Difference between revisions of "Anarchy 43/Reflections on parents, teachers and schools"

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{{tab}}Func&shy;tion&shy;ally, the ad&shy;min&shy;istra&shy;tion of the school is the con&shy;cern of parents and teach&shy;ers, and if we really seek a so&shy;ciety of auto&shy;nom&shy;ous free as&shy;so&shy;ci&shy;a&shy;tions we must see such bodies as {{w|parent-<wbr>teacher as&shy;so&shy;ci&shy;a&shy;tions|Parent-Teacher_Association}} as the kind of organ&shy;isa&shy;tion whose even&shy;tual and {{qq|natural}} func&shy;tion is to take over the schools from the {{w|Ministry|Ministry_of_Education_(United_Kingdom)}}, the {{w|County Coun&shy;cils|County_council#United_Kingdom}}, the Dir&shy;ect&shy;ors, In&shy;spect&shy;ors, Managers and Gov&shy;ern&shy;ors who, in a so&shy;ciety domi&shy;nated by the polit&shy;ical prin&shy;ciple are in&shy;evit&shy;ably their con&shy;trol&shy;lers. I don{{t}} know whether schools so ad&shy;min&shy;istered would be any better or any wrose than they are at present, but I do believe that a {{qq|self-<wbr>regula&shy;ting}} so&shy;ciety would run its schools that way. Among in&shy;de&shy;pend&shy;ent schools in this country which ex&shy;em&shy;plify this kind of organ&shy;isa&shy;tion, there used to be [[Anarchy 43/Progressive experience|Burgess Hill School]] (de&shy;scribed by one of the [[Author:Olive Markham|parents]] in this issue of {{sc|anarchy}}) which was owned by a Friendly So&shy;ciety of parents and teach&shy;ers and there still is {{w|King Alfred School|King_Alfred_School,_London}}, governed by a so&shy;ciety of people in&shy;ter&shy;ested in modern edu&shy;ca&shy;tional methods and {{qq|ad&shy;min&shy;istered by an ad&shy;vis&shy;ory coun&shy;cil of pupils and staff}}. I have not heard of any parent-<wbr>teacher as&shy;so&shy;ci&shy;a&shy;tions in the ordin&shy;ary school system which aspire to such func&shy;tions, though with the de&shy;velop&shy;ment of a vari&shy;ety of organ&shy;isa&shy;tions in the last few years con&shy;cerned with in&shy;ter&shy;est&shy;ing parents in edu&shy;ca&shy;tion, one can imagine the mem&shy;bers re&shy;flect&shy;ing after a time on whether their own in&shy;tense {{qq|par&shy;ti&shy;cip&shy;a&shy;tion}} had not rendered the usual com&shy;plic&shy;ated and ex&shy;pens&shy;ive bureau&shy;cracy of school ad&shy;min&shy;istra&shy;tion super&shy;flu&shy;ous.
 
