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SO 016 720
McKernan, Jim, Ed.
Irish Educational Studies. Vol. 4 no. 1.
Educational Studies Association of Ireland,
Dublin.
Feb 84
316p.; Financial assistance provided by Industrial
Credit Corporation, Dublin (Ireland). For Volume 4,
no. 2, see SO 016 721. For 1982-83 volumes see ED 235
105 and ED 248 187-188. Document contains small,
light type.
Viewpoints (120) -- Reports - Research/Technical
(143) -- Collected Works
Serials (022)
Irish Educational Studies; v4 nl 1984
MF01/PC13 Plus Postage.
Abstrac,c Reasoning; Academic Achievement; Comparative
Analysis; *Comparative Education; Continuing
Education; Educational Change; *Educational history;
*Educational Practices; Educational Research;
Educational Theories: *Educational Trends; Elementary
Secondary Education; Ethical Instruction; Females;
Foreign Countries; Higher Education; Historiography;
Home Economics; Imagination; Intellectual
Disciplines; Program Descriptions; Recreational
Activities; School Choice; Sex Discrimination; Social
Studies; Summer Programs; Teaching Methods; Textbook
Content; Textbook Evaluation; Values Education;
Vocational Education
Doublespeak; *Ireland; United States
ABSTRACT
The following papers dealing with education in
Ireland are presented: "The Fortunes of Education as a Subject of
Study and of Research in Ireland" (John Coolahan); "The Irish Charter
Schools: The Grand Design in Principle and Practice" (Kenneth Milne);
"Quaker Education in 18th and 19th Century Ireland" (Cyril G.
Brannigan); "Images of Women in Nineteenth Century Schoolbooks"
(Lorcan Walsh); "An Assessment of Rev. Professor Timothy J.
Corcoran's Major Works in the Field of Irish Educational
Historiography" (James G. Deegan); "St. Dominic's--The Rise and Fall
of a Training College 1907-1924" (Finbarr O'Driscoll); "One Approach
to Moral Education for Secondary Schools in the United States"
(Gerald M. Reagan); "Language Manipulation: Doublespeak in Education"
(Richard Pratte); "Some Curricular Aspects of Social and Civic
Education in Ireland, 1966-1984" (Mairtin Fahy); "What Use Is Day
Release?" (J. R. McCarthy); "Compensation for Deficiencies in the
Second-Level System" (Tom Baum and Linda McLoughlin); "Summer
Recreation Provision in America and Northern Ireland - A Comparative
Overview" (Paul G, J. Anthony); "Rethinking the Nature of Educational
Studies" (Padraig Hogan); "The First Blast of the Trumpet against the
Monstrous Regiment of the Disciplines (Theorising about Theory of
Education)" (Michael McKeown); "Some Philosophical Issues Relating to
the Identification of Education with the Development of Reason"
(Peter J. Gargan); "Predicting Success in First University
Examinations in Home Economics Colleges of Education" (Eamonn
O'Baiollain); "Imagination: That One Talent That Lies Buried" (Seamus
V. O'Suilleabhain); and "School Choice and School Catchment:
immummenimmjrucationinGalPost-Prinia City" (Seamus Grimes). (RM)
Edited by Dr. Jim McKernan
Education Department
University College Dublin
Editorial Board
Dr. Jim McKernan, U.C.D. (General Editor)
Mr. Frank Douglas, U.C.C. (Business Editor)
Dr. John Coolahan, U.C.D.
Professor Donal Mulcahy, U.C.C.
Dr. Denis O'Sullivan, U.C.G.
Dr. John Marshall, U.C.G.
Professor V. A. McClelland, Hull University
Professor Hugh Sockett, University of East Anglia
Published by the Educational Studies Association
of Ireland (Cumann Leann Oideachais na h-Eireann),
Dublin, 1984
Copyright of each contribution is vested in the contributor
The Educational Studies Association of Ireland
is grateful for financial assistance towards
the publication of Irish Educational Studies,
Vol. 4, to The Industrial Credit Company Ltd.
Harcourt Street, Dublin.
Contents
Page
Notes on Contributors
iii
General Editor's Comment
John Coolahan
Kenneth Milne
Cyril G. Rrannigan
Lorcan Walsh
James G. Deegan
The fortunes of education
as a subject of study and
of research in Ireland
The Irish Charter Schools
the grand design in
principle and practice
1
:
35
Quaker education in 18th and
19th century Ireland
54
Images of women in nineteenth century schoolbooks
73
An assessment of Rev.
Professor Timothy J.
, Corcoran's major works in the
field of Irish educational
historiography
88
St. Dominic's - the rise and
fall of a training college
1907 - 1924
98
One approach to moral
education for secondary
schools in the United States
115
Language manipulation
Doublespeak in education
130
Some curricular aspects of
social and civic education
in Ireland, 1966-1984
146
J. R. McCarthy
What use is day release?
163
Tom Daum and
Linda McLoughlin
Compensation for deficiencies
in the second-level system
174
Paul G. J. Anthony
S,J.Innor recreation provision
Finbarr O'Driscoll
Gerald M. Reagan
Richard Pratte
Mairtin Pahy
:
in America and Northern
Ireland - a comparative
overview
Padraig Hogan
Rethinking the nature of
educational studies
191
205
Page
Michael McKeown
The first blast of the
trumpet against the monstrous
regiment of the disciplines
(theorising about theory of
Peter J. Gargan
Samonn 0 Baiollain
education)
221
Some philosophical issues
relating to the identification
of education with the
development of reason
238
Predicting success in first
university examinations in home
economics colleges of education
249
Seamus V. 0 Suilleabhain
Imagination
chat one
talent that lies buried
:
Seamus Grimes
School choice and school
catchment : post-primary
education in Galway
ii
t
f:
265
287
Notes on Contributors
John Coolahan is Lecturer in the Education Department,
University College Dublin.
Kenneth Milne is President, The Church of Irelar4 Training
College, Rathmines, Dublin.
Cyril G. Brannigan is a teacher in St. Vincent's Secondary
School for Boys, Glasnevin.
Lorcan Walsh is a teacher in Ard Scoil Ris, Dublin.
James Deegan is a teacher in St. Columba'b B.N.S.,
Douglas, and is pa't -time Lecturer in
Education, University College Cork.
Finbarr 0 Driscoll is a teacher in Queen of Angels N.S.,
Wedgewood, Sandyford, Co. Dublin.
Gerald Reagan is Professor of Education at Ohio State
University.
Richard Pratti, is Professor of Education at Ohio State
University.
Martin Fahy is a Lecturer in the Education department,
University College Cork.
J. R. McCarthy is Research Officer with the Northern
Ireland Council for Educational Research,
Belfast, and a tutor with the Open University.
Tom Baum is in the Curriculum Development section of
C.E.R.T. Dublin.
Linda McLoughlin is in the Curriculum Development section
of C.E.R.T.
Paul Anthony is a Lecturer in Education in St. Joseph's
College of Education, Belfast.
Padraig Hogan is Lecturer in Education, St. Patrick's
College, Maynooth, Co. Kildare.
Michael McKeown is Head of Education, Carysfort College
of Education, Blackrock, Co. Dublin.
Peter Gargan is a teacher in the Educational Service of
the Prison system, Dublin.
iii
6
Eanum0 Baillain is Lecturer in St. Angela's College
of Home Economics, Lough Gill, Sligo.
Bro. Seamus 0 Suilleabhain, C.F.S., is Professor of
Education, St. Patrick's College, Maynooth.
Seamus Grimes is Lecturer in Geography, University
College, Galway.
iv
General Editor's Comment
It gives me great pleasure to be able to announce
that for the second year running Irish Educational Studies
will appear in two numbers.
This fact serves to underline
the increasing interest in educational enquiry in Ireland
and it is with a great sense of satisfaction that these
papers are published for all of those interested in
education, both at home and abroad.
Educational research and scholarly studies act as a
mirror to the face of a culture.
These researches enable
one to 'see' rather than simply 'look' and therefore serve
to illuminate and deepen our educational imagination and
understanding.
Fortunately we are able to see more of
that separate reality of the educational culture from the
labours of the authors contained in both numbers of Volume
of Irish EPugational Studies. We will know something
of the metaphysical shape of this world and the logic
4
of the actors in these scenes, as well as the rituals,
myths, ceremonies and other symbolic rites of passage that
are acted out.
This is the special contribution that
educational research and scholarly enquiry brings to the
mediation of Irish culture.
The Presidential Address,
by Dr. John Coolahan. demonstrates something of the history
of the field of 'education' in Ireland and points to the
emerging community of interest for the many agencies
involved in education.
The Educational Studies Association
was formally established to cultivate that discourse.
One of the striking features of these papers i the
geometric level of change in education.
Change not
only in terms of programmes and courses of study in schools,
but in educational policies, and, perhaps more significantly.
social-psychological beliefs, attitudes and values shared
by all those individuals in the educational market-place
which can only be described as open-minded, and,which view
innovation as the norm, rather than the exception demanding
V
8
that teachers carefully monitor and describe their attempts
at experimentation.
This latter task is crucial if
education is to progress in this country.
One of the
founding fathers of Sociology, Georg Simmel remarked:
Nothing more can be attempted than to
establish the beginning and direction
of an infinitely long road.
The
pretension of any systematic and definitive
completeness would be, at least, a selfillusion.
Perfection can here be obtained
by the individual student only in the
subjective sense that he communicates
everything he has been able to see.
