Difference between revisions of "Anarchy 43/Stunted to school"

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  | title      = [[../|ANARCHY 43 (Vol 4 No 9) SEPTEMBER 1964]]<br>Stunted to school
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  | title      = [[../|ANARCHY 43 (Vol 4 No 9) September 1964]]<br>Stunted to school
 
  | author    = Leila Berg
 
  | author    = Leila Berg
 
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<div style="text-align:justify;">{{sc|It seems strange to me that people should fight}} so hard, and so rightly, over edu&shy;ca&shy;tion for chil&shy;dren from five up&shy;wards{{dash|prim&shy;ary, second&shy;ary, uni&shy;ver&shy;sity}}and not care at all what has hap&shy;pened to the child before this.
+
<div style="text-align:justify;">{{sc|It seems strange to me that people should fight}} so hard, and so rightly, over edu&shy;ca&shy;tion for chil&shy;dren from five up&shy;wards—prim&shy;ary, second&shy;ary, uni&shy;ver&shy;sity—and not care at all what has hap&shy;pened to the child before this.
  
{{tab}}For their first five years, thou&shy;sands of our chil&shy;dren are un&shy;able to grow. They live in flats{{dash|new flats}}where their mothers have to keep all win&shy;dows per&shy;man&shy;ently locked be&shy;cause the child might climb and fall to the con&shy;crete ground; where the bal&shy;con&shy;ies, the only nearby play-<wbr>space, are also kept per&shy;man&shy;ently locked be&shy;cause the walls have been built too low; where the inside walls and floors are so thin, and let so much noise through, that chil&shy;dren cannot run across the floor to greet their father when he comes home from work; where mothers walk round and round the block with the baby in the pram and the small chil&shy;dren hang&shy;ing on to the pram handle be&shy;cause father, who is work&shy;ing nights, is asleep; where the chil&shy;dren who cannot play up&shy;stairs cannot play down&shy;stairs either be&shy;cause the mother{{dash|eight or nine stories up}}cannot see them, or get to them quickly when they need her, and dan&shy;ger&shy;ous traf&shy;fic runs nearby.
+
{{tab}}For their first five years, thou&shy;sands of our chil&shy;dren are un&shy;able to grow. They live in flats—new flats—where their mothers have to keep all win&shy;dows per&shy;man&shy;ently locked be&shy;cause the child might climb and fall to the con&shy;crete ground; where the bal&shy;con&shy;ies, the only nearby play-<wbr>space, are also kept per&shy;man&shy;ently locked be&shy;cause the walls have been built too low; where the inside walls and floors are so thin, and let so much noise through, that chil&shy;dren cannot run across the floor to greet their father when he comes home from work; where mothers walk round and round the block with the baby in the pram and the small chil&shy;dren hang&shy;ing on to the pram handle be&shy;cause father, who is work&shy;ing nights, is asleep; where the chil&shy;dren who cannot play up&shy;stairs cannot play down&shy;stairs either be&shy;cause the mother—eight or nine stories up—cannot see them, or get to them quickly when they need her, and dan&shy;ger&shy;ous traf&shy;fic runs nearby.
  
{{tab}}It is, ironic&shy;ally, the grad&shy;ual real&shy;isa&shy;tion that there must surely be a better, saner, hap&shy;pier, more hu&shy;man way of liv&shy;ing than this, that will fin&shy;ally break the ban on nurs&shy;ery school build&shy;ing. Mothers cannot go on like this much longer. I heard re&shy;cently of one who ar&shy;rived hys&shy;ter&shy;ical at a nurs&shy;ery school that was al&shy;ready filled to capa&shy;city, and said if they would not take her chil&shy;dren she would aban&shy;don them; they took them{{dash}}and now she has begun to have joy in them.
+
{{tab}}It is, ironic&shy;ally, the grad&shy;ual real&shy;isa&shy;tion that there must surely be a better, saner, hap&shy;pier, more hu&shy;man way of liv&shy;ing than this, that will fin&shy;ally break the ban on nurs&shy;ery school build&shy;ing. Mothers cannot go on like this much longer. I heard re&shy;cently of one who ar&shy;rived hys&shy;ter&shy;ical at a nurs&shy;ery school that was al&shy;ready filled to capa&shy;city, and said if they would not take her chil&shy;dren she would aban&shy;don them; they took them—and now she has begun to have joy in them.
  
{{tab}}So mothers come to the nurs&shy;ery school with chil&shy;dren whose in&shy;fant edu&shy;ca&shy;tion has al&shy;ready been stun&shy;ted by their en&shy;vir&shy;on&shy;ment, and those of them who are lucky enough to get in{{dash|how piti&shy;fully in&shy;ad&shy;equate the num&shy;ber is}}begin to grow.
+
{{tab}}So mothers come to the nurs&shy;ery school with chil&shy;dren whose in&shy;fant edu&shy;ca&shy;tion has al&shy;ready been stun&shy;ted by their en&shy;vir&shy;on&shy;ment, and those of them who are lucky enough to get in—how piti&shy;fully in&shy;ad&shy;equate the num&shy;ber is—begin to grow.
  