{{tab}}Func&shy;tion&shy;ally, the ad&shy;min&shy;istra&shy;tion of the school is the con&shy;cern of parents and teach&shy;ers, and if we really seek a so&shy;ciety of auto&shy;nom&shy;ous free as&shy;so&shy;ci&shy;a&shy;tions we must see such bodies as {{w|parent-<wbr>teacher as&shy;so&shy;ci&shy;a&shy;tions|Parent-Teacher_Association}} as the kind of organ&shy;isa&shy;tion whose even&shy;tual and {{qq|natural}} func&shy;tion is to take over the schools from the {{w|Ministry|Ministry_of_Education_(United_Kingdom)}}, the {{w|County Coun&shy;cils|County_council#United_Kingdom}}, the Dir&shy;ect&shy;ors, In&shy;spect&shy;ors, Managers and Gov&shy;ern&shy;ors who, in a so&shy;ciety domi&shy;nated by the polit&shy;ical prin&shy;ciple are in&shy;evit&shy;ably their con&shy;trol&shy;lers. I don{{t}} know whether schools so ad&shy;min&shy;istered would be any better or any wrose than they are at present, but I do believe that a {{qq|self-<wbr>regula&shy;ting}} so&shy;ciety would run its schools that way. Among in&shy;de&shy;pend&shy;ent schools in this country which ex&shy;em&shy;plify this kind of organ&shy;isa&shy;tion, there used to be [[Anarchy 43/Progressive experience|Burgess Hill School]] (de&shy;scribed by one of the [[Author:Olive Markham|parents]] in this issue of {{sc|anarchy}}) which was owned by a Friendly So&shy;ciety of parents and teach&shy;ers and there still is {{w|King Alfred School|King_Alfred_School,_London}}, governed by a so&shy;ciety of people in&shy;ter&shy;ested in modern edu&shy;ca&shy;tional methods and {{qq|ad&shy;min&shy;istered by an ad&shy;vis&shy;ory coun&shy;cil of pupils and staff}}. I have not heard of any parent-<wbr>teacher as&shy;so&shy;ci&shy;a&shy;tions in the ordin&shy;ary school system which aspire to such func&shy;tions, though with the de&shy;velop&shy;ment of a vari&shy;ety of organ&shy;isa&shy;tions in the last few years con&shy;cerned with in&shy;ter&shy;est&shy;ing parents in edu&shy;ca&shy;tion, one can imagine the mem&shy;bers re&shy;flect&shy;ing after a time on whether their own in&shy;tense {{qq|par&shy;ti&shy;cip&shy;a&shy;tion}} had not rendered the usual com&shy;plic&shy;ated and ex&shy;pens&shy;ive bureau&shy;cracy of school ad&shy;min&shy;istra&shy;tion super&shy;flu&shy;ous.
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{{tab}}The men&shy;tion of parent-<wbr>teacher as&shy;so&shy;ci&shy;a&shy;tions{{dash|in theory an epitome of the kind of so&shy;cial organ&shy;isa&shy;tion which anarch&shy;ists en&shy;vis&shy;age}}re&shy;minds us of their greater de&shy;velop&shy;ment in America, and the fact that this has not had ex&shy;actly the re&shy;sults that we as anarch&shy;ists would find de&shy;sir&shy;able. In his book ''On Being Human'', writing about the school as {{qq|a most im&shy;port&shy;ant agency in the teach&shy;ing of the art and sci&shy;ence of human rela&shy;tions}}, the an&shy;thro&shy;po&shy;lo&shy;gist and bio&shy;lo&shy;gist {{w|Ashley Montagu|Ashley_Montagu}} de&shy;clares:
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<font size="2"><blockquote>{{tab}}We must shift the em&shy;phasis from the three Rs to the fourth R, human rela&shy;tions, and place it first, fore&shy;most, and always in that order of im&shy;port&shy;ance as the prin&shy;cipal reason for the ex&shy;ist&shy;ence of the school. If must be clearly under&shy;stood, once and for all time, that human rela&shy;tions are the most im&shy;port&shy;ant of all rela&shy;tions. Upon this under&shy;stand&shy;ing must be based all our edu&shy;ca&shy;tional poli&shy;cies &hellip; Our teach&shy;ers must, there&shy;fore, be spe&shy;cially quali&shy;fied to teach human rela&shy;tions &hellip;</blockquote></font>
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{{tab}}But the kind of thing that hap&shy;pens when this point of view filters into the school system is dis&shy;cussed by {{w|David Riesman|David_Riesman}} in his {{qq|Thoughts on Teach&shy;ers and Schools}}. The teach&shy;ing func&shy;tion, he ob&shy;serves, {{qq|has been ex&shy;tended to in&shy;clude train&shy;ing in group co-<wbr>opera&shy;tion, manners, the arts, and self-<wbr>under&shy;stand&shy;ing, as well as large residues of the tradi&shy;tional cur&shy;ricu&shy;lum}}. For Human Rela&shy;tions has in fact already become a class&shy;room sub&shy;ject, but some&shy;how not in Montagu{{s}} sense. {{qq|The school is im&shy;plica&shy;ted and em&shy;broiled}}, says Riesman, {{qq|in the changing forms {{p|281}}of America{{s}} pre&shy;oc&shy;cu&shy;pa&shy;tion with suc&shy;cess{{dash}}the patina of suc&shy;cess now being de&shy;fined by such terms as {{qq|group co-<wbr>opera&shy;tion}}, {{qq|self-<wbr>under&shy;stand&shy;ing}}, {{qq|per&shy;sonal ad&shy;just&shy;ment}} and {{qq|get&shy;ting along with people}}. The pro&shy;gres&shy;sive edu&shy;ca&shy;tion move&shy;ment, spread&shy;ing in a dis&shy;torted fashion through the state school systems, has, he feels dove&shy;tailed with the {{qq|mind&shy;less prag&shy;mat&shy;ism and voca&shy;tion&shy;al&shy;ism}} which the schools ab&shy;sorb from their so&shy;cial cur&shy;round&shy;ings, from parents, super&shy;vis&shy;ors, tax&shy;payers and the vari&shy;ety of pres&shy;sure groups, great and small which sur&shy;round the American school boards. Mean&shy;while the teach&shy;ers lead lives of harried des&shy;per&shy;a&shy;tion fight&shy;ing a {{qq|losing battle in de&shy;fence of the tradi&shy;tional intel&shy;lec&shy;tual values}}. And he evolves, on the ana&shy;logy of {{w|Keynes&shy;ian eco&shy;nomics|Keynesian_economics}} a ''counter-<wbr>cyc&shy;lical'' theory of edu&shy;ca&shy;tion. Just as {{w|Keynes|John_Maynard_Keynes}} re&shy;com&shy;mended spend&shy;ing in times of {{w|de&shy;pres&shy;sion|Depression_(economics)}}, so Riesman re&shy;com&shy;mends that {{qq|teach&shy;ers, in se&shy;lect&shy;ing among the ex&shy;pecta&shy;tions held out to them, have some modest op&shy;por&shy;tun&shy;ities to op&shy;pose life in its moment&shy;ary ex&shy;cesses}}. He wants {{qq|to en&shy;courage some of them to give up trying to be psy&shy;chi&shy;at&shy;rists, mothers<!-- 'mothersm' in original --> and moral&shy;ists, to give up making cit&shy;izens, demo&shy;crats, and toler&shy;ant chil&shy;dren. Could they not be per&shy;suaded to con&shy;cen&shy;trate more than many now feel justi&shy;fied in doing, on their roles as teach&shy;ers of spe&shy;cific sub&shy;jects? This is, after all, a job no one else is as&shy;signed or trained to do.}}