It is in this special sense of "seeing" that I ask all of
those engaged in the world of education to become good
researchers of their own practice and give us 'thick
description' fed by understanding.
We must be able to
not only narrate and describe educational phenomena, but
we must be able to justify and evaluate these phenomena.
What this means is that each educator will have a disposition
to critically and systematically examine one's own
educational setting.
It is not enough that outside
'experts' traine3 in social research methods study
educational settings - teachers and others need to become
more skilled researchers and reporters.
I believe that
education, and particularly school curriculum, will not
make significant advances on past practice until we have
evolved a more effective system of research and curriculum
development in which teachers are supported by outside
researchers and that a more thorough commitment is given
to action research methodology than to natural science
modals of educational research.
This is a significant
part of the great challenge of change in Irish education.
Jim McKernan
General Editor,
University College Dublin.
February, 1985.
vi
Trish Educational Studios, Vol. 4, No. 1, 1984.
THE FORTUNES OF EDUCATION AS A SUBJECT
OF STUDY AND OF RESEARCH IN IRELAND
John Coolahan
Introduction
When one examines the traditional pattern of the
study of Education in modern Ireland one is struck by
its very chequered history. There have been periods of
breakthrough, promise and of serious concern for its
promotion. These were succeeded, however, by long
valley-periods where the approach to the subject was
unimaginative, instrumental and intellectually shallow.
Regrettably the latter was the more predominant pattern.
One considers that an appraisal of this tradition is
important for a number of reasons. It is a topic of
considerable interest in itself. It is a topic which has
been very much neglected in published research. The
strength or weakness of educational studies has had an
intimate bearing on the quality of the education system
in modern Ireland. One asserts that the neglect of
educational studies has been a weakness in the intellectual and cultural life of Irish society.
Such an
appraisal may also ba timely in that certain gains which
have been made may be under threat through current
policies and further desirable developments may be
seriously restricted.
An appraisal like this may be desirable bdt is
difficult to achieve in a short paper.
Nevertheless,
this synoptic presentation attempts to reveal the key
approaches to the study of Education, to give some
evaluation of them and to establish a perspective from
which currentdevelopments in the subject cAn be assessed.
1
Many relevant questions and much interesting detail are
set aside perforce for treatment on other occasions.
Early Conceptions of Education
In the late eighteenth and early nineteenth
centuries, and in the wake of the profound societal
changes associated with the Agricultural, Industrial
and French Revolutions the challenge of providing mass
education was faced by many Europen states.
It was a
period characterised by considerable optimism about the
potential of education to lead forward to a new era of
progress and civilisation.
It was a seminal and rich
period for educational theory and experiment.
Among the
rationalists evolved the view that a Science of Education
might be established based on a study of what was termed
the science of mind. Brian Simon has written, "The idea
that education could be developed as a science,
utilising observation and experiment, arose directly from
the tradition of English materialist philosophy deriving,
in particular, from the work of Hobbes and Locke".1
Simon went on to examine the work of Joseph Priestley in
this regard, but he also acknowledged the work of
Richard Lovell Edgeworth.
Edgeworth's Practical Education, published in 1798,
was the first full-scale treatise on education by an
Irishman and it won an international reputation. Strongly
influenced by the Lockean tradition he stated in his
preface "Experimental education is yet but in its infancy,
and boundless space forlimprovement remains.
To make
any progress in the art of education it must be patiently
reduced to an experimental science".
2
The ion
work of
twenty-five chapters was a remarkable, if uneven,
demonstration of educational principles and practice.
While many insights in this book are of perennial value
2
11
Edgewortl's system, as he admitted himself, was a
beginning rather than a compreheruiive system.
What was important was the conception that an
understanding of the education process required reflection,
reading, and structured experiment by educators; that
teaching was worthy of the serious concern of leaders in
society.
A friend of Edgeworth, Dr. Reuben Bryce in
many educational works pressed the cause of Education as
an area of study central to establishing teaching as "a
fourth profession".
In his Plan for System of National
Education, in 1828, he wrote:
All endeavours to improve education,
however zealous and generous they may
be, must utterly fail as to every purpose
of real value, unless means be provided
for enabling teachers to study education
as a liberal art, founded upon the
philosophy of the Human Mind. 3
Bryce urged that Professors in the Art of Teaching be
established in the University of Dublin and in regional
universities, which should be instituted.
In Bryce's
view:
Every teacher, before entering on the
duties of his profession ought to make
himself acquainted with the Art of
Teaching;
that is, with a system of rules
for communicating ideas and forming habits
and ought to obtain such a knowledge of the
philosophy of mind as shall enable him to
understand the reasons of these rules, and
to apply them with judgement and discretion
to the great diversity of dispositions with
which he will meet, in the course of his
professional labour. 4
(Author's underlining).
Thomas Wyse was a contemporary of Edgeworth and Bryce
and took a leading role in the establishment of the
national school system. In 1836 Wyse published Education
Reform,
the second large-scale work (and sadly the last)
on the theory and practice of Education by an Irishman
which won wide international readership.
3
12
Throughout the
book Wyse indicated acquaintance with a vast range of
educational writing and experiments abroad.
In his
striking philosophy of the curriculum he differed from
Edgeworth in the emphasis he gave to aesthetic education
and the cultivation of the imagination. He envisaged
long and assiduous preparation by intending teachers.
went on to state:
:a
The teacher must not only be a perfect
master of the various branches of
education which he is called upon to
teach, but he must also, in addition, be
thoroughly acquainted with the art of
Education itself. He must understand the
Science of mind, the principles of
instruction, the best methods, the latest
improvements;
and not only must he understand them,but he must also have so
repeatedly exercised them, that their
practice shall be as familiar as their
theory. 5
Wyse regarded pre-service training as essential and
wrote tellingly of the value of University Chairs of
Education for building a teaching profession.
He acted
as Chairman of the Committee on Foundation Schools and
Education in Ireland which reported in 1838.
Among its
wide-ranging proposals it urged a two-year course in
central and regional gColes normales for primary teachers.
Secondary teachers would benefit from "courses in the
art and science of teaching" under professors of
education in the universities.6
The concern of individuals such as Edgeworth, Bryce
and Wyse was to establish a body of knowledge and
formalised experience which would establish principles and
perspectives on the education process, would urge teachers
to understand such principles and inform their teaching
with them and would mark out teaching as one of the
learned professions.
Education was one of the great
public issues in the 1830s and it is interesting that one
4
13
of the earliest societies of Irish teachers we know
about - the Armagh Teachers' Society - in 1839 adopted
as
its
principal object "the improvement of the
literary and professional character of its members".7
The first teachers' professional journal in Ireland seems
to have been The Schoolmasters' Magazine and Educational
Inquirer founded in September 1839. This journal of
impressive quality urged its readers to lift their sights
towards genuine professional status.
It commented:
Until teaching is studied as an art, and
practised on the principles of mental
science, you will never be recognised as
professional men.
You must study
Paideutics (sic)" 8
Teachers were urged to set up Teachers' libraries stocked
with the works of writers such as Edgeworth, Wyse,
Pestalozzi, Hill, Hamilton and journals such as The
Journal of Education and The Education Magazine.
Teachers
were urged to study and discuss these works and "tomake
the schoolroom the theatre of experiment, testing
their
utility, and trying whether their opinions suit you as
an elementary teacher". 9
"Education" in the Training College, 1837-1896
The Commissioners of National Education in 1835 and
in 1837 set out plans for a two-year pre-service teacher
training programme and for the appointment of five
Professors to their new Central Training Establishment.
The National Board saw itself as moving away from the
apprentice tradition of the hedge school and from the
mechanical and rote methods of the monitorial system
introduced to Ireland by the Rildare Place Society in
its
model school in 1814. The first Pr.ofessor of
Teaching Method in the Board's Training College, Robert
5
14'
Sullivan, stated in a lecture delivered to his students
on 12 April 1838:
I would consider it an insult to your
understanding to offer a single argument
in favour of the new or intellectual
system, which indeed, alone deserves the
name of education. 10
The "new or intellectual system" favoured the
simultaneous teaching method over the individual and the
monitorial instruction methods.
Apart from that however,
it is not at all clear that the term "intellectual" was
appropriate for it.
Instead of the two-year training
course envisaged, the course was to amount only to four
or five months and two professors rather than five were
appointed.
The main concern of the training course came
to be the mastery of the content of the Board's reading
books and the content of subjects which could be taught
in the national schools.
The approach to the study of
Education was confined to lectures in teaching method,
supplemented with observation and teaching practice in
the model school. Thus, was set the predominant pattern
of national teacher training for well over a century.
At all times the need was felt that the content of
subjects, rather than the study of education as such,
should dominate the college courses.
A new form of
apprenticeship was also adopted whereby selected pupils
at the end of their own schooling would be apprenticed
as monitors to the local master, pass a number of
examinations largely based on subject content and
qualify as teachers.
One of these monitors was Patrick Keenan who
graduated to become; in turn, assistant teacher, head-
master of the Central Model School, a district inspector,
an assistant professor in the Training College, a chief
of inspection and at the age of 45, Resident Commissioner
of National Education, a post which he held for 23 years.
15
6
Keenan had a gift and flair for the practice and
organisation of teaching.
In 1856, as Head Inspector,
he gave a course on "The Science and Practice of School
Management" to "organising teachers".
One of these teachers was P.W. Joyce, later headmaster of the Central Model School.
