Difference between revisions of "Anarchy 43/Progressive experience"
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− | <div style="text-align:justify;">{{sc|Our four children, all girls}}, were educa­ted 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 young­est had to change to a more con­ven­tional school when she was thir­teen, because Burgess Hill closed down. | + | <div style="text-align:justify;">{{sc|Our four children, all girls}}, were educa­ted 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 young­est had to change to a more con­ven­tional school when she was thir­teen, because Burgess Hill closed down. |
{{tab}}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. | {{tab}}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. | ||
− | {{tab}}When we had chil­dren of our own, we cast about for hap­pier ways of educa­ting them. Through an article by [[Author:Marie Louise Berneri|Marie Louise Berneri]], we became inter­ested in {{w|Wilhelm Reich|Wilhelm_Reich}}. Then in [[Author:A. S. Neill|A. S. Neill]]. Look­ing for Neill{{s}} books led us to {{w|Free­dom Book­shop|Freedom_Press}}. Someone in the book­shop recom­men­ded Burgess Hill School, then in {{w|Hampstead|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- | + | {{tab}}When we had chil­dren of our own, we cast about for hap­pier ways of educa­ting them. Through an article by [[Author:Marie Louise Berneri|Marie Louise Berneri]], we became inter­ested in {{w|Wilhelm Reich|Wilhelm_Reich}}. Then in [[Author:A. S. Neill|A. S. Neill]]. Look­ing for Neill{{s}} books led us to {{w|Free­dom Book­shop|Freedom_Press|Freedom Press}}. Someone in the book­shop recom­men­ded Burgess Hill School, then in {{w|Hampstead|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. |
− | {{tab}}When we first saw Burgess Hill School, Geoffrey Thorpe was the head­master. He inver­viewed us, or we inter­viewed | + | {{tab}}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 children{{s|r}} 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{{p|265}} ridi­cu­lously low fee of £30 per child per term. |
{{tab}}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. | {{tab}}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. | ||
− | {{tab}}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- | + | {{tab}}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<!-- 'born' in original --> out by our eldest daugh­ter, an aca­demic type, who in­sisted upon taking her {{w|General Cer­ti­ficate|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 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. |
− | {{tab}}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- | + | {{tab}}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: |
<blockquote><font size="2">ENGLISH I have nothing to say. Peter thinks I haven{{t}} been work­ing but I think I have. | <blockquote><font size="2">ENGLISH I have nothing to say. Peter thinks I haven{{t}} been work­ing but I think I have. | ||
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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.</font></blockquote> | 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.</font></blockquote> | ||
− | {{tab}}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 {{p|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- | + | {{tab}}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 {{p|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. |
− | {{tab}}Another of our troubles was the Press. Pro­gres­sive Schools have a weak­ness to open­ing their doors to {{qq|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 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- | + | {{tab}}Another of our troubles was the Press. Pro­gres­sive Schools have a weak­ness to open­ing their doors to {{qq|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? |
− | {{tab}}Some of these ques­tions we are now in a posi­tion to answer. Two of the chil­dren are self- | + | {{tab}}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<!-- 'like' in original --> 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? |
− | {{tab}}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 {{w|L.C.C.|London_County_Council}}, 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 {{w|Hertford­shire|Hertfordshire}}. | + | {{tab}}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 {{w|L.C.C.|London_County_Council|London County Council}}, 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 {{w|Hertford­shire|Hertfordshire}}. |
− | {{tab}}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- | + | {{tab}}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 {{p|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. |
− | {{tab}}At High Canons, the staff problem, both dom­estic and aca­demic, became much more acute. No- | + | {{tab}}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. |
− | {{tab}}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- | + | {{tab}}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. |
{{tab}}It was the adults who bickered, vacil­lated, were un­reli­able and failed to clar­ify, let alone live up to their ideals. | {{tab}}It was the adults who bickered, vacil­lated, were un­reli­able and failed to clar­ify, let alone live up to their ideals. |
Latest revision as of 01:36, 26 September 2021
Progressive
experience
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 theWhen 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:
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 childENGLISH 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.
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 allAt 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.