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{{tab}}Montagu writes that {{qq|A so&shy;ciety such as ours, in which human rela&shy;tions are sub&shy;merged in the eco&shy;nomic system, can rescue itself only by sub&shy;merging its eco&shy;nomy in the matrix of human rela&shy;tions &hellip; And this is the task tat the schools must assist in under&shy;taking, no less that the rescue of man from his de&shy;basing en&shy;slave&shy;ment to the prin&shy;ciples and prac&shy;tices of an aquis&shy;it&shy;ive so&shy;ciety}}. But how does the at&shy;tempt work out? We may gain a clue from the book {{popup|''Crestwood Heights'': ''A North American Suburb''|University of Toronto Press (1956)}} by {{popup|Seeley|John R. Seeley}}, {{popup|Sim|R. Alexander Sim}} and {{popup|Loosley|Elizabeth W. Loosley}}. {{w|Crest&shy;wood Heights|Forest_Hill,_Toronto}}<!-- "Crestwood Heights" is pseudonymous and refers to Toronto's Forest Hill, according to Allan Levine in Toronto: Biography of a City (2014). --> is built around its modern, well-<wbr>equipped and en&shy;light&shy;ened schools. It is par&shy;ticu&shy;larly {{qq|child-<wbr>ori&shy;ented}} and the Crest&shy;wood Heights parents {{qq|ap&shy;pear to have ac&shy;cepted nearly all the values which the human&shy;ists, the liber&shy;als, and the psy&shy;chi&shy;atric&shy;ally ori&shy;ented speak&shy;ers and writers have ad&shy;voc&shy;ated over the last fifty years.}} All the right ad&shy;ject&shy;ives are used. {{qq|In the city}}, writes William J. Newman, {{qq|com&shy;peti&shy;tion is open, ac&shy;know&shy;ledged, and brutal; in the suburb toler&shy;a&shy;tion, per&shy;mis&shy;sive&shy;ness, and in&shy;di&shy;vidual choice are the rule. The child is brought up as an auto&shy;no&shy;mous spon&shy;tan&shy;eous in&shy;di&shy;vidual: thus the open glass school. The suburb will pro&shy;vide the arena in which the family and espe&shy;cially the chil&shy;dren can emerge as {{q|free}} and {{q|re&shy;spons&shy;ible}}, ready to take their place in the world.}} But the well-<wbr>meaning parents of Crest&shy;wood Heights are pur&shy;su&shy;ing for their chil&shy;dren two contra&shy;dict&shy;ory goals, {{qq|suc&shy;cess}} and {{qq|psy&shy;cho&shy;logical matur&shy;ity}}. The authors ob&shy;serve that:
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<font size="2"><blockquote>{{tab}}The child must be free in ac&shy;cord&shy;ance with demo&shy;cratic ideo&shy;logy; but he must, by no means, become free to the point of re&shy;noun&shy;cing either the ma&shy;terial suc&shy;cess goals or the en&shy;gin&shy;eered co-<wbr>opera&shy;tion in&shy;tegral to the ad&shy;equate func&shy;tion&shy;ing of an in&shy;dus&shy;trial civil&shy;isa&shy;tion.</blockquote></font>
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And Newman com&shy;ments:
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<font size="2"><blockquote>{{tab}}But it is not only the func&shy;tion&shy;ing of an in&shy;dus&shy;trial civil&shy;isa&shy;tion which pro&shy;vides the drive behind the over&shy;master&shy;ing of in&shy;di&shy;vidual choice; it is the urge to go from status to status, for one gener&shy;a&shy;tion to achieve in the eyes of their peers what the other could not, which is the mot&shy;ive force of Amer&shy;ican life in the suburb. The child {{q|is forced into the posi&shy;tion of ''having to choose'' those means which will as&shy;sure his ul&shy;ti&shy;mate en&shy;trance into an ap&shy;pro&shy;pri&shy;ate adult oc&shy;cu&shy;pa&shy;tional status}}. Since it is a choice made on the sly through an omni&shy;present cul&shy;ture, the child {{q|sees no au&shy;thor&shy;ity figures against which to rebel, should he feel the desire to do so &hellip; The child has there&shy;fore, only one re&shy;course{{dash}}to turn his at&shy;tacks against himself.}} A pleas&shy;ant so&shy;ciety this, a new so&shy;ciety, in which free&shy;dom is in&shy;sti&shy;tu&shy;tion&shy;alised, where choice is dic&shy;tated.</blockquote></font>
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{{tab}}So this {{qq|free and pro&shy;gres&shy;sive}} edu&shy;ca&shy;tion becomes, with the best of in&shy;ten&shy;tions, no better than Rousseau{{s}} system which Godwin de&shy;scribed as {{qq|a puppet-<wbr>show ex&shy;hib&shy;i&shy;tion, of which the master holds the wires, and the scholar is never to suspect in what man&shy;ner they are moved.}}
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{{tab}}Ashley Montagu, in another book, ''The Direc&shy;tion of Human De&shy;velop&shy;ment'' writes of the coming together of parents and teach&shy;ers in the com&shy;ple&shy;ment&shy;ary task of de&shy;velop&shy;ing the poten&shy;tial&shy;it&shy;ies of the child:
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<font size="2"><blockquote>{{tab}}The parents would con&shy;trib&shy;ute what the teach&shy;ers ought to know, and the teach&shy;ers would con&shy;trib&shy;ute what the parents ought to know, for the be&shy;ne&shy;fit of the child as well as for the be&shy;ne&shy;fit of all con&shy;cerned. The teach&shy;ing the child re&shy;ceives at home and the teach&shy;ing it re&shy;ceives at school must be joined and uni&shy;fied. The teach&shy;ing of the ele&shy;ment&shy;ary skills of read&shy;ing, writing and arith&shy;metic is im&shy;port&shy;ant, but not nearly as im&shy;port&shy;ant as the most im&shy;port&shy;ant of all skills{{dash}}human rela&shy;tions.</blockquote></font>
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{{tab}}But David Riesman again, in his book ''In&shy;di&shy;vidu&shy;al&shy;ism Re&shy;con&shy;sidered'' makes this ob&shy;serva&shy;tion on the chil&shy;dren of Crest&shy;wood Heights:
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<font size="2"><blockquote>{{tab}}Their parents want to know how they have fared at school: they are con&shy;stantly com&shy;par&shy;ing them, judging them in school apti&shy;tude, popu&shy;lar&shy;ity, what part they have in the school play; are the boys sissies? the girls too fat? All the school anxi&shy;et&shy;ies are trans&shy;ferred to the home and ''vice versa'', partly because the parents, col&shy;lege gradu&shy;ates mostly, are intel&shy;ligent and con&shy;cerned with edu&shy;ca&shy;tion. After school there are music les&shy;sons, skating les&shy;sons, riding les&shy;sons, with mother as chauf&shy;feur and sched&shy;uler. In the evening, the chil&shy;dren go to a dance at school for which the parents have groomed them, while the parents go to a Parent-<wbr>Teacher As&shy;so&shy;ci&shy;a&shy;tion meet&shy;ing for which the chil&shy;dren, di&shy;rectly or in&shy;di&shy;rectly, have groomed ''them'', where they are ad&shy;dressed by a psy&shy;chi&shy;atrist who ad&shy;vises them to be warm and re&shy;laxed in handling their chil&shy;dren! They go home and eagerly and warmly ask their re&shy;turn&shy;ing chil&shy;dren to thell them every&shy;thing that hap&shy;pened at the dance, making it clear by their manner that they are soph&shy;ist&shy;ic&shy;ated and can&shy;not be easily shocked. As Pro&shy;fes&shy;sor Seeley de&shy;scribes matters, the school in this com&shy;mun&shy;ity oper&shy;ates a {{qq|gigan&shy;tic fac&shy;tory for the pro&shy;duc&shy;tion of rela&shy;tion&shy;ships}}.</blockquote></font>
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{{tab}}This really fright&shy;en&shy;ing de&shy;scrip&shy;tion pulls us up with a jerk. Ac&shy;cus&shy;tomed to think of parent-<wbr>teacher co-<wbr>opera&shy;tion as a Good Thing, we seldom con&shy;sider its pos&shy;sibil&shy;it&shy;ies as a tender trap, a well-<wbr>inten&shy;tioned con&shy;spir&shy;acy against the child. For where home and school are two separ&shy;ate worlds a child un&shy;happy at home might find a means of escape in the dif&shy;fer&shy;ent life of a school, and a child who is miser&shy;able at school might find con&shy;sola&shy;tion in the atmo&shy;sphere of home. But if home and school are {{qq|joined and united}}, all avenues of escape are closed. After {{p|283}}all, how many chil&shy;dren of your ac&shy;quaint&shy;ance enjoy dis&shy;cus&shy;sing their school life with their parents or their home life with their teach&shy;ers? Is not the plur&shy;ality of en&shy;viron&shy;ment one of the child{{s}} means of de&shy;fend&shy;ing itself against the paying omni&shy;po&shy;tence of the adult world?
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Revision as of 21:13, 26 July 2017


