;dren wanted to take the State exam&shy;ina&shy;tions before they left, and many did, they could get all the help they needed. The theory was that any lively-minded child could pass an exam&shy;ina&shy;tion if it wanted to, without all the pres&shy;sure, forcing and stuf&shy;fing that most state-educa&shy;ted chil&shy;dren have to put up with. This theory was borne<!-- 'born' in original --> out by our eldest daugh&shy;ter, an aca&shy;demic type, who in&shy;sisted upon taking her {{w|General Cer&shy;ti&shy;ficate|General_Certificate_of_Secondary_Education|General Certificate of Secondary Education}} after five years at Burgess Hill. She went on her own to Hampstead Town Hall and in spite of the fact that she had never taken an exam&shy;ina&shy;tion in her life, passed in five sub&shy;jects, getting nearly 100 per cent in both the French papers and over 80 per cent in both English papers. This is not written in a spirit of pride (I per&shy;son&shy;ally abomin&shy;ate exam&shy;ina&shy;tions and have never cared whether my chil&shy;dren passed any or not) but to refute the charge that schools like Burgess Hill can never get exam&shy;ina&shy;tion suc&shy;cesses.
  
{{tab}}It was in Geoffrey Thorpe{{s}} time that the chil&shy;dren were asked to write end of term re&shy;ports on the teach&shy;ers and these were sent to the parents to&shy;gether with the re&shy;ports of the teach&shy;ers on the chil&shy;dren. In spite of some showing-<wbr>off, the chil&shy;dren were honest and were able to judge their own pro&shy;gress far better, in many ways, than the teach&shy;ers. I still have on eof these re&shy;ports headed: Pupil{{s}} Own Report. It reads like this:
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{{tab}}It was in Geoffrey Thorpe{{s}} time that the chil&shy;dren were asked to write end of term re&shy;ports on the teach&shy;ers and these were sent to the parents to&shy;gether with the re&shy;ports of the teach&shy;ers on the chil&shy;dren. In spite of some showing-off, the chil&shy;dren were honest and were able to judge their own pro&shy;gress far better, in many ways, than the teach&shy;ers. I still have one of these re&shy;ports headed: Pupil{{s}} Own Report. It reads like this:
  
 
<blockquote><font size="2">ENGLISH&nbsp; I have nothing to say. Peter thinks I haven{{t}} been work&shy;ing but I think I have.
 
<blockquote><font size="2">ENGLISH&nbsp; I have nothing to say. Peter thinks I haven{{t}} been work&shy;ing but I think I have.
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OTHER COMMENTS&nbsp; School meet&shy;ings are much better with John as Chair&shy;man and me as Se&shy;cret&shy;ary. I like ex&shy;pedi&shy;tions. I would like ''very much'' to do cook&shy;ing.</font></blockquote>
 
OTHER COMMENTS&nbsp; School meet&shy;ings are much better with John as Chair&shy;man and me as Se&shy;cret&shy;ary. I like ex&shy;pedi&shy;tions. I would like ''very much'' to do cook&shy;ing.</font></blockquote>
  