Joyce was very
impressed by Keenan's lectures and went on to write
A Handbook of School Management and Methods of Teaching
in 1863.
In his preface Joyce acknowledged "I have
incorporated the most important of them (Keenan's
lectures) and they form a very considerable portion of
the books".
10
This book formed the central text for
Irish teachers in their study of Education and teaching
for over half a century.
An introductory stptement
indicated the author's approach, "While carefully
avoiding all mere theory, I have endeavoured to render
the instruction contained in it plain, useful and practical". 12
The suspicion of "mere theory" was to have a long life
Irish education circles. The book was a very useful,
in
clearly written compendium of practical guidelines, model
lessons and hints relating to methodology and organisation
of the school.
It had a strong didactic tone expressive
of a "This is the way" approach.
The Powis Commission of 1870 was highly critical
of the Central Training Institution and the courses
pursued in it.
Among various criticisms the investigators
stated:
To spend twenty weeks in incessant
occupations, wandering from one subjec's:
to another, is hardly the most promising
method of changing an inefficient teacher
into a competent one.
13
It criticised the system of teaching practice and student
assessment.
It was urged that fewer subjects be taken and
the course extended to, at least, one year's duration.
The need for a good library and encouragement in its use
were stressed.
It was pointedly remarked:
7
16
Less meagre fare for the mind than the
"Books of the Board" should be put
before the students. This perpetual
feeding on husks stunts and dwarfs the
minds of these people.
14
The course was extended to one year and from 1884
to two years for non-certificated teachers.
The concept
of the closed, boarding institution with students subject
to set regimens of timetable and close supervision from
early morning until late at night was intensified
within the new denominational training colleges.
Education as a subject had very low status.
A written
paper on "Methods of Teaching and School Organisation"
was introduced for all students in 1884. but a pass in
it was not essential for graduation.
rive questions were
to be answered in an hour and a half and it is clear from
the structure of the questions that definite, clear-cut,
factual answers were being sought. That the theoretical
and practical aspects of the subject Education were
seriously undervalued vis-a-vis the other subjects in
the Colleges is clearly evidenced by contemporary comment
of inspectors and others.
15
The introduction of payment
by results in 1872,with the strong support of Patrick Keenan,
implied a functional definition of teaching as a job with
clearly defined targets which encouraged a great deal of
mechanical and rote learning and positively discouraged
professional flair and personal initiative. 16 Imagination
in teachers was not considers: a Prized talent by officials in
charge of education in the nineteenth century.
8
17
Developments in Education, 1897-1922
A less closeted approach to the study of Education
emerged from the mid-nineties.
Payment by results fell
out of favour and the New Education Movement was having
international influence.
17
Ireland again opened windows
on to international thought on Education and there was a
resurgence of interest, as in the early part of the
nineteenth century, in Education as a subject of study.
This was clearly reflected in the new programmes for the
training colleges introduced in 1897.
There was a change
of title to "Theory of Method" and as part of a special
course for high level students a subject called the
"Science of Education" was introduced. The programmes
and examination papers clearly reflected a concern to
lift the pattern from basic factual questions on methods
and regulations to The general principles of teaching
and the intelligent application of these principles to
the teaching of the elementary subjects". The type and
standard of questions now being asked were indeed
18
impressive.
Education was nor allocated about 20 per
cent of overall marks, a large improvement.
However, the Revised Programme for National Schools
introduced in 1900 placed new pressures on the colleges
and the continuous tendency to overload the courses
re-e)erted itself.
Inspectors
complained that over
fifty hours a week had to be devoted to lectures and
associated study and remarked on "the want of time for
thought or for assimilation of what has been learned".19
The fact that students could qualify from the colleges
without passing in the Theory of Method examination
reveals the continuing suspicion of "mere theory".
There were usually only one or two staff members
specialising in Education who worked extremely hard with
lecture schedules of about 32 hours per week."
1
From
April 1900 training in a recognised training college
became essential for appointment as a principal teacher
in a national school.
9
18
The hopes of Bryce and Wyse that Chairs of
Education would be established in Irish universities had
not materialised in the nineteenth century.
Secondary
education was largely a private concern with no direct
state involvement.
The Intermediate Education Act of
1878 introduced an indirect involvement through its
payment by results examination system and totally ignored
the teacher or teacher training.
The cult of the
amateur held full sway for secondary teaching; a knowledge
of subject content being deemed quite sufficient for
secondary school teachers.
Orders such as the Jesuits and
the Christian Brothers had a more organised form of
teacher induction.
About the same year, 1897, as the
changes were introduced to give Education a more serious
position in the training colleges, the first steps were
taken to provide a qualification in Education for
secondary teachers in Ireland.
Trinity College decided to
hold examinations in the History and Theory of Education
and in the Practice of Education for graduates.
No
formal courses were provided and the first examinations
were held in January 1898.21
Successful candidates in
both examinations were awarded a Diploma in Education.
This was also the title of the award for two similar
examinations established in 1898 by the Royal University.
At first confined to Arts graduates they were later
extended to Science graduates.
As was the case with all
its academic awards the Royal University provided no
courses for students.
The standards of the examination
papers were high and the papers were in line with the
conception of Education as a subject in England and
Europe at the time.
22
Very few students took the
examinations; there were about three or four successful
students in any year.
Also in September 1896 the
Ursuline Convent in Waterford established a training
course for women secondary teachers which was recognised
19
10
by the Cambridge Syndicate.
23
The Dominican nuns and
Alexandra College in Dublin also set up training courses
for women.
The questions of teacher training and the setting
up of a Chair of Pedagogy were raised in the deliberations
of the Commission of Inquiry into Intermediate Education
(Panes) in 1898-99 and in evidence to the Commission on
University Education (Robertson) 1901-03,
but neither
Commission regarded the matter as coming within its
terms of reference.
24
The new Department of Agriculture
and Technical Instruction (1900) established courses
from 1901 for secondary teachers of Science and from
1905 required candidates for the Irish Secondary Teachers'
Science Certificate to pass an examination in the
Principles, Methods and History of Education with special
reference to Science teaching.
25
Among the terms of
reference to the Dale and Stephens Committee on
Intermediate Education established in 1904 was the issue
of "training
for secondary teachers".
While urging
flexibility in the requirements for training, Dale and
Stephens favoured a system of training and commended the
German pattern whereby the course would be post-graduate,
should include "a systematic course of study in the
Mental and Moral Sciences bearing on Education, and in
the Theory and History of Education".
These were to be
complemented by teaching practice and classroom
observation and, before accreditation asa teacher, there
should be a probationary period in a recognised school.
26
These proposals were later to form the core of the
registration requirements introduced in 1918.
Dale and
Stephens went further to recommend encouragement "to
teachers to interest themselves whilst teaching in
original work connected either with some branch of
scholarship or with studies of value for the science and
art of teaching".
The Report stated that funds should
11
20
be available to publish theses by secondary teachers,
holding that the stimulus to teachers would be of great
value and would enhance the dignity of the teacher and
of his professsion.
27
Thus we can note that the question of providing a
structured course in Education for secondary teachers
was a live one around the turn of the century.
Some
important initiatives followed and the first Chair of
Education in Ireland was established by Trinity College
in Ma/ 1905, following the publication of the Dale and
Stephens Report.
Professor Culverwell was the first
occupant of the Ct*air.
The establishment of the National
University of Ireland in 1908 resolved the long-disputed
issue of providing university education acceptable to
Two of the constituent colleges, University
Catholics.
College Dublin and University College Cork established
Chairs of Education straight away, to be followed by
University College Galway in 1915.
Queen's University
Belfast set up its Chair in 1914.
At long last it seemed as if Education was being
accepted as a serious subject whose status was endorsed
by the establishment of Chairs of Education in all Irish
universities.
This seemed to be particularly the case
in U.C.D., where Rev.Professor Corcoran succeeded in
having Education at Diploma and Higher Diploma levels,
as an undergraduate subject for the B.A. and the B.Sc.,
and also for M.A. and Ph.D. levels.
28
An Education
Society was established in the university and publication
of educational studies was initiated.
Another important
Initiative which followed the establishment of the
National University was that a two-year course was made
obligatory for all training college students and provision
was made for the best students to add a third year of
university-based studies leading to a university diploma
or higher certificate in Education.
12
21
The INTO had urged
closer links between the colleges and the university
29
since 1902.
From that time until the establishment
of the B.Ed. degrees in 1974 the INTO remained steadfast
in its belief in the importance of the university
dimension for national teachers.
The third-year course
for matriculated students attending university lectures
in Education was inaugurated in 1912 and continued under
various regulations until about 1950.
The Higher Diploma in Education was the training
course introduced for graduates and it was geared towards
secondary teaching as a career. The consecutive pattern
of the one year post-graduate course has survived as the
basic structure for secondary teachers of general
subjects to the mid-eighties.
A key problem in its early
years was the lack of demand for the course as secondary
teachers were not required to have a pre-service
qualification in teaching.
A revealing, if somewhat
shocking statement of the appalling condition of
secondary teachers was made by Professor Culverwell at
a public meeting in 1910.
He stated that he had never
advised one of his students, who had any other prospects,
to go in for the position of secondary teaching in
Ireland. 30
The Association of Secondary Teachers,
Ireland (ASTI) was set up in 1909 and pressed strongly
for the raising of the status of secondary teaching.