275

Reflections on
parents, teachers
and schools

JOHN ELLERBY


What anarch­ists are after is per­sonal and so­cial auto­nomy—the idea that in­di­viduals and their organ­isa­tions should be self-reg­u­lat­ing auto­no­mous bodies. It is this which makes us ad­voc­ates of workers’ control in in­dus­try and which makes us en­thusi­astic about such ex­amples as we find of so­cial organ­isa­tions spring up from below, from people’s urge to sat­isfy their own needs, as op­posed to those which depend on a struc­ture of hier­archy, power and au­thor­ity in which one set of people give in­struc­tions and another set of people carry them out.

  The the­or­et­ical ap­pli­ca­tion of our ideas to the organ­isa­tion of edu­ca­tion is clear enough. The auto­nom­ous self-govern­ing school is the aim, and in view of the ob­vi­ous limits within which chil­dren may be said to govern them­selves, this means in prac­tice a school con­trolled by teach­ers by virtue of their func­tional re­spons­ibil­ity to chil­dren, and by parents because of their bio­lo­gical re­spons­ibil­ity for them. But the issue is more com­pli­ca­ted, for in both prim­it­ive and com­plex com­mun­it­ies it is recog­nised that all adults have a re­spons­ibil­ity towards chil­dren, which because of the vagar­ies and vicis­si­tudes of in­di­vidual parent­age, may have to be exer­cised on its behalf or on the child’s behalf. Once that is ad­mit­ted, we have of course ad­mit­ted that edu­ca­tion is the con­cern of the com­mun­ity. But what com­mun­ity? The state as in France, the local au­thor­ity as in the United States, or a mix­ture of the two as in Britain? And where does the re­spons­ibil­ity of the com­mun­ity begin and end?

  Should edu­ca­tion be com­puls­ory anyway? (And is the com­pul­sion to be ap­plied to the child or the parent?) Bakunin saw the ques­tion dia­lect­ic­ally:

  The prin­ciple of au­thor­ity, in the edu­ca­tion of chil­dren, con­sti­tutes the natural point of de­par­ture; it is leg­itim­ate, neces­sary, when ap­plied to chil­dren of a tender age, whose intel­li­gence has not yet openly de­veloped itself. But as the de­velop­ment of every­thing, and con­sequently of edu­ca­tion, im­plies the gradual nega­tion of the point of de­par­ture, this prin­ciple must dimin­ish as fast as edu­ca­tion and in­struc­tion ad­vance, giving place to in­creas­ing liberty. All ra­tional edu­ca­tion is at bottom nothing but this pro­gres­sive im­mola­tion of au­thor­ity for the benefit of liberty, the final ob­ject of edu­ca­tion neces­sarily
276

being the form­a­tion of free men full of re­spect and love for the liberty of others. There­fore the first day of the pupil’s life, if the school takes infants scarcely able as yet to stam­mer a few words, should be that of the great­est au­thor­ity and an almost entire ab­sence of liberty; but its last day should be that of the great­est liberty and the ab­solute aboli­tion of every vestige of the animal or divine prin­ciple of au­thor­ity.

  Eighty-five years later, Ethel Mannin in her utopian survey Bread and Roses took a more ab­solutely “liber­tarian” line:

  At this point you per­haps pro­test, “But if there is no com­pul­sion, what hap­pens if a child does not want to at­tend school of any kind, and the parents are not con­cerned to per­suade him?” It is quite simple. In that case the child does not at­tend any school. As he becomes adoles­cent he may wish to ac­quire some learn­ing. Or he may de­velop school-

going friends and wish to at­tend school because they do. But if he doesn’t he is never­the­less learn­ing all the time, his natural child’s creat­ive­ness work­ing in happy alli­ance with his free­dom. No Utopian parent would think of using that moral coer­cion we call ‘per­sua­sion’. By the time he reaches adoles­cence the child grows tired of run­ning wild, and begins to ident­ify himself with grown-

ups; he per­ceives the use­ful­ness of know­ing how to read and write and add, and there is prob­ably some special thing he wants to learn—

such as how to drive a train or build a bridge or a house. It is all very much simpler than our pro­fes­sional edu­ca­tion­ists would have us believe.