{{tab}}They have space, they have a tran&shy;quil and in&shy;ter&shy;ested love, they have time, the long time of child&shy;hood, that is abund&shy;antly theirs, they have ac&shy;cess to the basic things{{dash|sand, water, earth, grass, and clay, with a flow&shy;ing chan&shy;ging un&shy;cramped sky above}}and they begin to make rela&shy;tion&shy;ships, to ap&shy;pre&shy;ciate first them&shy;selves and then other people as unique hu&shy;man beings. They begin to make pat&shy;terns of casual co-<wbr>oper&shy;at&shy;{{p|258}}ing that is very beauti&shy;ful to see, like ballet.
+
{{tab}}They have space, they have a tran&shy;quil and in&shy;ter&shy;ested love, they have time, the long time of child&shy;hood, that is abund&shy;antly theirs, they have ac&shy;cess to the basic things—sand, water, earth, grass, and clay, with a flow&shy;ing chan&shy;ging un&shy;cramped sky above—and they begin to make rela&shy;tion&shy;ships, to ap&shy;pre&shy;ciate first them&shy;selves and then other people as unique hu&shy;man beings. They begin to make pat&shy;terns of casual co-<wbr>oper&shy;at&shy;{{p|258}}ing that is very beauti&shy;ful to see, like ballet.
  
{{tab}}And their parents too begin to grow. In nurs&shy;ery schools, parents are wel&shy;come, parents are part of the whole edu&shy;ca&shy;tional vision. There are no notices in nurs&shy;ery schools that say {{qq|Parents may not come beyond this point.}} They are not kept out&shy;side the gates while their chil&shy;dren scream for them. They come in with the chil&shy;dren, and they stay, and they talk and watch and dis&shy;cuss and won&shy;der. The real&shy;isa&shy;tion comes to them that it is pos&shy;sible to ''re&shy;joice'' in a child{{s}} laugh&shy;ter, a child{{s}} dan&shy;cing, a child{{s}} ex&shy;plor&shy;ing, a child{{s}} de&shy;velop&shy;ing skills, a child{{s}} grow&shy;ing in&shy;de&shy;pend&shy;ence, a child{{s}} glee. All these things, which had been so twist&shy;ing them with anxi&shy;ety and anger, for they saw them only as a threat, be&shy;cause their en&shy;vir&shy;on&shy;ment had be&shy;come more im&shy;port&shy;ant to them than the child, they begin at last to see as the hu&shy;man herit&shy;age. They sud&shy;denly see that to be&shy;have like this{{dash|joy&shy;ously, spon&shy;tan&shy;eously, curi&shy;ously}}is ''pos&shy;sible''. Nothing dread&shy;ful hap&shy;pens. The<!-- 'They' in original --> sky does not fall. Their chil&shy;dren are happy, not de&shy;praved. And then they see that what is wrong is their en&shy;vir&shy;on&shy;ment, the way they are liv&shy;ing. And this they will then begin to change.
+
{{tab}}And their parents too begin to grow. In nurs&shy;ery schools, parents are wel&shy;come, parents are part of the whole edu&shy;ca&shy;tional vision. There are no notices in nurs&shy;ery schools that say {{qq|Parents may not come beyond this point.}} They are not kept out&shy;side the gates while their chil&shy;dren scream for them. They come in with the chil&shy;dren, and they stay, and they talk and watch and dis&shy;cuss and won&shy;der. The real&shy;isa&shy;tion comes to them that it is pos&shy;sible to ''re&shy;joice'' in a child{{s}} laugh&shy;ter, a child{{s}} dan&shy;cing, a child{{s}} ex&shy;plor&shy;ing, a child{{s}} de&shy;velop&shy;ing skills, a child{{s}} grow&shy;ing in&shy;de&shy;pend&shy;ence, a child{{s}} glee. All these things, which had been so twist&shy;ing them with anxi&shy;ety and anger, for they saw them only as a threat, be&shy;cause their en&shy;vir&shy;on&shy;ment had be&shy;come more im&shy;port&shy;ant to them than the child, they begin at last to see as the hu&shy;man herit&shy;age. They sud&shy;denly see that to be&shy;have like this—joy&shy;ously, spon&shy;tan&shy;eously, curi&shy;ously—is ''pos&shy;sible''. Nothing dread&shy;ful hap&shy;pens. The<!-- 'They' in original --> sky does not fall. Their chil&shy;dren are happy, not de&shy;praved. And then they see that what is wrong is their en&shy;vir&shy;on&shy;ment, the way they are liv&shy;ing. And this they will then begin to change.
  