Due
largely to its pressure a Registration Council was
established whose regulations came into effect from
July 1918. To qualify for registration candidates
needed to have a university degree, a diploma in
Education and probationary experience in approved schools.
This was a landmark development, but it was still the
case that teachers could be employed in secondary schools
who did not satisfy the registration requirements.
M.A. studies in Education were by now well established
and Professors of Education had published some important
13
works.
Thus, the period from 1898 to 1918 was a period
which witnessed significant breakthroughs on several
fronts foraEducatianas a s. :ious subject of study.
The
foundations seemed to have been laid for further
development as Ireland emerged into independence.
"Education" in Independent Ireland, 1922-1962
Following political independence in 1922 renewed
efforts were made to establish more integrated links
between the universities and the training colleges. A
scheme of 1923 for a university degree course for
national teachers was not proceeded with because of
opposition from the new Department of Education,
formally established in 1924.
Both the National
University and Trinity College extended some credits to
academic subjects in the training colleges.
Other than
these arrangements no liaison was established between
the colleges and the universities and the Education
departments grew apart from one another.
The primary educational aim of the new State was
the preservation and revival of the Irish language as
a living language. A heavy onus was placed on the
training colleges and schools to promote this aim. Irish
was to be the medium of instruction and of social life
within the colleges.
In 1931 recruitment to the colleges
became based on the levels of performance in the Leaving
Certificate examination and in specifically designed
oral examinations, and a high level of competition
existed for entry.
New courses were introduced in
1932-33 which were to remain in operation for 30 years.
Examination papers were taken in "Principles of Education"
as well as in "Teaching Methods".
23
14
For the first time
ever success in the written papers in Education became
essential for a pass in the overall examination.
The
marks allocated to Education in the second year course
amounted to about 23 per cent of overall marks.
The colleges continued to be denominational, singlesexed and highly routinised and closed off as bearding
institutions.
The students' day was very crowded; as
late as 1959 the average attendance at lectures was 30
hours per week, apart from other organised activities.31
Lectures were given through the medium of Irish but no
books on educational studies were available in the Irish
language.
Thus, the tendency to rely on lecturers' notes
was intensified.
Lecturers were neither expected nor
facilitated to engage in educational research other than
lecture preparation.
A heavy reliance was placed on
practical experience, an excellent thing in itself, but
the value of which is augmented by probing at new
frontiers.
The Colleges had very little academic
autonomy with entry standards and numbers decided by the
Department of Education which also prescribed the courses.
Departmental inspectors set and corrected the examination
papers as well as inspected lecturers' work.
The
inspectors themselves were inducted through the apprenticeship system. They were regarded as "outdoor staff" and
their influence on educational policy within the
Department of Education was limited.
There was very little
time for personal reflection or wide reading by the
lecturers or the students in the colleges.
The libraries
were inadequate and little used.
This probably was a
factor in the predominantly anti-intellectual sub-culture
which prevailed in the colleges and which had carryover
effects on their graduates.
To delineate these general characteristics is not
to denigrate the tremendous input of work by committed
and often gifted staff members or the resilience of
15
fro
ON&
talented and motivated students to benefit from and go
beyond their college experiences.
Rather it is to
remind us of the context in which they had to work and
the lack of scope and of vision with regard to
educational studies for a well-educated and highly
intelligent student clientele.
It would be refreshing if we could shift our gaze
and be impressed by the state of educational studies
within the universities in the first forty years of
independence.
Regrettably, this is not so and the
promising early beginnings were not improved on or even
satisfactorily sustained.
The staffs of Education
Departments remained pitiably small up to the nineteen
Indeed, the very serious situation developed
sixties.
whereby different universities left the Chair of
Education vacant for considerable periods of time.
For
instance, the Chair was vacant in Trinity College from
1916 to 1922, in U.C.D., for 16 years - from 1950 to
1966, in Maynooth College at various times and
in U.C.C.
fro 1962 to 1969.
The predominant
concern of the small staffs became the teaching of the
one-year Higher Diploma Course to graduates.
This
affected the status of Education among other university
staff.
This course was conducted under very difficult
circumstances whereby lectures had to be given in the
late afternoon or evening, up to the nineteen seventies.
Efforts were made to erode its status further during
these decades by trying to make the Higher Diploma a
vacation course taken by serving full-time teachers and
by attempts to admit categories of teachers to registration
without the aigher Diploma in Education.
were resisted by the ASTI.
32
Such efforts
While the Higher Diploma was
a'necessary requirement for registration the fact that
for decades almost 50 per cent of secondary teachers were
unregistered seriously weakened the status of the
25
.
16
pre-service studies in Education.
U.C.D. removed
Education as an undergraduate subject for the B.A. and
the B.Sc., in 1945.
A significant decline also set in in
the number of students successfully concluding masters
degree studies in Education.
Only about 80 Masters
theses on educational topics were produced in the
universities of the Republic of Ireland in the 20 years
from 1946 to 1965, and these were not all directed in
Education Departments. 33 While many other European
countries re-organised their educational systems in the
post-war years this did not happen in Ireland and neither
did the subject Education benefit from any re-structuring.
Thus, while established subjects were being
strengthened and some other subjects were being introduced
and fostered within the university, Education was holding
a very tenuous position within the academic community.
Education had in fact declined from the position it
occupied circa 1920.
It had reached a very weak position
by the early nineteen sixties just at the time that there
was to be a great renewal and development of the Irish
education system generally, including a massive expansion
in post-primary school enrollment.
34
University
Education Departments were in a weak position to contribute to or indeed cope with the situation.
The dangerously
weak position in which they found themselves is
illustrated by the following table.
17
26'
Number of students and staff in University
Education Departments, 1965/1966
Number of Staff
College
No. of
Students
Professor
U.C.D.
346
U.C.C.
164
1
U.C.G.
152
1
Trinity
60
-
1
Lecturer
2
(vacant)
(vacant)
Junior Lecturer/Assistant
Full Time
Part Time
2
6
1
(vacant)
4
6
1
(vacant)
2
11
2
8
1
2 Visiting
part-time
Source: Report of Commission on Higher Education,Vol.1,p.220
These figures meant that a full time staff of 14
had to cater for 722 students and only 4 of this staff
were above junior lecturer status.
Well might the
Commission on Higher Education (19671 comment:
There are indications that academic
opinion does not regard university
departments of education on the same
footing as other university departments. 35
The situation had reached the stage when the
Minister for Education could remark cavalierly in the
Dgil in 1967 "Maybe I will do away with the Higher
Diploma in Education".J6
During the four decades following independence,
1922-62)publications dealing with Irish education were
very limited.
Of the nineteen books one has counted they
all dealt with historical themes and twelve of them were
institutional histories or dealt with specific categories
of schools. There were no books which dealt with wider
aspects of education.
.27
The INTO's booklets of 1941 and 1947
18
as well as Rev Dr. 0 Cathain's booklet on Secondary
Education in 1958 stood out as lonely beacons throwing
light on general policy.
Articles on education in
periodicals and journals were few in number and very
uneven in quality. Apart from teacher union magazines
there was no educational journal as such and no
educational correspondent was appointed to any newspaper.
Following the reports on inspection and on technical
education in 1927 no committee of enquiry was established
for education until the Council of Education was set up
in 1950.
One wonders if the duration taken to produce
the Council's Reports on the primary and secondary
curricula and the quality of these Reports were not
injuriously affected by the lack of a live tradition and
range of research skills for such studies.
The
Department of Education sponsored no educational research
project.
Its annual reports became dull and routinised,
petering out altogether in the mid-sixties.
One is of the opinion that debate on education and
the quality of Irish intellectual and cultural life
generally suffered deeply from the State and institutional
neglect of educational studies over these four decades.
Eventually it was again the re-establishment of links
with educational thought and developments abroad, as well as
with the work of economists, which drew public attention
to the rather dismal condition of Irish education studies
in Ireland after forty years of independence.
28
19
The Revitalisation of "Education", 1962-1984.
Several major reports were published on Irish
education in the sixties which had implications for
educational studies and teacher training. One of these
was the Investment in Education Report,published in 1965.
From a close scrutiny of the supply and demand pattern
the Report demonstrated that an increased output of
teachers would be required at all levels and urged
a
redeployment of teaching resources to secure a more
satisfactory and economic return from :Ile teaching force.
The Report of the Commission on Higher Education (1967)
had more specific proposals to make regarding education
and teacher training. It urged the re-structuring of
the teacher training colleges so that their education
staffs would become the education departments of a new
type of third-level institution - somewhat on the lines
of a polytechnic, termed New Colleges.
The course for
primary teachers would be lengthened from two to three
years and lead to the award of a degree from the New
Colleges. The courses for teachers in vocational and
technical schools should also be lengthened and become
more formalised. However, the Report took most direct
issue with prevailing trends when it objected to the
neglect of Educational Studies by the universities.
stated unequivocably:
It
In our opinion, the study of education should
not be regarded as the "poor relation" of
university studies. It should be given equal
importance with other studies. It would be
wrong to conceive of the function of
university departments of education simply as
departments for the training of teachers in
pedagogics. Education, with all its
philosophical, historical, economic and
sociological implications, forms a field of
study that requires to be pursued and
investigated no less than other university
subjects; ...