{{tab}}Of course, there were doubts, regrets and dif&shy;fi&shy;cul&shy;ties. The school, being toler&shy;ant and without racial pre&shy;jud&shy;ice, took in many prob&shy;lem chil&shy;dren who were often a great trial to the more normal pupils. A child {{p|266}}with violent tempers (during which she at&shy;tacked, shook and bit those near&shy;est to her) shared a bed&shy;room with two of our chil&shy;dren who became so ter&shy;ri&shy;fied of her that at one time we told Geoffrey Thorpe that either our chil&shy;dren or the prob&shy;lem would have to leave. The staff were very sym&shy;path&shy;etic but nobody wanted to aban&shy;don the dif&shy;fi&shy;cult child who had already been ex&shy;pelled or re&shy;jec&shy;ted by various State schools, and was un&shy;happy at home. In between tempers, the child was friendly and co-<wbr>oper&shy;at&shy;ive. The whole thing was dis&shy;cussed at a school meet&shy;ing when all the chil&shy;dren put their points of view and it was finally de&shy;cided to give our chil&shy;dren a body&shy;guard of tough boys who would come to their as&shy;sist&shy;ance at the onset of an at&shy;tack. As far as I re&shy;mem&shy;ber, the tan&shy;trums gradu&shy;ally de&shy;creased. Or per&shy;haps our chil&shy;dren, as they grew older, learnt how to deal with them.
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{{tab}}Of course, there were doubts, regrets and dif&shy;fi&shy;cul&shy;ties. The school, being toler&shy;ant and without racial pre&shy;jud&shy;ice, took in many prob&shy;lem chil&shy;dren who were often a great trial to the more normal pupils. A child {{p|266}}with violent tempers (during which she at&shy;tacked, shook and bit those near&shy;est to her) shared a bed&shy;room with two of our chil&shy;dren who became so ter&shy;ri&shy;fied of her that at one time we told Geoffrey Thorpe that either our chil&shy;dren or the prob&shy;lem would have to leave. The staff were very sym&shy;path&shy;etic but nobody wanted to aban&shy;don the dif&shy;fi&shy;cult child who had already been ex&shy;pelled or re&shy;jec&shy;ted by various State schools, and was un&shy;happy at home. In between tempers, the child was friendly and co-oper&shy;at&shy;ive. The whole thing was dis&shy;cussed at a school meet&shy;ing when all the chil&shy;dren put their points of view and it was finally de&shy;cided to give our chil&shy;dren a body&shy;guard of tough boys who would come to their as&shy;sist&shy;ance at the onset of an at&shy;tack. As far as I re&shy;mem&shy;ber, the tan&shy;trums gradu&shy;ally de&shy;creased. Or per&shy;haps our chil&shy;dren, as they grew older, learnt how to deal with them.
  
{{tab}}Another of our troubles was the Press. Pro&shy;gres&shy;sive Schools have a weak&shy;ness to open&shy;ing their doors to {{qq|sym&shy;path&shy;etic}} jour&shy;nal&shy;ists whose art&shy;icles always turn out to be any&shy;thing but sym&shy;path&shy;etic. The closing down of Burgess Hill was as&shy;sisted by two jour&shy;nal&shy;ists of this kind, who bought a bottle of whisky at a nearby pub and tried to per&shy;suade some of the chil&shy;dren to drink it so that they could take pic&shy;tures of them wal&shy;low&shy;ing in drunken orgy. As parents, we suf&shy;fered a good deal from seeing lurid pic&shy;tures of our chil&shy;dren used as il&shy;lust&shy;ra&shy;tions to un&shy;truth&shy;ful and sala&shy;cious art&shy;icles in the gutter-<wbr>press. Rela&shy;tions and friends harassed us with criti&shy;cism. Were our chil&shy;dren turning into savages? Were they learn&shy;ing enough? What would happen when they had to fend for them&shy;selves in the ''real'' world?
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{{tab}}Another of our troubles was the Press. Pro&shy;gres&shy;sive Schools have a weak&shy;ness to open&shy;ing their doors to {{qq|sym&shy;path&shy;etic}} jour&shy;nal&shy;ists whose art&shy;icles always turn out to be any&shy;thing but sym&shy;path&shy;etic. The closing down of Burgess Hill was as&shy;sisted by two jour&shy;nal&shy;ists of this kind, who bought a bottle of whisky at a nearby pub and tried to per&shy;suade some of the chil&shy;dren to drink it so that they could take pic&shy;tures of them wal&shy;low&shy;ing in a drunken orgy. As parents, we suf&shy;fered a good deal from seeing lurid pic&shy;tures of our chil&shy;dren used as il&shy;lust&shy;ra&shy;tions to un&shy;truth&shy;ful and sala&shy;cious art&shy;icles in the gutter-press. Rela&shy;tions and friends harassed us with criti&shy;cism. Were our chil&shy;dren turning into savages? Were they learn&shy;ing enough? What would happen when they had to fend for them&shy;selves in the ''real'' world?
  