 
{{tab}}Then we will have homes where chil&shy;dren can play toge&shy;ther, where they can have cats and rab&shy;bits, where they can dance and sing with&shy;out guilt. We will have as many nurs&shy;ery schools as mothers need, be&shy;cause small chil&shy;dren, even in the best of homes, need a bridge into the out&shy;side world. And then the child&shy;ren will not come al&shy;ready stun&shy;ted to the prim&shy;ary schools.
 
{{tab}}Then we will have homes where chil&shy;dren can play toge&shy;ther, where they can have cats and rab&shy;bits, where they can dance and sing with&shy;out guilt. We will have as many nurs&shy;ery schools as mothers need, be&shy;cause small chil&shy;dren, even in the best of homes, need a bridge into the out&shy;side world. And then the child&shy;ren will not come al&shy;ready stun&shy;ted to the prim&shy;ary schools.

Latest revision as of 01:20, 26 September 2021


257

Stunted
to school

LEILA BERG


It seems strange to me that people should fight so hard, and so rightly, over edu­ca­tion for chil­dren from five up­wards—prim­ary, second­ary, uni­ver­sity—and not care at all what has hap­pened to the child before this.

  For their first five years, thou­sands of our chil­dren are un­able to grow. They live in flats—new flats—where their mothers have to keep all win­dows per­man­ently locked be­cause the child might climb and fall to the con­crete ground; where the bal­con­ies, the only nearby play-space, are also kept per­man­ently locked be­cause the walls have been built too low; where the inside walls and floors are so thin, and let so much noise through, that chil­dren cannot run across the floor to greet their father when he comes home from work; where mothers walk round and round the block with the baby in the pram and the small chil­dren hang­ing on to the pram handle be­cause father, who is work­ing nights, is asleep; where the chil­dren who cannot play up­stairs cannot play down­stairs either be­cause the mother—eight or nine stories up—cannot see them, or get to them quickly when they need her, and dan­ger­ous traf­fic runs nearby.

  It is, ironic­ally, the grad­ual real­isa­tion that there must surely be a better, saner, hap­pier, more hu­man way of liv­ing than this, that will fin­ally break the ban on nurs­ery school build­ing. Mothers cannot go on like this much longer. I heard re­cently of one who ar­rived hys­ter­ical at a nurs­ery school that was al­ready filled to capa­city, and said if they would not take her chil­dren she would aban­don them; they took them—and now she has begun to have joy in them.

  So mothers come to the nurs­ery school with chil­dren whose in­fant edu­ca­tion has al­ready been stun­ted by their en­vir­on­ment, and those of them who are lucky enough to get in—how piti­fully in­ad­equate the num­ber is—begin to grow.

  They have space, they have a tran­quil and in­ter­ested love, they have time, the long time of child­hood, that is abund­antly theirs, they have ac­cess to the basic things—sand, water, earth, grass, and clay, with a flow­ing chan­ging un­cramped sky above—and they begin to make rela­tion­ships, to ap­pre­ciate first them­selves and then other people as unique hu­man beings. They begin to make pat­terns of casual co-oper­at­
258
ing that is very beauti­ful to see, like ballet.

  And their parents too begin to grow. In nurs­ery schools, parents are wel­come, parents are part of the whole edu­ca­tional vision. There are no notices in nurs­ery schools that say “Parents may not come beyond this point.” They are not kept out­side the gates while their chil­dren scream for them. They come in with the chil­dren, and they stay, and they talk and watch and dis­cuss and won­der. The real­isa­tion comes to them that it is pos­sible to re­joice in a child’s laugh­ter, a child’s dan­cing, a child’s ex­plor­ing, a child’s de­velop­ing skills, a child’s grow­ing in­de­pend­ence, a child’s glee. All these things, which had been so twist­ing them with anxi­ety and anger, for they saw them only as a threat, be­cause their en­vir­on­ment had be­come more im­port­ant to them than the child, they begin at last to see as the hu­man herit­age. They sud­denly see that to be­have like this—joy­ously, spon­tan­eously, curi­ously—is pos­sible. Nothing dread­ful hap­pens. The sky does not fall. Their chil­dren are happy, not de­praved. And then they see that what is wrong is their en­vir­on­ment, the way they are liv­ing. And this they will then begin to change.

  Then we will have homes where chil­dren can play toge­ther, where they can have cats and rab­bits, where they can dance and sing with­out guilt. We will have as many nurs­ery schools as mothers need, be­cause small chil­dren, even in the best of homes, need a bridge into the out­side world. And then the child­ren will not come al­ready stun­ted to the prim­ary schools.