37
29
20
The Report also deprecated the lack of educational research
remarking:
Paucity of research into educational problems
in this country has been disclosed by the
evidence. So far as we can ascertain,
educational research is neither well organised
nor well supported. 38
Such statements were an authoritative indictment of the
state of affairs which had come to exist. The Report
urged "that the university departments of education should
all be staffed and maintained at a level and to an extent
appropriate to a major university department" 39
While full-scale remedial measures were slow to
emerge some changes were already taking place which
gradually,and on accumulation, would change significantly
the overall situation for Education. The training colleges
benefited from new extensions and larger intakes of
students. The colleges became more regularly known as
Colleges of Education and became more "open" as institutions, with more personal responsibility devolving on
students in the management of their scholastic and leisure
time.
The single sex college gradually gave way to mixed
colleges with female students forming the majority of the
student body.
The student body became more diversified
by a greater infusion of university graduates on a one
year training course and the participation of what were
known as "mature" students within the student body.
From
1962 the colleges assumed greater academic responsibility
for their courses and
examinations and were less under
the control of the state Department of Education.
An
important change occurred in 1963 when, following
discussions between College of Education and Department
of Education personnel, new courses were devised which
reduced the range of subjects to be studied and established
a restructured course in Education. As well as re-vamped
courses in Methods and Principles of Education, this now,
included Psychology and elective courses such as History
21
t
of Education, Sociology of Education and Comparative
Education. The change was directed at Giving a more
theoretical underpinning to the students' studies. The
'staffs in the Education Departments were greatly expanded
allowing much more scope for specialisation.
A key figure in guiding the new developments was
Rev. Dr. D.F.Cregan.
He also took the important
initiatives of establishing the Special Education Unit
in St. Patrick's College, in 1961, Sand the Educational
Research Centre in 1966. To help widen the academic
and cultural horizons of the college of education
Dr. Cregan initiated series of public lectures on
education by national and international scholars.and he
also initiated the publication of two scholarly journals.
Both Dr. Cregan and the first Director of the Educational
Research Centre, Dr. Kellaghan, urged the universities
to give greater support to Education and to educational
research.
40
The establishment of the Educational Research
Centre was symbolic of a new concern that the health and
vitality of a modern education system were closely
connected with empirical research on the system.
Since
its establishment the Centre has carried out a wide range
of research, and, while acting as an independent agency,
the Centre has been a yeasting influence among college
staffs and some teachers.
Meanwhile the understaffed Education Departments
of the Universities were being stretched to breaking
point to cope with the greatly expanded numbers taking
the Higher Diploma in Education. The student numbers
more than quadrupled within the decade 1959-1969, which
was an extraordinary increase over such a short period. 41
It is a tribute to the limited staffs that they were
able to cope at all. The predicament of Education in
the Universities reached its nadir in the mid-sixties
in terms of insufficient staff, resources and funding.
31
..
22
Heed was taken,however, of the calls of the Commission
on Higher Education that the university departments should
be expanded as a matter of urgency and that a more active
research role be developed.
Steps were taken to
re-establish or re-fill the Chairs of Education.
Fr. 0 Cathain became Professor in U.C.D., and Professors
Rice, 0 Suilleabhain, 0 h-Eideain and McClelland were
appointed as new
Professors in Trinity College, Maynooth,
U.C.G., and U.C.C.,respectively. Recruitment of more
full-time staff with various specialisms took place.
Premises and facilities were also improved, particularly
in the areas of audio-visual equipment, resource rooms,
micro-teaching studios, workshop spaces and library
resources.
The courses for the Higher Diploma have been restructured with less reliance on mass lectures and more
scope for seminar, tutorial and workshop groups. More
emphasis has been given to Psychology and Sociology, with
educational technology, micro-teaching and elective
specialisms also becoming more prominent.
Efforts have
been made to give a more practical thrust to the courses
and they have also assumed a more strictly full-time
complexion.
Reduced student numbers in recent years have
allowed for more individual attention to their needs.
While Education does not exist as an undergraduate
subject in any of the universities, except U.C.G., all
*Education departments have re-vitalised their postgraduate work since 1970.
M.Ed. courses now exist in
all the Departments while M.A. degrees in Education
exist in the National University colleges and Ph.D's in
all the Universities. Trinity (nllege provides an M.Litt.
degree which may be taken in Education.
The greater
availability of post-graduate degrees in Education, with
flexible formats to match student requirements, has
allowed scope for much-needed specialisation of an advanced
23
32
character to meet the needs for expertise and skill
within the education syS.tem to-day.
There has also been a great increase in diplomas
of a specialist character. These include diplomas in
Career Guidance, in Special Education, in the Education
of the Deaf, in Remedial Education, in Computers for
Education, in Catechetics, in Compensatory and Remedial
Education.
Departmental policy in recent years has
placed some of these courses in jeopardy.
A significant new departure in teacher education
was the setting up of Thomond College in Limerick in
1970.
This was on different lines from the traditional
colleges of education and from the university education
departments.
It was to concern itself with the education
and training of specialist second-level teachers.
The
first group of such teachers was the Physical Education
teachers who underwent a four-year degree course with
Education taken as a concurrent subject.
The degree was
awarded under the auspices of the National Council for
Educational Awards (NCEA).
Since then Metalwork,
Woodwork and Rural Science trainee teachers have
embarked on similarly structured degree courses.
A
four-year degree course for Art teachers based in the
National College of Art and Design is also expected to
be validated shortly by the N.C.E.A.
A university-
linked B.Ed. degree course exists for Home Economics
teachers.
VIA
Meanwhile primary teachers had continued to urge
that their education and training should lead to a
university degree course. The Report on Teacher
Training by the Higher Educational Authority in 1970,
favoured a degree course linked to the new National
Council for Educational Awards.
The INTO for seven
decades had urged a university-linked award and
24
33
Mr. Sean Brosnahan, the General Secretary, was particularly
to the fore in the early seventies seeking a university
degree for national teachers.
Eventually the Government
decided to request the universities to agree to the
award of degrees to primary teachers and a notable
landmark in teacher training was the introduction of the
B.Ed.
degrees in 1974.
The three largest colleges of
education became "recognised" colleges of the National
University while the Church of Ireland College and some
smaller colleges became associated with Trinity College
for their B.Ed. degrees.
Under the B.Ed. structure
Education became the central subject within the Colleges
of Education and the increased course duration as well
as greatly improved library facilities allowed the
expanded staffs to help students towards a deeper grasp
of the subject.
In 1983 the National University
approved a plan for a composite M.Ed.Degree between one
of its constituent colleges and two of the new Recognised
Colleges but the Minister for Education did not
arrroveof the
Plans have been
Recognised Colleges participating.
formulated in recent times to set up in-service B.Ed.
degrees.
These various developments have led the ay towards
an all-graduate teaching profession in Irela'id.
The
teaching force has doubled in the last twenty years and
teachers participate in a common salary scale.
42
The
teacher unions have developed co-operative relationships
between them leading to the Council of Education Unions
in 1981.
A Ministerial Conmittee in 1974 recommended the
establishment of a Teaching Council with wide-ranging
functions in relation to teacher education and the study
of Education and educational research but the recommendation has not been implemented. 43
The early seventies
was also a period when the importance of in-service
education for teachers was more emphasised.
25
34
Teacher
centres were established.
Various courses, largely of
a short-term and non-certificated variety, were made
available.
No contractual entitlement to release from
full-time teaching ,to participate in in-service
training exists for Irish teachers and the needs of
the teaching profession in relation to in-service
provision have not been met by Government policy
support.
44
and
The Programme for Action, 1984-87, has ruled
out action on the recommendations of a Ministerial
Committee on in-service education, which reported in
1983. 45
Contemporary with the many developments which
occurred in teacher education the last twenty years have
seen significant developments in educational research.
The expansion of post-graduate theses on education is
emphasised when we note that from 1966 to 1982 over
550 theses have been produced in the Education Departments
of the Republic's Universities. 46
Benjamin Alvarez in
a bibliography confined to empirical research from 1960
to 1980, excluding
post-graduate theses,listed
47
148 titles.
Vincent Greaney and Brendan Molloy have
listed 155 studies on Reading which have been
produced
This is remarkable
evidence of research vitality, particularly when the
within the period 1960 to 1982. 48
miniscule direct input from Government finance is borne
in mind.
There has also been a great vitality in the number
of bodies and associations which have been involved in
promoting educational debate, conferences and workshops.
Publications of various kinds by such agencies have
provided a good range of outlets for articles and
research findings in Education.
A list of some of
of the associations and publications is set out in
the appendix.
26
35
The last 20 years then, have been a watershed period
for the subject Education and the profession of teaching.
The improved staffing and facilities in the Education
Departments of Colleges of Education and Universities is
very striking.
The more central place allocated to
"Education" in pre-service courses is highly significant.
The increased duration and altered structure of courses
is important in allowing students to get a more thorough
understanding of Education and a greater opportunity to
formulate a professional outlook.
Publications in the
forms of books, articles and reports on the system are
evidence of an extraordinary flowering of educational
debate and research.
Professional debate and interchange
of ideas is further fostered by the impressive calendar
of conferences, seminars and professional workshops
which are now a feature of the educational year.
Teacher
centres provide a resource which could only be dreamed
of by generations of teachers, going back as far as the
Armagh Teachers' Association with its plans for teachers'
study centres in the 1830s.
Concluding Comments
One cannot pursue here some vitally important
questions such as the nature of educational studies today,
the theory-practice problem, the use of educational
research. However, in conclusion, one would like to
offer some general comments.
