Starting School – 1960 and 2018, by Rosalie Warren
My young granddaughter
Daisy started school – proper, full-time school, in reception class – last month
and, I’m glad to say, seems to have settled in very well. There’s some reassuring
continuity in that one of her former nursery teachers is now her class teacher,
and she has a number of friends who were at nursery with her. Apparently she
loves school dinners too, and probably eats all kinds of things there that
she would never dream of eating at home!
I can’t help thinking
back to my own, now very distant, memories of starting school. My first school
was an odd one, to say the least. I’d been to a fairly standard nursery school
when we lived in Cornwall, but we had now moved up to Yorkshire and I was still
getting used to a new home in a new town, and my dad being far away in
Singapore. The strange little private school they sent me to was my grandmother’s
idea, and I believe she paid the fees. We were not a wealthy family by any
means, but she had savings and wanted to give me ‘a good start’. I suppose she
saw me as a shy little girl who was already reading by herself, and she wanted
me to have the best education possible. The school was tiny – I think there
were about twelve of us, aged between just five (me) and twelve (the headmistress’s
daughter – I remember her being big and scary). There were three teachers,
so the teacher-pupil ratio was exceptionally high. On my first day (needless
to say, the classes were mixed age, mixed everything) we learned about someone
called Julius Caesar. I was very puzzled over who he was, but I did my best to
draw a picture of… a man.
Not long after that, we had
a Bible story read to us about someone called Jeremiah, and our homework was to
write a little piece about what happened to him. I was so upset… I couldn’t
remember the first thing about Jeremiah, except – did he break a vase or
something? Luckily, I somehow managed to remember his name, and Nana looked up
the story in the Old Testament and helped me do my summary (i.e. did it for me,
pretty much, I expect). I do remember feeling a bit guilty when I got a big red
tick and a nine out of ten for it.
I also learned how to
write with a pen and how to do fractions. We learned about money, including
farthings, even though this was 1960 and farthings weren’t in circulation any
more (our books were out of date). Since I could already read, it
would have been nice to be given some interesting books to devour, but for some
reason they gave me endless Janet and
John and similar dull, repetitive stuff. I had to discover the town library
to get my fill of good books.
There was a terrifying morning in assembly when I
spotted all three of our teachers at various points in the little hall, well
away from the piano, but the piano was being played – I could hear ‘Morning has
Broken’ booming out. There was only one explanation – that piano was playing
itself!
I don’t know whether I
started crying – I do remember finding it terribly frightening, heaven knows
why – anyway, one of the teachers asked me what was wrong. Somehow I managed to
ask her – was the piano playing
itself? She reassured me and took me to see. The player was none other than the
headmistress’s daughter. I hadn’t realised that you didn’t need to be a
grown-up to play the piano. Phew!
The strange little school
(which may well have been good for me in some ways – I really don’t know)
closed down after three years and at the age of seven I had to join the ordinary
primary school down the road. It wasn’t easy – the children there threw stones
at me, some of them, for ‘talking posh’. I was ahead of them in some subjects,
which didn’t endear me to anyone, especially not the teacher. That teacher, Mrs
B, really was a bully, looking back. She mocked me for writing with a pen (‘Only
the teacher uses a pen in this classroom!’), for using joined-up letters and
for crossing out mistakes instead of putting a tiny cross at the end. She humiliated
me in front of the class for some of my ‘worries’ (I had a lot of worries). And
nothing really changed, even after my mother went to see her at the school. I think
Mrs B convinced Mum that everything was fine and I was just making a fuss. I
learned a lot of lessons very quickly – such as to speak in a broad Yorkshire accent like the rest of my class and to hide away any abilities I might have.
The only thing you were allowed to be good at was games – and sadly, I wasn’t,
which was a shame as that was the thing that made you popular. I settled in
eventually, but it wasn’t easy, and I still have a deep irrational fear, going into
a roomful of strangers, that they will surround me in a big ring and start
chanting insults at me or even throwing stones.
I know I wasn’t bullied
anywhere near as badly as some, but these things do leave their mark. Thankfully,
bullying is recognised these days and schools do their best to deal
with it. I hope very much for Daisy and all the others just starting school
that they will find it a happy and welcoming place, with plenty of challenges
and lots of good books, but perhaps not too much Julius Caesar and Jeremiah in their first few days!
Me, starting school, April 1960 (that haircut!!) |
Daisy, first day of school, Sept 2018 |
All the best,
Ros
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me on Twitter @Ros_Warren
Comments
My first day at school, I was told by my mother, was both anarchic and hilarious, with the poor teacher trying vainly to get kids to line up, and me deciding it was all a huge joke, and running round the playground pursued by said teacher who could barely run for laughing (I have no recollection of this, but I've always liked the story.)
I could write a great deal about bullying, both via other children, but also via a couple of horrendous teachers. Teachers were hugely respected when I was growing up, which often meant they could get away with near-murder - after all, who believed what kids said?