{{tab}}Some of these ques&shy;tions we are now in a posi&shy;tion to answer. Two of the chil&shy;dren are self-<wbr>sup&shy;port&shy;ing. The eldest has held for several years a dif&shy;fi&shy;cult and re&shy;spons&shy;ible job re&shy;quir&shy;ing ex&shy;treme tact and for&shy;bear&shy;ance. If she had shown even the slight&shy;est in&shy;clin&shy;ation towards sa&shy;vagery, she would have been out on her ear at once. The young&shy;est child likes<!-- 'like' in original --> an oc&shy;ca&shy;sional cigar&shy;ette; the other three don{{t}} smoke. They are all ex&shy;cel&shy;lent cooks. Their sexual rela&shy;tion&shy;ships have varied ac&shy;cord&shy;ing to their tem&shy;pera&shy;ments, but so far un&shy;wanted babies have been avoided. They have a great af&shy;fec&shy;tion for us and we for them. What more could parents ask?
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{{tab}}Some of these ques&shy;tions we are now in a posi&shy;tion to answer. Two of the chil&shy;dren are self-sup&shy;port&shy;ing. The eldest has held for several years a dif&shy;fi&shy;cult and re&shy;spons&shy;ible job re&shy;quir&shy;ing ex&shy;treme tact and for&shy;bear&shy;ance. If she had shown even the slight&shy;est in&shy;clin&shy;ation towards sa&shy;vagery, she would have been out on her ear at once. The young&shy;est child likes<!-- 'like' in original --> an oc&shy;ca&shy;sional cigar&shy;ette; the other three don{{t}} smoke. They are all ex&shy;cel&shy;lent cooks. Their sexual rela&shy;tion&shy;ships have varied ac&shy;cord&shy;ing to their tem&shy;pera&shy;ments, but so far, un&shy;wanted babies have been avoided. They have a great af&shy;fec&shy;tion for us and we for them. What more could parents ask?
  
{{tab}}During the last few years, inter&shy;est and sup&shy;port for schools like Burgess Hill, has been growing less and less. When Geoffrey Thorpe retired and Jimmy East took over the head&shy;master&shy;ship, the numbers were already drop&shy;ping and the {{w|L.C.C.|London_County_Council}}, which had for years re&shy;garded Burgess Hill as an un&shy;sightly boil upon the re&shy;siden&shy;tial face of Frognall, had con&shy;demned the build&shy;ing because of sup&shy;posed bomb damage. Eventu&shy;ally, the house in Hampstead had to be evacu&shy;ated, and after frantic efforts to raise money to add to the miser&shy;able com&shy;pens&shy;a&shy;tion paid by the L.C.C., the school moved out to High Canons, a dere&shy;lict mansion in {{w|Hertford&shy;shire|Hertfordshire}}.
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{{tab}}During the last few years, inter&shy;est and sup&shy;port for schools like Burgess Hill, has been growing less and less. When Geoffrey Thorpe retired and Jimmy East took over the head&shy;master&shy;ship, the numbers were already drop&shy;ping and the {{w|L.C.C.|London_County_Council|London County Council}}, which had for years re&shy;garded Burgess Hill as an un&shy;sightly boil upon the re&shy;siden&shy;tial face of Frognall, had con&shy;demned the build&shy;ing because of sup&shy;posed bomb damage. Eventu&shy;ally, the house in Hampstead had to be evacu&shy;ated, and after frantic efforts to raise money to add to the miser&shy;able com&shy;pens&shy;a&shy;tion paid by the L.C.C., the school moved out to High Canons, a dere&shy;lict mansion in {{w|Hertford&shy;shire|Hertfordshire}}.
  