While attitudes have
changed within the Irish academic world toward Education
the subject, it still has a long way to go before it is
fully endorsed as a field of study which is underninned
by a serious theoretical structure, which is studied
and expanded according to rigorous canons of scholarship
and experiment and which is taught in,amanner and a style
27
which sets a headline for other disciplines or areas of
knowledge.
A criterion of professionalism in educati-n is the
command over, and skill in the application of a body of
specialized and systematized knowledge.
The manner of
the organization of, and initiation into the knowledge
and skills evolves in the light of experience, insight
and further research. The content and teaching of
Education need to be of a quality to provide a secure
basis from which professional development may grow and
be fostered giving assurance, competence and sense of
direction to practitioners.
Ironically, if it is to do
that it needs to be realised more generally that there
is more to Education than teacher training.
If
Education as a field of study and teacher education as
a professional programme are allowed to deteriorate and
become stale and moribund then the deleterious effects
range much further afield than the on-going professional
competence of teachers.
Some elements of the study of
Education can and should lead directly towards professional competence in the classroom. Other aspects do not
pretend to and cannot deliver on precise guidelines and
skills for specific situations. What the overall study
of Education in a professional programme should do is
to equip the educator with classroom skills, deepen his
understanding, widen his area of knowledge reference,
and motivate him to act in an intelligent, artistic
and developing manner. There is a heavy onus on those
teaching educational studies to ensure that their content
and mode of handling courses are such that students
genuinely benefit and are inspired by them.
The teaching of Education is enriched, deepened
and kept vitalised by educational research. As well as
this, educational research enriches the education system
in a variety of ways. It can be of direct benefit to
37
28
teachers in the classroom.
It can widen the horizons
and deepen the understanding of many involved in education
- teacher educators, policy makers and administrators.
It can be personally developmental for those involved in
it.
It contributes to the gradual accumulation of
knowledge and truth in general, and tr., the development
of Education, in particular.
Problems exist in the mode
of communicating the research to different audiences
with varying backgrounds and interests. The research
should always be subject to scrutiny but one needs to
guard against a prevalent tendency to dismiss educational
research by a brusque, commonsense, no-nonsense attitude
which is unworthy of professionals.
There are
over 40.000 people professionally
involved in a direct way with the education system.
For
many the exposure to educational studies has been limited,
its quality has been thin and the circumstancLs in
which it occurred very restricted.
The lack of serious
provision for in-service studies of a satisfactory
character is a further significant loss for people
operating at all levels within the education system.
Yet
we expect educators to be curriculum innovators, to be
skilled in many aspects of their job at a time of
fundamental, sccial and cultural change and to retain
a fresh enthusiasm for a career span of up to forty-five
years, fuelled by such limited resources.
Is it a
cause of surprise that for many the shallow well of
fructifying ideas and inspiration has already run dry
long before they draw their pension? There is a great
pool of talent among the corps of Irish educators but
there is also, what might be termed a great silence from
many of them. The sad fact is that few teachers write
on Education or, let it be admitted, read in Education.
Is it a case that many educators lack confidence and do
not feel at home in writing on Education?
%I
29
38
Do they fail
to realise that communicating their experiences and
reflections can enrich the system as well as be
professionally developmental for themselves?. Are such
attitudes connected with the quality of their experience
of educational studies?
Knowledge gives freedom,
power and confidence. The Irish nation can only benefit
when its educators have access to the knowledge,
attitudes and skills which help to lead to the realisation
of their full potential as professionals.
There is a community of interest, in the best sense,
for the many agencies involved in education to ensure
that the study of Education and the pursuit of educational
research are promoted and developed.
To remind us of
Edgeworth's phrase "boundless space for improvement
remains".
Co-operation between individuals, interest
groups and institutions is vital in meeting the challenges
ahead.
From its foundation in 1976 one of the key aims
of the Educational Studies Association has been the
promotion of co-operation between educational researchers
and educational interests throughout Ireland.
One hopes
that in the years ahead it may continue to do so and
help to retain, and build on what has been achieved in
the development of educational studies in Ireland for
the long-term benefit of its new generations.
39
30
APPENDIX
Some Educational Associations and Publications
Post-Primary School Subject
Associations
- Journals
Teachers' Study Group
- Occasional publicatioas
Educational Research Centre
- Irish Journal of
Education and many
publications.
Curriculum Development Association
- Compass
Department of Education
- Oideas
reading Association of Ireland
- Proceedings and other
publications
Educational Studies Association
- Proceedings,
trisu
Educationa StuaTa7
Teacher Unions
- Journals and Special
Reports
School of Education, 1' C.D.
- Studies in Education
and occasional
publications.
Linguistics Institute
- Teangeolas
H.E.A.
N.C.E.A.4
E.S.R.I.)
- Special Reports on
Educatioh
Remedial ;teachers' Association
- Learn
Register of WEEZ1-
Association of Teachers in Special
Education
Computer in Education Society
Technological Education Society
Association of Principals and
Vice-Principals in Community and
Comprehensive Schools
Education Ireland
31
- Guth anus Cairm
REFERENCES
1.
Brian Simon, "The Rise of Science and the Science of
Education" in Collection 3 of Papers of
International Conference for History (..f
Education, Westminster College, Oxford, 1983,
pp.131-140, p. 132.
2.
R.L. Edgeworth, Practical Education.
Johnston, 1196), p.v.
3.
R.J. Bryce, Sketch of a Plan for a System of National
Education.
(London:
Cowie, 1828), p.v.
4..
Ibid., p. 25.
5.
Thomas Wyse, Education Reform.
1836), p. 293.
6.
Report of the Select Committee on Foundation Schools
and Education in Ireland. H.C.1837, (701),
vii, p.42.
7.
The Schoolmasters Magazine, Vol. I,
8.
Ibid., p. 35.
9.
Ibid., p. 1?2.
(London:
(London: Longman,
1839, p-57- (Armagh:
McWatters).
10.
Robert Sullivan, Lectures in Popular Education.
(Dublin: Curry, 1842), p. 19.
11.
P.W. Joyce, A Handbook of School Management and
Methods of Teaching. (Dublin: Gill, 18631,p.iii.
1 2 .
Ibid.
13.
Report of the Royal Commission of Inquiry into
Primary Education in Ireland (c.6), H.C. 1870,
xxviii, Vol.I, p.b13.
14.
Ibid., p. 813.
15.
Fifty-sixth Report of the Commissioners of National
Education.
(C.60741, H.C.1890, XXX, Appendix C.,
p.184.
16.
John Coolahan, "Payment by Results in the National
and Intermediate Schools of Ireland". Unpublished
M.Ed. thesis, Trinity College, 1975.
41
32
17.
J.W. Selleck, The New Education: The English
Background, 1870-1914.
(Melbourne: Pitman,
1968).
18.
John Coolahan, "Education in the Training Colleges
1877-1977", in Two Centenary Lectures.
(Carysfort College, 1981), pp.20-52, p.29.
19.
Quoted in Ibid., pp.31, 32.
20.
Ibid., p. 32.
21.
Graham Balfour, The Educational Systems of Great
Britain and Ireland.
(Oxford: Clarendon Press,
1903), P. 209.
22.
Examination Papers of Royal University, 1899-1906.
23.
Report of Messrs. Dale and Stephens, Intermediate
Education in Ireland
(Ce.2546) 1905, p.80.
24.
Appendix to Commission of Inquiry into Intermediate
Education, (Cd.9511), H.C. 1899, XXII, cols.'
8396, 8522, 8824-6.
First Report of Commissioners on University
Education, H.C. 1902, (Cd.900), H.C.XXXI,
Cols.
6472 ff.
25.
Report of Dale and Stephens on Intermediate Education,
p.81.
26.
Ibid., p. 79.
27.
Ibid., p. 81.
28.
Calender of U.C.D., 1911-12.
29.
Appendix to Commission on University Education.
(C.1884), H.C. 1903, xxxii, p. 98.
30.
The Irish Journal of Education, No. 10, Dec., 1910,
p.177.
31.
Renort and Appendices of Teachers' Salaries Committee,
(Dublin: Stationery Office 1960), p.94.
32.
Minutes of Registration Council 1930 to 1960.
(Various meetings).
33.
E.S.A.I. Register of Theses on Educational Topics,
1911-79.
(Galway: Officina Typographica, 1979.
33
42
34. John Coolahan, Irish Education, History and Structure.
(Dublin: Institute of Public Administration,
1981), pp. 131-140.
35. Commission on Higher Education, Report (Pr.9389).
(Dublin:
Stationery Office, 1967), Vol. I, p.220,
par. 9.46.
36. Dail Debates - Vol.227, Co1.1192, 6 April 1967.
37.
Commission on Higher Education,Report, Vol.I,
pp220,211.
38. Ibid., p. 235.
39. Ibid., p. 221.
40. Rev. D.F. Cregan, "The University and the Teaching
Profession", in Academic Staff Association,
U.C.D., Contemporary Developments in University
Education, III, 1965, pp.34-39, and
Rev.D.F.Cregan, "Education and the University", and
T. Kellaghan, "The University and Education" in
Contemporary
ments in University Education,
vi, pp.27-33 and pp.17-26.
41. Commission on Higher Education Report, Vol. I, P.59
and Calender of the National University of
Ireland, 1971, pp.278, 289 and Records of School
of Educatio. . Trinity College, Dublin.
42. Statistical Reports of the Department of Education.
43. Planning Committee, Report to the Minister for
Education on the Teaching Council. (Unpublished,pp.7.8.)
