Friday, 21 October 2011

Independent No Longer - The Decline And Fall Of Independent Education

A few months ago Subrosa published this post by Edward Spalton. This is a follow-up article from Stephen Beet and although it relates to the English public school system, much of it I am assured by Subrosa, is relevant to Scotland. Subrosa and myself have agreed to publish it.

"Parents are paying thousands of pounds per annum in fees to secure an independent education for their children. But are they getting what they are paying for?  Stephen Beet taught for many years in English Preparatory Schools, but after becoming disillusioned by restrictive legislation, and political correctness left England to teach in Russia.

     The story of my career could have been lifted straight out of the pages of children’s literature. The headmaster, a kindly and eccentric man in his forties, owned the school outright.  Everyone was known either by his surname or a nickname and Matron’s word was law. Together, she and the head maintained a firm but fair discipline, and whilst corporal punishment was rarely used it was still generally believed that a boy needed the threat of a beating in order to ensure the emergence of a polite, well brought up, gentleman at the end of his school career. It really was the world of Jennings and Derbyshire, midnight feasts and hilarious anecdotes, all of which if written down would be dismissed as pure fiction.

     My first form of eighteen eight-year-olds was housed in a room lacking adequate heating, a watertight roof or any useful furniture other than the desks at which we sat. Every morning after PT, Chapel, breakfast and dorm inspection, lessons began with the repetition of Latin verbs, continuing with Arithmetic and English.  After an hour’s break, during which the boys, unsupervised by adults, ran clubs and societies, classes continued with History, Geography, Scripture and other subjects, all still unaffected by the recommendations of the Plowden Report which had already destroyed the finest state-education system in the world.  Desks faced the master, boys were tested every fortnight and order marks sent home twice per term.  Games were of such vital importance that those who fell short of the required standard were not allowed to appear for the school, but lined up on the touch-lines to cheer on the First Eleven.  Highly coveted team colours were awarded only to the best which were – “forty years on” -  still prized more highly than any MBE.

      House points were given and house points were taken away and sometimes if one boy offended all felt the consequences. Discipline was a ‘whole school’ affair; team spirit and competition the order of he day and ‘splitting’ or telling tales was unheard of. 

Lesson preparation took the form of notes in an exercise book, leaving ample time for careful marking.  Every mistake was noted and discussed with the boy in question and it was thus so that we managed to bring even the slowest boy up to the exacting levels required by the Common Entrance Board and the brightest to the heights of the Eton Scholarship. In short, parents were glad to fork out the fees because they could see that they were getting value for money.

     In History we began with the Romans and worked our way up through the gory and scheming Middle Ages until we reached the reign of Queen Anne.  When one compares this approach with today’s ‘topic-based’ Common Entrance Syllabus, which now slavishly follows the dictates of The National Curriculum with all its emphasis on source material and empathy with the past, one wonders what parents are paying for today. Traditional 35-minute teaching periods have now also largely been replaced by fewer 70-minute periods.  This is convenient for the teachers but not good for the boys: not only is intense concentration limited but also one can cover much more material in four single periods than in two doubles.

     Moving to another school in 1995 was a complete culture shock for me and I was immediately forced to make educational concessions, but I did manage to hold on to my black board and chalk. White boards and markers I found to be bad for handwriting and hard to see from the back of the room.  Unfortunately, I was compelled to plan lessons according to unsound National Curriculum guidelines, an educational straitjacket, laying down unnecessary structures.   Out went the traditional reading period, the exciting History lesson, and no longer was one able to devote a period to completing an essay or in exploring an English topic by improvisation.  So after many years of teaching in a school in which my classroom was referred to in jocular vein by the second master as ‘that little corner of Old England’ I realised that the time had come to leave before until I was forced out.  A position in Russia was a tempting prospect and one which has exceeded all expectations!

     It’s hard to pinpoint just when our blissful and truly ‘child-centred’ world of Jennings and Derbyshire came to an end, but the erosion began, I believe, in the late 1970’s when the threat of a future socialist government abolishing private education began to receded.  Complacency set in and with it entered a new generation of teachers.  Mainly state trained and indoctrinated, some were barely literate or numerate and as a result the teaching of the three R’s was particularly affected, creating tremendous learning difficulties in later years.  One needs only to study the Entrance and Scholarship papers sat until the early 1970’s for evidence of a serious decline thereafter.  Those responsible for the setting of standards, the Independent Association of Preparatory Schools (IAPS) now draws its influential committee mainly from trendy Oxford or London Prep schools and has succeeded in effecting root and branch change, bringing schools completely in line with every aspect of the state system. That an Independent Inspectorate now inspects schools further strengthens government control over the whole sector. What governments could not abolish by legislation they have now changed by stealth, and even those schools which had set their faces as stone against the changes have now been forced to capitulate. 