  Some of us think it is not that simple. But the point is aca­demic, for in prac­tice the deci­sion is that of the parents. Nowadays it is only highly soph­ist­ic­ated and edu­ca­ted people who bother to argue about whether or not it is desir­able that chil­dren should learn the three Rs. The law in this country does not in fact re­quire parents to send their chil­dren to school; it im­poses an obli­ga­tion on them to see that their chil­dren while within the com­puls­ory age, are re­ceiv­ing “an ap­propri­ate edu­ca­tion”. The oc­ca­sional pro­secu­tions of re­calcit­rant parents usually reveal a degree of apathy, in­dif­fer­ence or parental in­com­pet­ence that hardly pro­vides a good case for the op­ponents of com­pul­sion, though they do some­times rope in highly con­scien­tious parents whose views on edu­ca­tion do not hap­pen to co­incide with those of the local au­thor­ity. (Mrs. Joy Baker’s ac­count of her long and in the end suc­cess­ful struggle with the au­thor­it­ies will be re­viewed in a coming issue of anarchy). Usually, apart from a few of the rich, with their gover­nesses and tutors, there are not many parents with the time or skill to teach their chil­dren at home, and of those who could, many must feel it unfair to de­prive their chil­dren of the pleasures and so­cial ex­peri­ence of be­long­ing to a com­mun­ity of their peers, or may cherish the right of parents to have the kids out of their way for some of the time—and the recip­rocal right of their children to be outside the parental at­mo­sphere.

*   *   *
  Histor­ic­ally, in this country, the strug­gle to make edu­ca­tion free, com­puls­ory and uni­versal, and out of the ex­clus­ive con­trol of reli­gious organ­isa­tions, was long and bitter, and the op­po­si­tion to it came, not from liber­tarian ob­jectors, but from the up­hold­ers of priv­ilege and dogma, and from those (both parents and em­ploy­ers) who had an eco­nomic inter­est in the labour of chil­dren or a vested inter­est in ignor­ance. The very reason why it had to be made com­puls­ory ninety-four
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years ago was because chil­dren were an eco­nomic asset. Read­ers of chap­ters 8 and 12 of Marx’s Capital will not dis­sent from the as­ser­tion that the in­dus­trial re­volu­tion was made by the chil­dren of the poor. As late as 1935 Lord Halifax, as Pres­id­ent of the Board of Edu­ca­tion, op­pos­ing the pro­posal to raise the school leaving age from four­teen to fif­teen, de­clared that “public opinion would not toler­ate an un­con­di­tional raising of the age” and the Bradford tex­tile manu­fac­turers as­sured him that “there was work for little fingers there.”

  The no­tion that primary ecu­ca­tion should be free, com­puls­ory and uni­versal is very much older than the English Act of 1870. It grew up with the print­ing press and the rise of prot­est­ant­ism. The rich had been edu­cated by the Church and the sons of the rising bour­geoisie in the grammar schools of the Middle Ages. From the 16th century on arose a grad­ual demand that all should be taught. Martin Luther ap­pealed “To the Coun­cil­men of all Cities in Germany that they estab­lish and main­tain Christian Schools”, ob­serv­ing that the train­ing chil­dren get at home “at­tempts to make up wise through our ex­peri­ence” a task for which life itself is too short, and which could be ac­cel­er­ated by sys­tema­tic in­struc­tion by means of books. Com­puls­ory uni­versal edu­ca­tion was founded in Calvin­ist Geneva in 1536, and Calvin’s Scottish dis­ciple John Knox “planted a school as well as a kirk in every parish.” In puritan Mas­sachu­setts free com­puls­ory primary edu­ca­tion was intro­duced in 1647. The common school, writes Lewis Mumford in The Condi­tion of Man:

  … con­trary to popular belief, is no be­lated pro­duct of 19th century demo­cracy: I have pointed out that it played a neces­sary part in the ab­solu­tist-

mech­an­ical form­ula. Friedrich Wilhelm I of Prussia, fol­lowing Luther’s pre­cept, made primary edu­ca­tion com­puls­ory in his realm in 1717, and foun­ded 1,700 schools to meet the needs of the poor. Two ordin­ances of Louis XIV in 1694 and 1698 and one of Louis XV in 1724 re­quired regular at­tend­ance at school. Even England, a strag­gler in such mat­ters, had hun­dreds of private char­ity schools, some of them foun­ded by the So­ci­ety for Pro­moting Chris­tian Know­ledge, which had been in­cor­por­ated in 1699. Vergerious, one of the earliest renais­sance school­masters, had thought edu­ca­tion an es­sen­tial func­tion of the State; and cen­tral­ised au­thor­ity was now be­lat­edly taking up the work that had been neg­lected with the wiping out of mu­ni­cipal free­dom in the greater part of Europe.

  All the ra­tion­al­ist philo­sophers of the 18th century thought about the prob­lems of edu­ca­tion, and of them, the two acutest edu­ca­tional think­ers ranged them­selves on op­pos­ite sides on the ques­tion of the organ­isa­tion of edu­ca­tion: Rousseau for the State, Godwin against it. Rousseau, whose Emile pos­tu­lates a com­pletely in­di­vidual edu­ca­tion (human so­ciety is ig­nored, the tutor’s entire life is de­voted to poor Emile), did never­the­less con­cern himself with the so­cial aspect, argu­ing, in his Dis­course on Polit­ical Eco­nomy (1755) for public edu­ca­tion “under regu­la­tions pre­scribed by the govern­ment”, for

  If chil­dren are brought up in com­mon in the bosom of equal­ity; if they are im­bued with the laws of the State and the pre­cepts of the General Will … we can­not doubt that they will cher­ish one another mu­tually as broth­ers … to become in time de­fenders and fath­ers of the country of which they will have been so long the chil­dren.