44. John Coolahan, "Ireland" in A. Salmon,ed. The Inservice
Training of Teachers in the European Community.
(ATEE, Brussels, 1980T, pp. 10-18.
45. Programme for Action in Education, 1984-87, pp.51,52,
par.7.11.
46. E.S.A.I., Register of Theses and Spplemetts.
47. Benjamin Alvarez, "Educational research in Ireland:
a bibliography of empirical work 1960-1980".
Irish Journal of Education, 1981, Vol.15, pp.41-52.
48. Brendan Molloy and Vincent Greaney,"Reading in the
Republic of Ireland - Bibliography", Oideas,
26, 1982, pp.104-114.
43
34
Irish Educational Studies, Vol. 4, No. 1, 1984.
THE IRISH CHARTER SCHOOLS:
THE GRAND DESIGN IN
PRINCIPLE AND PRACTICE
Kenneth Milne
The history of educational ideas and institutions in
the eighteenth century while not throwing as much light
on today's situation as nineteenth century history does,
for all that provides a great deal of information on the
society of its day.
A study of the charter schools adds
to our knowledge of some of the elements of eighteenth
century social and economic life:
there is much data on
apprenticeship, food prices, et cetera. On a larger, scale,
such a study also contributes to a debate that has been
kindling for some time about the penal laws, a debate
summarised by S.J. Connolly in a review article in the
most recent issue of Irish Economic and Social History
for more thought to be given to the
where he asks
possibility that the penal code was what it was said to be:
an attempt to eliminate Catholicism and make Ireland
Protestant, and that this was the legislators' prime
motive, rather than that of making the Catholic
population a subject class)
I think that even the brief introduction to the
charter schools that follows will give substance to Dr.
Connolly's suggestion that "The launching in 1733 of the
charter schools makes clear that even at this stage the
idea of converting the Catholic population to Protestantism
was not dead."
2
Historians of education are not the only ones to
neglect the eighteenth century, its early decades in
particular. Perhaps this neglect owes something to the
headline set by Lecky - still a force to be reckoned with -
35
of whose five volume history of the century four are
concerned with George III's reign.
Yet the early
eighteenth century was important.
Seminal thinking was
taking place - in political theory, in religion and in
economics. A vast pamphlet literature on these facets of
society survives, and the leaders were the Protestant
intelligentsia such as Prior, Dobbs, Madden, and of course
Swift. Their zeal for the moral and material welfare of
Ireland found expression in such noteworthy developments
as the Dublin (soon to be Royal Dublin) Society and the
Linen Board. Many of them - Swift included - were members
of the Incorporated Society in Dublin for Promoting
English Protestant schools in Ireland. The Royal Dublin
Society and the Linen Board have always received a more
favourable press than the Incorporated Society has done,
understandably, given the disrepute into which the
Society's schools fell. Lecky described them as having
"offered a people thirsting for knowledge a cup which they
believed to be poison".3
A modern historian, Professor
R.B. McDowell, has written that they were "ill-managed by
committees of languid, educationally inexpert amateurs",4
and Charles Dickens' most gruesome passages on Dotheboys
Hall have nothing on the description of the Incorporated
Society's schools by one public enquiry after another.
The opprobrium attaching to the charter schools (as
they came to be called in recognition of their royal
mandate) owed much not only to the cruelty and neglect
with which many of them were conducted, but also to the
fact that their sponsors fervently believed that if the
Irish poor were to become industrious and civilised they
must, perforce, be anglicised and Protestant. The
conversion of the Irish was an essential step to the
redemption of Ireland in all senses of the word. This is
not to say that the scandalous maladministration of the
schools was a calculated part of the process. Indeed the
45
36
Society struggled hard to remove from its schools any
grounds for the criticism that might so easily have been
levelled at them that they were centres for disease and
degradation, and scarcely constituted a convincing
argument for Protestantism.
The Society's, or rather
Archbishop Boulter's 'grand design' was therefore very
different in practice to what its founders had envisaged
in theory.
Well versed in the scriptures though the
founders of the Society were, they made scant allowance
for human nature in its less attractive aspects.
Hugh Boulter, Archbishop of Armagh from 1724 to 1742,
is generally regarded as having been the major influence
in the setting up of the Incorporated Society.
There can
be no doubt that it was his great prestige and influence
that gave to the 'grand design', as it was sometimes
extravagantly termed, its initial impetus.
Boulter, like
every Church of Ireland Archbishop of Armagh in the
eighteenth century (and like many in other centuries
before and after the Reformation) was English.
Bishop of
Bristol, dean of Christ Church, Oxford, a former tutor at
the Hanoverian court, he epitomised that blend of
political and religious leadership so characteristic of
church and state in eighteenth century Ireland.
He could
draw little comfort from the predicament of the
Established Church of Ireland that the Report on the
State of Popery presented to the Irish House of Lords
revealed in 1731, telling as it did of "the disproportion
between mass-houses and churches, Romish ecclesiastics
and Protestant ministers and popish and Protestant
schools."
5
Something must be done The answer was thought to be
an elaborate network of charity schools, centrally
directed, government supported, adequately financed.
There were already many such schools, the fruits of local
and individual initiative such as that of Henry Maule,
37
46
Bishop of Cloyne.
There was, indeed, since 1716 a society
for promoting such schools, 6 and in 1730 Maule drew up
An humble proposal for obtaining His Majesty's royal
charter to incorproate a Society for promoting Christian
Knoweldge among the poor natives of
English Protestant schools were to b
, kingdom of Ireland.
e agents used.
7
Boutler mobilised support among
_ leaders of the
ascendancy, and in the early months of 1731 (or late i.n
1730, Old Style) the Lord Lieutenant forwarded the
petition to Ceorge II. The good offices of Wake,
Gibson, Bishop of London, and
of the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge (S.P.C.K.)
Archbishop of Canterbury, of
were involved, and in February 1733/4 the charter was
granted and solemnly opened in the Council Chamber of
Dublin Castle in the presence of an influential gathering
that included the Lord Lieutenant. 8 Under the charter,
commissioners were appointed, headed by the viceroy, to
execute the purposes of the charter 4nd so The Incorporated
Society in Dublin for promoting English Protestant schools
in Ireland' came into being.
The most immediate duty imposed on the commissioners
was that of electing the Society's officers, as named in
the charter, and this they proceeded to do at once. Dorset,
the Lord Lieutenant, was made president, Archbishop Boulter
vice-president and treasurer, and John Hansard was to be
the Society's secretary. The treasurer quickly assumed his
responsibilities, and a subscription being then proposed,
it was "cheerfully made by most of those present". 9 The
Incorporated Society was in business.
Five members were appointed to prepare a scheme for
the future, and rules were drawn up, some general, some
'particular', setting out what might be termed the ground
plan for the development of the system and specifying the
day to day regulations by which the schools were to be
conducted.
The first of the general rules stipulated that
47
38
there should initially be a school in each of the four
provinces of Ireland, and that these would serve as models
for private foundations. "Some very popish and extended
parish", was envisaged, and further rules provided for the
setting up of a local committee comprising the Society's
members in the neighbourhood to supervise the school and
keep the Society informed of its progress.
The local
committee was a sound idea, but experience was to show
that it needed supervision itself, and from an early stage
in the Society's life it came to be seen as a vital (if
frequently weak) link in communication and control."
The decision to erect schools province by province
was adhered to.
First came Castledermot in 1734, very
largely provided by the earl of Kildare.
It was followed
within twelve months by Ballinahinch (Ulster), Minola
(Connacht) and Shannon Grove (Munster). By 1760 there
were nine schools in Ulster, thirteen in Munster, sixteen
in Leinster and six in Connacht.
In a category of its
own was the nursery in York Street, Dublin, which existed
"for the immediate reception of such of the children as
are admitted here or sent from schools in the country to
be apprenticed, or transplanted to parts remote from their
11
popish relations".
Three provincial nurseries, Minola
(Connacht), Shannon Grove (Munster) and Monasterevan
(Leinster) were founded in the 1760s, parliament having
responded favourably to the Society's petition that it was
difficult to fill the schools (except in times of scarcity),
and that the rules precluded the admission of children
under six years of age.
The nurseries, it was hoped, would
ensure a constant supply of children. 12
School patrons followed, with some variations, a
universal pattern by which they conveyed a few acres
(generally two) to the Society for the use of the school
and leased a further number (usually twenty) at a low rent
and on a middle-to-long term lease.
Sometimes they
39
48
provided the school-house, sometimes they contributed to
it.
While in no sense lavishly built, it must be
..membered that these were boarding schools, not just
simple school-rooms, and that there had to be accommodation
not only for the pupils (forty on average) but also for the
master and/or mistress and his or her family.
The Society
published a basic design that made the necessary provision
for teachers and pupils.13 The costs involved in setting
up a school were not large. It cost William Bury £80 to
build the school at Shannon Grove,14 though by 1750 the
Society was prepared to allow up to £450 for the cost of
erecting school and outbuildings. 15
The early cash books
of the Society shoW that twenty children, boys and girls,
could be fully fitted out for as many pounds. 16
Ideally,
of course, the schools were intended to be Self-sufficient,
even where clothing was concerned.