{{tab}}By this time, our two eldest had left and the two young&shy;est were in&shy;stalled. The school had become in some ways more anarch&shy;istic and ex&shy;peri&shy;mental. School meet&shy;ings con&shy;tinued, but car&shy;ried much more weight. The chil&shy;dren did really run school af&shy;fairs. Bed-<wbr>time and get&shy;ting-<wbr>up time were left to the child{{s}} dis&chy;cre&shy;tion. You could stay up all {{p|267}}night if you wished: some chil&shy;dren, who came from au&shy;thor&shy;it&shy;arian homes, did, at first. If you got up too late you missed your break&shy;fast. Les&shy;sons were no longer com&shy;puls&shy;ory. At the begin&shy;ning of each term, chil&shy;dren made con&shy;tracts with the teach&shy;ers whose les&shy;sons they wished to at&shy;tend. One child went to no les&shy;sons at all but planted out a big patch of garden where he worked all term, pro&shy;ducing a wonder&shy;ful crop of vege&shy;tables and flowers for his grand&shy;mother, who looked after him. Re&shy;ports were abol&shy;ished. We rather missed them but made do with verbal ones. I think Jimmy East felt that re&shy;ports were in&shy;con&shy;gru&shy;ous when staff and chil&shy;dren lived on such equal terms.
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{{tab}}By this time, our two eldest had left and the two young&shy;est were in&shy;stalled. The school had become in some ways more anarch&shy;istic and ex&shy;peri&shy;mental. School meet&shy;ings con&shy;tinued, but car&shy;ried much more weight. The chil&shy;dren did really run school af&shy;fairs. Bed-time and get&shy;ting-up time were left to the child{{s}} dis&shy;cre&shy;tion. You could stay up all {{p|267}}night if you wished: some chil&shy;dren, who came from au&shy;thor&shy;it&shy;arian homes, did, at first. If you got up too late you missed your break&shy;fast. Les&shy;sons were no longer com&shy;puls&shy;ory. At the begin&shy;ning of each term, chil&shy;dren made con&shy;tracts with the teach&shy;ers whose les&shy;sons they wished to at&shy;tend. One child went to no les&shy;sons at all but planted out a big patch of garden where he worked all term, pro&shy;ducing a wonder&shy;ful crop of vege&shy;tables and flowers for his grand&shy;mother, who looked after him. Re&shy;ports were abol&shy;ished. We rather missed them but made do with verbal ones. I think Jimmy East felt that re&shy;ports were in&shy;con&shy;gru&shy;ous when staff and chil&shy;dren lived on such equal terms.
  
{{tab}}At High Canons, the staff problem, both dom&shy;estic and aca&shy;demic, became much more acute. No-<wbr>one who has not actu&shy;ally had chil&shy;dren at a Pro&shy;gres&shy;sive School, can real&shy;ise the awful con&shy;di&shy;tions, due to per&shy;petual short&shy;age of money, which such places have to con&shy;tend with. Not only is the teach&shy;ing of volun&shy;tary pupils more ex&shy;haust&shy;ing than the teach&shy;ing of con&shy;scripts, but the staff and chil&shy;dren have to cope with most of the dom&shy;estic duties as well. Jimmy East was a very com&shy;pet&shy;ent cook, but it wore him out and short&shy;ened his teach&shy;ing periods. One of the things that Burgess Hill can be said to have proved is that chil&shy;dren, what&shy;ever their home en&shy;vir&shy;on&shy;ment, are not natur&shy;ally tidy and clean.
+
{{tab}}At High Canons, the staff problem, both dom&shy;estic and aca&shy;demic, became much more acute. No-one who has not actu&shy;ally had chil&shy;dren at a Pro&shy;gres&shy;sive School, can real&shy;ise the awful con&shy;di&shy;tions, due to per&shy;petual short&shy;age of money, which such places have to con&shy;tend with. Not only is the teach&shy;ing of volun&shy;tary pupils more ex&shy;haust&shy;ing than the teach&shy;ing of con&shy;scripts, but the staff and chil&shy;dren have to cope with most of the dom&shy;estic duties as well. Jimmy East was a very com&shy;pet&shy;ent cook, but it wore him out and short&shy;ened his teach&shy;ing periods. One of the things that Burgess Hill can be said to have proved is that chil&shy;dren, what&shy;ever their home en&shy;vir&shy;on&shy;ment, are not natur&shy;ally tidy and clean.
  