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  William Godwin, who, in his En­quirer at­tacks the con­cealed au­thor­it­ar­ian­ism of Rousseau’s edu­ca­tional theor­ies, criti­cises in his En­quiry Con­cern­ing Polit­ical Justice (1793), the idea of na­tional edu­ca­tion. He sum­mar­ises the argu­ments in favour, which are those of Rousseau, adding to them the ques­tion:

  If the edu­ca­tion of our youth be en­tirely con­fined to the pru­dence of their parents, or the ac­cid­ental be­ne­vol­ence of private in­di­viduals, will it not be a neces­sary con­se­quence, that some will be edu­cated to virtue, others to vice, and others again en­tirely neg­lected?

  Godwin’s answer is:

  The injur­ies that re­sult from a system of na­tional edu­ca­tion are, in the first place, that all public estab­lish­ments in­clude in them the idea of per­man­ence. They en­deavour, it may be, to se­cure and to dif­fuse what­ever of ad­vant­age to so­ciety is already known, but they forget that more re­mains to be known … But public edu­ca­tion has always ex­pended its en­er­gies in the sup­port of pre­jud­ice; it teaches its pupils not the fort­i­tude that shall bring every pro­pos­i­tion to the test of exam­ina­tion, but the art of vin­dic­at­ing such tenets as may chance to be previ­ously estab­lished … This feature runs through every spe­cies of public estab­lish­ment; and, even in the petty in­sti­tu­tion of Sunday schools, the chief les­sons that are taught are a super­sti­tious vener­a­tion for the Church of England, and to bow to every man in a hand­some coat … Refer them to read­ing, to con­ver­sa­tion, to medi­ta­tion, but teach them neither creeds nor cat­ech­isms, neither moral nor polit­ical …

  Secondly, the idea of na­tional edu­ca­tion is foun­ded in an in­at­ten­tion to the nature of mind. What­ever each man does for him­self is done well; what­ever his neigh­bours or his country under­take to do for him is done ill. It is our wisdom to in­cite men to act for them­selves, not to retain them in a state of per­petual pupil­lage. He that learns because he desires to learn will listen to the in­struc­tions he re­ceives and ap­pre­hend their mean­ing. He that teaches because he desires to teach will dis­charge his oc­cupa­tion with en­thusi­asm and energy. But the moment polit­ical in­sti­tu­tion under­takes to as­sign to every man his place, the func­tions of all will be dis­charged with supine­ness and in­dif­fer­ence …

  Thirdly, the pro­ject of a na­tional edu­ca­tion ought uni­formly to be dis­cour­aged on ac­count of its ob­vious al­li­ance with na­tional govern­ment. This is an al­li­ance of a more for­mid­able nature than the old and much con­tested al­li­ance of church and state. Before we put so power­ful a ma­chine under the direc­tion of so ambi­tious an agent, it be­hoves us to con­sider well what we do. Govern­ment will not fail to em­ploy it to strengthen its hands and per­pet­u­ate its in­sti­tu­tions … Their view as in­sti­gator of a system of edu­ca­tion will not fail to be ana­log­ous to their views in their polit­ical cap­acity: the data upon which their con­duct as states­men is vin­dic­ated will be the data upon which their in­sti­tu­tions are foun­ded. It is not true that our youth ought to be in­struc­ted to vener­ate the con­sti­tu­tion, however ex­cel­lent; they should be in­struc­ted to vener­ate truth … (Even) in the coun­tries where liberty chiefly pre­vails, it is reason­ably to be as­sumed that there are im­port­ant errors, and a na­tional edu­ca­tion has the most direct tend­ency to per­pet­u­ate those errors and to form all minds upon one model.

  Godwin’s argu­ments are worth quoting at this length, not only as the classic state­ment of an anarch­ist posi­tion on this issue, but because they have had such ample sub­se­quent just­ifi­ca­tion. On the other hand he does not really answer the ques­tion of how we can en­sure that every child can have free ac­cess to what­ever edu­ca­tional facil­it­ies will suit its in­di­vidual needs.

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  In practice, in this country today people who want to try an anarch­ist ap­proach to edu­ca­tion have two pos­sible courses of action: to work in the private sector—in­de­pend­ent schools of one kind or an­other, a minor­ity of which are pro­gres­sive, or to work in the normal school system and try to in­flu­ence it in a “pro­gres­sive” direc­tion. These two courses are by no means mu­tu­ally ex­clus­ive, and there is plenty of evid­ence of the in­flu­ence of the former on the latter.

  It is sur­pris­ing and cer­tainly sad­den­ing, con­sider­ing the number of people in­ter­ested in “pro­gres­sive” schools, how few of them there are and how they seldom in­spire other people to start them. For ex­ample, the pub­lica­tion of Summer­hill a com­pil­a­tion of the writ­ings of A. S. Neill brought about a great deal of in­ter­est in his school and his ideas in America; there was an embar­ras­sing pro­ces­sion of over­seas vis­it­ors to Neill’s little school in Suffolk, but how few of the ad­mirers and vis­it­ors set about start­ing more schools on similar lines. A few did: one of the con­trib­u­tions in this issue of anarchy comes from people who are trying to.

  Why shouldn’t the parents of a group of babies in the same age-group get together and plan a school for them well in ad­vance, so as to ac­cum­ul­ate the funds re­quired before they are needed? They could as several groups of parents do, run their own nurs­ary school when their chil­dren reach the ap­pro­pri­ate age and then de­velop from the primary stage onward. The wealthy who are also in­tent on edu­ca­ting their chil­dren in in­de­pend­ent schools, have found a vari­ety of ways for fin­ancing them by way of Deeds and Coven­ant, en­dow­ment pol­icies and so on. (John Vaizey es­tim­ates that at present some­thing like £60 mil­lion a year is spent on school fees and £15-£20 mil­lion of this is found by tax-avoid­ance).