     The world of the English Prep Schools was, until the early 1990’s one necessarily set far apart from society.  Today teachers are responsible to a line manager, a senior management team, and there will be a governing body and an association of parents.  The headmaster, now merely an employee is completely at the beck and call of parents and governors.

      Social workers, with an anti-establishment agenda have right of entry into schools to meddle in affairs that should not concern them. Unnecessary health and safety regulations have forced some smaller schools to close. Petty rules govern the hours children may work, the number of beds that can be put into a dormitory, and no longer may older boys be placed in charge of younger.  All this has contributed to the very fabric of the public school system being systematically and deliberately destroyed, and it beggars belief that it could have been allowed to happen; in fact one may form no other opinion than it has come to pass as a result of the work of those propagating a dangerous political and feminist agenda.  Even that champion of ‘Children’s Rights’ and founder of ‘Childline’ Esther Rantzen writing in The Daily Mail recently expressed horror at the monster she had unleashed when she established the organisation.  Gone are the days when a schoolmaster was considered to be in loco parentis, and now accidents are not allowed to happen: someone has to take the blame for them!

    The children of tomorrow will either be so protected by their parents that they are not allowed to leave the house unaccompanied or they will be left roaming the streets with nothing to do.  Having never known the company or friendship of any adult other than their own family members, they will be utterly unprepared for life.  What a plot this would make for an apocryphal novel.

     While some traditional schools seem determined to continue, my old prep school is no more -- closed shortly after the admission of girls onto the grounds where mothers once feared to tread. The headmaster ended his career teaching in a state comprehensive and a posh ‘gels’ school has invaded the buildings.  It has a new roof, indoor swimming pool, carpeted dorms and a ‘state of the arts’ science block. The chapel has been deconsecrated and turned into a computer suite and the National Curriculum ‘plus’ is de rigueur.  The outside doors have locks and alarms and the latest security devices. There is not a spot of dirt or dry rot to be seen anywhere. But where are Jennings and Derbyshire?  Certainly not to be found within those hallowed portals!
       

Stephen R. Beet, October 2011"

NB: The links in Stephen Beet's letter are those inserted by Subrosa.

4 comments:

PeterCharles said...

I would disagree with one thing Stephen has said. "What governments could not abolish by legislation they have now changed by stealth ..." This debasing of British education is the work of the Marxist inspired post war Education and Teaching Establishment. The 60s change to the comprehensive system and the attack on the Grammar school might have been legislated for by the then Labour government, and here again I would say Stephen is wrong because the state secondary modern was dysfunctional, mainly as I have said before because they Education Establishment insisted on trying to teach a predominantly academic route instead of going full out to teach engineering and other trade skills, but they were simply sold on the idea by the educational establishment on the basis of the 'proof' of the wonderful American educational revolution. This was before they realised that revolution was an even bigger disaster than ours and it was also a time when anything American had to be the height of excellence.

I have little doubt that various Education Secretaries from the Thatcher premiership onwards have honestly sought to make things better, it is the Education and Teaching Establishment that has subverted, debased and generally used every new initiative to further their own perverted view of what education should be. Thus teacher training is more a social work course than a preparation for teaching, Ofsted has become a malign fungus determined to homogenise every school and examinations and curricular dumbed down so everyone can 'excel' and there is of course the added benefit that it hides 50 years of failure.

john in cheshire said...

We suffer from too many socialists in the teaching hierarchy, and in the footsoldiers. Socialism is the root cause of all that is wrong with our country and until they are all purged from the system, things will continue as they are. This all began after the second world war; I witnessed its beginnings in my Grammar School (which is now sadly no longer) when the younger intake of teachers insisted on us calling them by their Christian names. And I remember some of the younger female teachers flirting with boys in my class - a teacher telling a friend of mine that he had lovely eyes and long eyelashes for example. I was naive but even then I thought it was wrong. God knows what these teachers were being indoctrinated with while at training college. Marxism is how I interpret it these days. The worrying thing is that the young teachers were probably too stupid to realise that what they were doing was wrong.

WitteringsfromWitney said...

PC: Agreed......

jic: Agreed also......

StephenRBeet said...

I take Peter Charles' point as if applies to the State system; but in the Private sector, much of the decline has been during the past 30 years. It's certainly true to say that both the previous Labour Administration and the Tory Governments before and after have destroyed the Independent Sector and brought it under state control. Therefore I said: What governments could not abolish by legislation they have now changed by stealth ..." We cannot really blame Socialism for that, as there has been no true Socialist Government for years. The problem lies with Political Correctness and Feminism: and both the Labour Party and the present Tory/Liberal Government are steeped in both!