{{tab}}The move from Hampstead to Hertford&shy;shire might have put new life into Burgess Hill, but, in fact, it killed it. For one thing, a huge finan&shy;cial debt was in&shy;curred, which lay like a dead&shy;weight on staff, parents and even chil&shy;dren. There is no doubt that all those forty-<wbr>five chil&shy;dren who fol&shy;lowed Burgess Hill from town to country, cared enorm&shy;ously about the school. You had only to see the ef&shy;forts they made when they heard that the School In&shy;spect&shy;ors were coming, the start&shy;lingly beau&shy;ti&shy;ful mural that two of them painted along one wall of the vast dining-<wbr>room, the pride they took in show&shy;ing visit&shy;ors round, to realise how they felt.
+
{{tab}}The move from Hampstead to Hertford&shy;shire might have put new life into Burgess Hill, but, in fact, it killed it. For one thing, a huge finan&shy;cial debt was in&shy;curred, which lay like a dead&shy;weight on staff, parents and even chil&shy;dren. There is no doubt that all those forty-five chil&shy;dren who fol&shy;lowed Burgess Hill from town to country, cared enorm&shy;ously about the school. You had only to see the ef&shy;forts they made when they heard that the School In&shy;spect&shy;ors were coming, the start&shy;lingly beau&shy;ti&shy;ful mural that two of them painted along one wall of the vast dining-room, the pride they took in show&shy;ing visit&shy;ors round, to realise how they felt.
  
 
{{tab}}It was the adults who bickered, vacil&shy;lated, were un&shy;reli&shy;able and failed to clar&shy;ify, let alone live up to their ideals.
 
{{tab}}It was the adults who bickered, vacil&shy;lated, were un&shy;reli&shy;able and failed to clar&shy;ify, let alone live up to their ideals.

Latest revision as of 01:36, 26 September 2021


264

Progressive
experience

OLIVE MARKHAM


Our four children, all girls, were educa­ted at Burgess Hill School, where the three eldest stayed until they were ready to leave. The young­est had to change to a more con­ven­tional school when she was thir­teen, because Burgess Hill closed down.

  Their father and I had been educa­ted at Public Schools, where we had both been un­happy. His was worse than mine and his un­hap­pi­ness was more acute. I made a sud­den un­pre­medi­ta­ted at­tempt to run away when I was six­teen but I was seen from afar (we wore red jerseys under our gym-tunics) and brought back by the matron in a taxi.

  When we had chil­dren of our own, we cast about for hap­pier ways of educa­ting them. Through an article by Marie Louise Berneri, we became inter­ested in Wilhelm Reich. Then in A. S. Neill. Look­ing for Neill’s books led us to Free­dom Book­shop. Someone in the book­shop recom­men­ded Burgess Hill School, then in Hampstead, as being co-educa­tional, fairly free and un­ortho­dox. It was also one of the few schools that didn’t mind taking weekly board­ers. Our chil­dren had never wanted to be whole-time board­ers at any school; partly, I think, because I’m a good cook, and we have a small farm with our own cow, so that they had always been used to good food. It would have been dif­fi­cult to get them to school daily because the farm is very iso­la­ted and I can’t drive a car. There was a vil­lage school four miles away, but it was only a prim­ary school and the head­mistress used the strap.

  When we first saw Burgess Hill School, Geoffrey Thorpe was the head­master. He inver­viewed us, or we inter­viewed him—I think it was mutual—sitting on hard chairs in a big bare room heated by a very meagre gas-fire. After­wards we went round the school and found it ugly, untidy, bare and com­fort­less. Only the walls, covered with paint­ings and draw­ings, showed signs of creat­ive activ­ity. At the back there was a sooty looking garden with huge leaf­less trees. But some­where behind this un­pre­ten­tious and for­bid­ding ex­terior, we smelt a whiff of the free­dom and non-con­form­ity which we so wanted to in­cor­por­ate in our childrens’ educa­tion. At any rate, we ar­ranged for our two eldest daugh­ters to start the next term. The school, though ex­tremely poor and without any finan­cial aid from the State, did all it could to help the chil­dren of artists, actors and musi­cians, and for years we paid the
265
ridi­cu­lously low fee of £30 per child per term.

  When our two eldest daugh­ters started, Burgess Hill was not as com­pletely un­au­thor­it­arian as it became later. There was no school uni­form, smoking and swear­ing were al­lowed, but a few simple rules had to be obeyed. Les­sons were com­pul­sory, though games were not. There were fixed hours for going to bed and get­ting up. If you went out in the even­ing you had to get per­mis­sion and say where you were going and when you would be back. There were rotas for wash­ing up and help­ing to clear away meals.