  Many of us on the other hand, are more con­cerned with changing the ordin­ary primary and second­ary schools which the vast ma­jor­ity of chil­dren at­tend, changing the teach­ing methods and changing parental and so­cial at­ti­tudes. Some will simply say that this can­not be done—this would be the view of the second­ary modern school-teacher who con­trib­utes an honest ac­count of his prob­lems else­where in this issue. But others will say that it would be fool­ish not to try to take ad­vant­age of the present wave of in­ter­est in edu­ca­tion and in the state of the schools.

  The anarch­ist, seek­ing func­tional, as op­posed to polit­ical, answers to so­cial needs, and con­trast­ing the so­cial prin­ciple with the polit­ical prin­ciple, sees in the state’s con­trol of edu­ca­tion a usurp­a­tion of a so­cial func­tion. (His­tor­ic­ally of course, the Edu­ca­tion Act of 1870 didn’t “usurp” any­body’s func­tion, but if you ac­cept the con­cep­tion of an in­verse rela­tion­ship between the state and so­ciety—the strength of one re­sult­ing from the weak­ness of the other—you can see how the so­cial organ­isa­tion of popular edu­ca­tion was, so to speak, at­rophied in ad­vance, by its polit­ical organ­isa­tion. That this has not been the dis­aster—though some would say it has—that anarch­ist think­ers like
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Godwin pre­dic­ted, has been due to the local dif­fu­sion of con­trol, the di­ver­gent aims of teach­ers and the re­sili­ence of chil­dren).

  Func­tion­ally, the ad­min­istra­tion of the school is the con­cern of parents and teach­ers, and if we really seek a so­ciety of auto­nom­ous free as­so­ci­a­tions we must see such bodies as <span data-html="true" class="plainlinks" title="Wikipedia: parent-teacher as­so­ci­a­tions">parent-teacher as­so­ci­a­tions as the kind of organ­isa­tion whose even­tual and “natural” func­tion is to take over the schools from the Ministry, the County Coun­cils, the Dir­ect­ors, In­spect­ors, Managers and Gov­ern­ors who, in a so­ciety domi­nated by the polit­ical prin­ciple are in­evit­ably their con­trol­lers. I don’t know whether schools so ad­min­istered would be any better or any wrose than they are at present, but I do believe that a “self-regula­ting” so­ciety would run its schools that way. Among in­de­pend­ent schools in this country which ex­em­plify this kind of organ­isa­tion, there used to be Burgess Hill School (de­scribed by one of the parents in this issue of anarchy) which was owned by a Friendly So­ciety of parents and teach­ers and there still is King Alfred School, governed by a so­ciety of people in­ter­ested in modern edu­ca­tional methods and “ad­min­istered by an ad­vis­ory coun­cil of pupils and staff”. I have not heard of any parent-teacher as­so­ci­a­tions in the ordin­ary school system which aspire to such func­tions, though with the de­velop­ment of a vari­ety of organ­isa­tions in the last few years con­cerned with in­ter­est­ing parents in edu­ca­tion, one can imagine the mem­bers re­flect­ing after a time on whether their own in­tense “par­ti­cip­a­tion” had not rendered the usual com­plic­ated and ex­pens­ive bureau­cracy of school ad­min­istra­tion super­flu­ous.

  The men­tion of parent-teacher as­so­ci­a­tions—in theory an epitome of the kind of so­cial organ­isa­tion which anarch­ists en­vis­age—re­minds us of their greater de­velop­ment in America, and the fact that this has not had ex­actly the re­sults that we as anarch­ists would find de­sir­able. In his book On Being Human, writing about the school as “a most im­port­ant agency in the teach­ing of the art and sci­ence of human rela­tions”, the an­thro­po­lo­gist and bio­lo­gist Ashley Montagu de­clares:

  We must shift the em­phasis from the three Rs to the fourth R, human rela­tions, and place it first, fore­most, and always in that order of im­port­ance as the prin­cipal reason for the ex­ist­ence of the school. If must be clearly under­stood, once and for all time, that human rela­tions are the most im­port­ant of all rela­tions. Upon this under­stand­ing must be based all our edu­ca­tional poli­cies … Our teach­ers must, there­fore, be spe­cially quali­fied to teach human rela­tions …

  But the kind of thing that hap­pens when this point of view filters into the school system is dis­cussed by David Riesman in his “Thoughts on Teach­ers and Schools”. The teach­ing func­tion, he ob­serves, “has been ex­tended to in­clude train­ing in group co-opera­tion, manners, the arts, and self-under­stand­ing, as well as large residues of the tradi­tional cur­ricu­lum”. For Human Rela­tions has in fact already become a class­room sub­ject, but some­how not in Montagu’s sense. “The school is im­plica­ted and em­broiled”, says Riesman, {{qq|in the changing forms
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of America’s pre­oc­cu­pa­tion with suc­cess—the patina of suc­cess now being de­fined by such terms as “group co-opera­tion”, “self-under­stand­ing”, “per­sonal ad­just­ment” and “get­ting along with people”. The pro­gres­sive edu­ca­tion move­ment, spread­ing in a dis­torted fashion through the state school systems, has, he feels dove­tailed with the “mind­less prag­mat­ism and voca­tion­al­ism” which the schools ab­sorb from their so­cial cur­round­ings, from parents, super­vis­ors, tax­payers and the vari­ety of pres­sure groups, great and small which sur­round the American school boards. Mean­while the teach­ers lead lives of harried des­per­a­tion fight­ing a “losing battle in de­fence of the tradi­tional intel­lec­tual values”. And he evolves, on the ana­logy of Keynes­ian eco­nomics a counter-cyc­lical theory of edu­ca­tion. Just as Keynes re­com­mended spend­ing in times of de­pres­sion, so Riesman re­com­mends that “teach­ers, in se­lect­ing among the ex­pecta­tions held out to them, have some modest op­por­tun­ities to op­pose life in its moment­ary ex­cesses”. He wants “to en­courage some of them to give up trying to be psy­chi­at­rists, mothers and moral­ists, to give up making cit­izens, demo­crats, and toler­ant chil­dren. Could they not be per­suaded to con­cen­trate more than many now feel justi­fied in doing, on their roles as teach­ers of spe­cific sub­jects? This is, after all, a job no one else is as­signed or trained to do.”