  The teach­ing was of a very high stand­ard and the teach­ers were more imagin­at­ive and ori­ginal and less neuro­tic than in most State schools. A school meet­ing was held every week at which the chil­dren aired their grievan­ces and settled dis­putes. There were no marks, pun­ish­ments or exam­ina­tions, but if chil­dren wanted to take the State exam­ina­tions before they left, and many did, they could get all the help they needed. The theory was that any lively-minded child could pass an exam­ina­tion if it wanted to, without all the pres­sure, forcing and stuf­fing that most state-educa­ted chil­dren have to put up with. This theory was borne out by our eldest daugh­ter, an aca­demic type, who in­sisted upon taking her General Cer­ti­ficate after five years at Burgess Hill. She went on her own to Hampstead Town Hall and in spite of the fact that she had never taken an exam­ina­tion in her life, passed in five sub­jects, getting nearly 100 per cent in both the French papers and over 80 per cent in both English papers. This is not written in a spirit of pride (I per­son­ally abomin­ate exam­ina­tions and have never cared whether my chil­dren passed any or not) but to refute the charge that schools like Burgess Hill can never get exam­ina­tion suc­cesses.

  It was in Geoffrey Thorpe’s time that the chil­dren were asked to write end of term re­ports on the teach­ers and these were sent to the parents to­gether with the re­ports of the teach­ers on the chil­dren. In spite of some showing-off, the chil­dren were honest and were able to judge their own pro­gress far better, in many ways, than the teach­ers. I still have one of these re­ports headed: Pupil’s Own Report. It reads like this:

ENGLISH  I have nothing to say. Peter thinks I haven’t been work­ing but I think I have.

GEOGRAPHY  I don’t think I take it quite seri­ously enough. I haven’t done enough work on it.

SCIENCE  I like it very much and have worked quite hard. Mary is very help­ful and cheer­ful.

FRENCH  I know a lot of vo­cab­ulary. But I’ll have to do more essays.

ART  I have done some good things in clay and was just “let­ting myself go” over a paint­ing only it was burnt which is rather a waste.

GAMES AND SPORTS  Hockey I like. It would do John Rhodes good to play.

OTHER COMMENTS  School meet­ings are much better with John as Chair­man and me as Se­cret­ary. I like ex­pedi­tions. I would like very much to do cook­ing.

  Of course, there were doubts, regrets and dif­fi­cul­ties. The school, being toler­ant and without racial pre­jud­ice, took in many prob­lem chil­dren who were often a great trial to the more normal pupils. A child
266
with violent tempers (during which she at­tacked, shook and bit those near­est to her) shared a bed­room with two of our chil­dren who became so ter­ri­fied of her that at one time we told Geoffrey Thorpe that either our chil­dren or the prob­lem would have to leave. The staff were very sym­path­etic but nobody wanted to aban­don the dif­fi­cult child who had already been ex­pelled or re­jec­ted by various State schools, and was un­happy at home. In between tempers, the child was friendly and co-oper­at­ive. The whole thing was dis­cussed at a school meet­ing when all the chil­dren put their points of view and it was finally de­cided to give our chil­dren a body­guard of tough boys who would come to their as­sist­ance at the onset of an at­tack. As far as I re­mem­ber, the tan­trums gradu­ally de­creased. Or per­haps our chil­dren, as they grew older, learnt how to deal with them.

  Another of our troubles was the Press. Pro­gres­sive Schools have a weak­ness to open­ing their doors to “sym­path­etic” jour­nal­ists whose art­icles always turn out to be any­thing but sym­path­etic. The closing down of Burgess Hill was as­sisted by two jour­nal­ists of this kind, who bought a bottle of whisky at a nearby pub and tried to per­suade some of the chil­dren to drink it so that they could take pic­tures of them wal­low­ing in a drunken orgy. As parents, we suf­fered a good deal from seeing lurid pic­tures of our chil­dren used as il­lust­ra­tions to un­truth­ful and sala­cious art­icles in the gutter-press. Rela­tions and friends harassed us with criti­cism. Were our chil­dren turning into savages? Were they learn­ing enough? What would happen when they had to fend for them­selves in the real world?

  Some of these ques­tions we are now in a posi­tion to answer. Two of the chil­dren are self-sup­port­ing. The eldest has held for several years a dif­fi­cult and re­spons­ible job re­quir­ing ex­treme tact and for­bear­ance. If she had shown even the slight­est in­clin­ation towards sa­vagery, she would have been out on her ear at once. The young­est child likes an oc­ca­sional cigar­ette; the other three don’t smoke. They are all ex­cel­lent cooks. Their sexual rela­tion­ships have varied ac­cord­ing to their tem­pera­ments, but so far, un­wanted babies have been avoided. They have a great af­fec­tion for us and we for them. What more could parents ask?

  During the last few years, inter­est and sup­port for schools like Burgess Hill, has been growing less and less. When Geoffrey Thorpe retired and Jimmy East took over the head­master­ship, the numbers were already drop­ping and the L.C.C., which had for years re­garded Burgess Hill as an un­sightly boil upon the re­siden­tial face of Frognall, had con­demned the build­ing because of sup­posed bomb damage. Eventu­ally, the house in Hampstead had to be evacu­ated, and after frantic efforts to raise money to add to the miser­able com­pens­a­tion paid by the L.C.C., the school moved out to High Canons, a dere­lict mansion in Hertford­shire.

  By this time, our two eldest had left and the two young­est were in­stalled. The school had become in some ways more anarch­istic and ex­peri­mental. School meet­ings con­tinued, but car­ried much more weight. The chil­dren did really run school af­fairs. Bed-time and get­ting-up time were left to the child’s dis­cre­tion. You could stay up all
267
night if you wished: some chil­dren, who came from au­thor­it­arian homes, did, at first. If you got up too late you missed your break­fast. Les­sons were no longer com­puls­ory. At the begin­ning of each term, chil­dren made con­tracts with the teach­ers whose les­sons they wished to at­tend. One child went to no les­sons at all but planted out a big patch of garden where he worked all term, pro­ducing a wonder­ful crop of vege­tables and flowers for his grand­mother, who looked after him. Re­ports were abol­ished. We rather missed them but made do with verbal ones. I think Jimmy East felt that re­ports were in­con­gru­ous when staff and chil­dren lived on such equal terms.

  At High Canons, the staff problem, both dom­estic and aca­demic, became much more acute. No-one who has not actu­ally had chil­dren at a Pro­gres­sive School, can real­ise the awful con­di­tions, due to per­petual short­age of money, which such places have to con­tend with. Not only is the teach­ing of volun­tary pupils more ex­haust­ing than the teach­ing of con­scripts, but the staff and chil­dren have to cope with most of the dom­estic duties as well. Jimmy East was a very com­pet­ent cook, but it wore him out and short­ened his teach­ing periods. One of the things that Burgess Hill can be said to have proved is that chil­dren, what­ever their home en­vir­on­ment, are not natur­ally tidy and clean.

  The move from Hampstead to Hertford­shire might have put new life into Burgess Hill, but, in fact, it killed it. For one thing, a huge finan­cial debt was in­curred, which lay like a dead­weight on staff, parents and even chil­dren. There is no doubt that all those forty-five chil­dren who fol­lowed Burgess Hill from town to country, cared enorm­ously about the school. You had only to see the ef­forts they made when they heard that the School In­spect­ors were coming, the start­lingly beau­ti­ful mural that two of them painted along one wall of the vast dining-room, the pride they took in show­ing visit­ors round, to realise how they felt.

  It was the adults who bickered, vacil­lated, were un­reli­able and failed to clar­ify, let alone live up to their ideals.

  Even so, behind all the ambi­gu­ities and ex­cuses, a real spirit of toler­ance and free­dom, unique in many of its ex­pres­sions, existed in Burgess Hill to the end. An imagin­at­ive Ministry of Education might have thought it worth­while to pre­serve such a place, if only as a study for an­throp­olo­gists.