  Montagu writes that “A so­ciety such as ours, in which human rela­tions are sub­merged in the eco­nomic system, can rescue itself only by sub­merging its eco­nomy in the matrix of human rela­tions … And this is the task tat the schools must assist in under­taking, no less that the rescue of man from his de­basing en­slave­ment to the prin­ciples and prac­tices of an aquis­it­ive so­ciety”. But how does the at­tempt work out? We may gain a clue from the book Crestwood Heights: A North American Suburb by Seeley, Sim and Loosley. Crest­wood Heights is built around its modern, well-equipped and en­light­ened schools. It is par­ticu­larly “child-ori­ented” and the Crest­wood Heights parents “ap­pear to have ac­cepted nearly all the values which the human­ists, the liber­als, and the psy­chi­atric­ally ori­ented speak­ers and writers have ad­voc­ated over the last fifty years.” All the right ad­ject­ives are used. “In the city”, writes William J. Newman, “com­peti­tion is open, ac­know­ledged, and brutal; in the suburb toler­a­tion, per­mis­sive­ness, and in­di­vidual choice are the rule. The child is brought up as an auto­no­mous spon­tan­eous in­di­vidual: thus the open glass school. The suburb will pro­vide the arena in which the family and espe­cially the chil­dren can emerge as ‘free’ and ‘re­spons­ible’, ready to take their place in the world.” But the well-meaning parents of Crest­wood Heights are pur­su­ing for their chil­dren two contra­dict­ory goals, “suc­cess” and “psy­cho­logical matur­ity”. The authors ob­serve that:

  The child must be free in ac­cord­ance with demo­cratic ideo­logy; but he must, by no means, become free to the point of re­noun­cing either the ma­terial suc­cess goals or the en­gin­eered co-

opera­tion in­tegral to the ad­equate func­tion­ing of an in­dus­trial civil­isa­tion.

And Newman com­ments:

  But it is not only the func­tion­ing of an in­dus­trial civil­isa­tion which pro­vides the drive behind the over­master­ing of in­di­vidual choice; it is the urge to go from status to status, for one gener­a­tion to achieve in the eyes of their peers what the other could not, which is the mot­ive force of Amer­ican life in the suburb. The child ‘is forced into the posi­tion of having to choose those means which will as­sure his ul­ti­mate en­trance into an ap­pro­pri­ate adult oc­cu­pa­tional status’. Since it is a choice made on the sly through an omni­present cul­ture, the child ‘sees no au­thor­ity figures against which to rebel, should he feel the desire to do so … The child has there­fore, only one re­course—

to turn his at­tacks against himself.’ A pleas­ant so­ciety this, a new so­ciety, in which free­dom is in­sti­tu­tion­alised, where choice is dic­tated.

  So this “free and pro­gres­sive” edu­ca­tion becomes, with the best of in­ten­tions, no better than Rousseau’s system which Godwin de­scribed as “a puppet-show ex­hib­i­tion, of which the master holds the wires, and the scholar is never to suspect in what man­ner they are moved.”

  Ashley Montagu, in another book, The Direc­tion of Human De­velop­ment writes of the coming together of parents and teach­ers in the com­ple­ment­ary task of de­velop­ing the poten­tial­it­ies of the child:

  The parents would con­trib­ute what the teach­ers ought to know, and the teach­ers would con­trib­ute what the parents ought to know, for the be­ne­fit of the child as well as for the be­ne­fit of all con­cerned. The teach­ing the child re­ceives at home and the teach­ing it re­ceives at school must be joined and uni­fied. The teach­ing of the ele­ment­ary skills of read­ing, writing and arith­metic is im­port­ant, but not nearly as im­port­ant as the most im­port­ant of all skills—

human rela­tions.

  But David Riesman again, in his book In­di­vidu­al­ism Re­con­sidered makes this ob­serva­tion on the chil­dren of Crest­wood Heights:

  Their parents want to know how they have fared at school: they are con­stantly com­par­ing them, judging them in school apti­tude, popu­lar­ity, what part they have in the school play; are the boys sissies? the girls too fat? All the school anxi­et­ies are trans­ferred to the home and vice versa, partly because the parents, col­lege gradu­ates mostly, are intel­ligent and con­cerned with edu­ca­tion. After school there are music les­sons, skating les­sons, riding les­sons, with mother as chauf­feur and sched­uler. In the evening, the chil­dren go to a dance at school for which the parents have groomed them, while the parents go to a Parent-

Teacher As­so­ci­a­tion meet­ing for which the chil­dren, di­rectly or in­di­rectly, have groomed them, where they are ad­dressed by a psy­chi­atrist who ad­vises them to be warm and re­laxed in handling their chil­dren! They go home and eagerly and warmly ask their re­turn­ing chil­dren to thell them every­thing that hap­pened at the dance, making it clear by their manner that they are soph­ist­ic­ated and can­not be easily shocked. As Pro­fes­sor Seeley de­scribes matters, the school in this com­mun­ity oper­ates a “gigan­tic fac­tory for the pro­duc­tion of rela­tion­ships”.

  This really fright­en­ing de­scrip­tion pulls us up with a jerk. Ac­cus­tomed to think of parent-teacher co-opera­tion as a Good Thing, we seldom con­sider its pos­sibil­it­ies as a tender trap, a well-inten­tioned con­spir­acy against the child. For where home and school are two separ­ate worlds a child un­happy at home might find a means of escape in the dif­fer­ent life of a school, and a child who is miser­able at school might find con­sola­tion in the atmo­sphere of home. But if home and school are “joined and united”, all avenues of escape are closed. After
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all, how many chil­dren of your ac­quaint­ance enjoy dis­cus­sing their school life with their parents or their home life with their teach­ers? Is not the plur­ality of en­viron­ment one of the child’s means of de­fend­ing itself against the paying omni­po­tence of the adult world?
*   *   *