Hence the satisfaction
with which it was reported that the girls at Minola school
were engaged in spinning, knitting and preparirl materials
for their own and the boys' clothing. 17
Self-sufficiency sums up the economic principle on
which the schools were based, however far short they may
have fallen in practice. An early report on the first
school to be founded, Castledermot, paints a picture of a
charter school as the founders wanted it to be:
It (Castledermot) consists of 10 boys and
10 girls, who are clothed, dieted and
lodged.
The boys are daily employed in
cultivating that little portion of ground
that belongs to the school, the girls in
spinning and other parts of housewifery,
under the tuition of a mistress.
They
have a web of cloth of their own manufacture,
the weaving only excepted. Two hours in the
day are spent in reading, and they have made
such proficiency, that the English tongue is
become familiar to them, who before spoke
Irish only, and they have made a progress,
according to their age, in the knowledge of
our holy religion. 18
49
40
Primate Boulter, as befitted a man who held a leading
position on the Linen Board, the Dublin Society and the
Incorporated Society, gave due emphasis to the practical
side of the school that he himself established at Santry,
in county Dublin.
A house was provided there (at the
archbishop's own expense) and the school is described in a
report on the Society's proceedings as "a nursery for
flax-dressers, who may from time to time be distributed
throughout the kingdom to propogate the knowledge of that
particular branch. "19
In addition to the school itself
there were to be two outbuildings, one a flax store and
the other to house drying ovens.
The land at Santry was
walled in and canals were dug for steeping the flax.2°
The words "English, Protestant, working schools"
appear in some versions of the Society's title, and this
aspect of their operations held particular attraction for
the 'Corresponding Society', a body of English supporters
that rendered the Society considerable financial
assistance - as well as urging it to fresh endeavours when
its Irish support languished. Like the parent body in
Dublin the Corresponding Society in London held An annual
general meeting, preceeded by a charity sermon, which was
in due course printed together with an account of the
Society's progress to date.
We have the minute book of
the Corresponding Society for some decades prior to those
covered by the Society's own board and committee records. 21
In its pages we can trace the differences and tensions
that from time to time arose between Dublin and London,
the latter, which paid a large part of the piper's salary,
prodding the former in the direction most calculated to
elicit English support, while Dublin politely yet firmly
implied - and sometimes more then implied - that the
English did not really understand the local situation:
The Corresponding Society believed that the schools
themselves were the best publicity for the Incorporated
41
50
Society's work, and took steps to make known in England
the activities of the fledgling foundations, amongst other
It is
things by placing advertisements in the newspapers.
to the activities of the schools themselves that rather
belatedly one now turns, looking in turn at their internal
organisation, their curriculum, and their performance.
As has been noted, the schools were built, partly or
entirely, at the expense of a patron, who also endowed
them with a little land, and made additional land
Some schools were for boys only,
available at a low rent.
some for girls only, and some were mixed.
Boys and girls
were expected to spend a substantial part of each day in
"proper work and labour", the boys in husbandry and
agriculture, with special emphasis on flax growing, and
the girls in knitting, spinning, dairying and domestic
In both cases, they were to be put out to
work.
apprenticeship or service with a Protestant master or
mistress at the society's expense.
The master or mistress of each school was to be a
'known and approved Protestant', well affected to the
crown,
22
and the masters and mistresses were appointed by
the Society on the recommendation either of the Committee
23
The children were
of Fifteen or the Local Committee.
24
and the master or mistress, apart
to be taught gratis,
from a salary (E5 per annum in 1730s) depended for their
income on a per capita clothing and diet allowance from
the Society, and such money as the children's w,,r's could
generate.
Furthermore, they generally rented part of the
school land for their own use, though on fairly easy
terms.
The opportunities, if not, indeed, the incentives
for neglect and exploitation inherent in such a system
hardly need to be spelled out. That the charter schools
were 'working schools' there can be little doubt, but
whether or not in the sense so highly approved by the
51
42
members of the London Corresponding Society is another
matter.
The number of pupils in each school was small, seldom
more than forty or so, although the nurseries could take a
hundred, and seem generally to have been full.
The total
number of institutions founded by the Society was sixty'one, though somewhat fewer were in existence at any one
time.
The total number of pupils in the schools, while
fluctuating from year to year, was generally in the region
of 1,600 - 2,000.
It is generally taken for granted that
these were children from Roman Catholic families and
undoubtedly such was usually the case.
But the Society's
charter did not restrict enrollment to the children of
Catholics, and in its early years, when recruitment often
fell short of the accommodation available, the provincial
nurseries were set up to increase supply.
Legislation of
1749 gave authority to the Society to appoint agents to
take up the children of beggars and place them in the
25
schools,
and the introduction of the nurseries made it
possible to take younger children, presumably of Catholic
parents in most cases.
Preaching before the Corresponding
Society in 1757, the Bishop of Oxford admitted that the
schools could not always be filled with
the offspring of
papists', (though they were the vast majority of pupils),
the available places being taken up by orphans, vagrants
and 'occasional Protestant children'. 26 Some years later,
in 1765, the Society decided, 'more effectively to fill
the schools and nurseries', by commissioning the mayors
and chief magistrates of Dublin, Cork, Waterford, Limerick,
Kilkenny, Derry, and several other cities and towns to
take up healthy children between 5 and 10 years of age
found begging. 27 A decade later, in 1776, the Society
confirmed by resolution that it had been the practice only
to admit to its schools and nurseries the children of
papists, or children one of whose parents was or had been
43
52
a papist, or orphans in the care of papists. 28
It is
impossible to tell how many Protestant pupils had helped
to fill the schools, or whether the schools had, with the
years, become more attractive to the Catholic poor, as
the records of the 1730s and 1740s do not distinguish the
children by religious denomination.
It seems hardly
likely, despite the best endeavours of the Society to
publicise its alleged popularity with poor papist parents.
What we do know is that the schools were an irresistible
escape from hardship if not starvation in many cases, as
is shown by the comment made by the Secretary when
presenting accounts to the Board in 1767, that they had
experienced a very expensive year, due to the high cost
of provisions and the poor offering their children in
29
great numbers.
Having separated the children from the influence of
their homes, it was the policy of the Society to eliminate
parential influence totally by 'transplanting' children,
as it was called, to schools far removed from their home:
Bishop MauIe enunciated this policy in October 1733.
"When a sufficient number of schools are (sic) erected,
the Society will transOant the children from one county
to another, that they may not be under the influence of
their popish parents or priests to pervert them". 30 Hence
the Dublin Courant reports in 1745 that Santry school has
20 boys of popish parents transplanted from different
counties,
31
and the Freeman's Journal, describing the
opening of Ardbraccan school in County Meath in 1747 tells
of 40 children "of oopish parents transplanted from
distant parts . .
32
The Bishop of Oxford's sermon of 1757,
already referred to, has it that while there were many
who lapsed back into popery in the early years, (though he
draws comfort from the fact that their temporary
enlightenment must have done them some good), "since the
method of transplanting hath been followed, extremely few
44
53
have become apostates..."
Transplanting remained Society
policy for a century, and the records are full of
information showing how large numbers of children were
conveyed by the Society's carriers from one region to
another, criss-crossing the island.
Frequent also were
instances of rescue or attempted rescue, such as when
Malachy Haneen was jailed in Galway for "rescuing and
carrying away" a charter school boy, Nicholas Haneen, who
was being brought to Dublin by carrier. 33 These cccurrences,
together with frequent escapes, or 'elopements' from the
schools, tell their own tale.
There were inducements to encourage charter school
children to remain Protestant.
From 1748 a premium of £5
was given those who completed apprenticeship and married
34
a Protestant.
The Local Committee cf Longford school
gave as its opinion in the 1780s that "the bounty granted
on the intermarrying with a Protestant has been very
instrumental in keeping the apprentices steady to the
35
Protestant religion",
Also, of course, the process of
what we would nowadays call 'religious formation' was
supposed to be carried on by the routine of school life:
Protestant teachers and servants, prayers several times a
day, grace at meals, and regular church-going (though
sometimes not as regular as the Society expected, since
church-attendance took time from work in house or field).
Furthermore, the curriculum of the schools placed a heavy
emphasis on religious instruction, as that it permeated
not only what would today be regarded as catechetical
teaching, but also provided the texts for reading and
spelling as well.
The First Report of the Irish Education Inquiry,
(1825)
36
found the instruction given in the charter schools
to be of a very limited nature, going on to state that the
only books used were the scriptures, several expositions of
the Church Catechism and other religious works.
45
54
This was
certainly the case in the early years.
But it is difficult
to reconcile with evidence that literature of a more varied
nature was in use in the later eighteenth century. Such
lists as we have for the early 1700s are indeed entirely
moral and religious, with a heavy emphasis on the polemical
and evangelical.. They were the stock in trade of the
charity schools. 37 By the 1790s, however, there is mention
of spelling books, 38 and the Board of Education Report on
the charter schools in 1808 lists spelling books, Reading
Made Easy, Gough's and Voster's arithmetic books, and
copper-plate pieces.
39
That having been said, the texts in
the schools remained highly religious in tone and content,
the ubiquitous Whole Duty of Man holding its place in the
list for many years, with such other stalwarts as Sellon's
Abridgement (of the Bible), Secker's Sermons;
all this, be
it remembered, for children who in many cases came from
Irish-speaking homes.
If it was hoped thereby to kill two
birds with one stone, the evidence suggests that the aim
was far from accurate, and both religion and education
suffered equally.
The Society was receiving complaints about the
standard of reading in some schools in 1749 and asked local
committees to look into the matter. 40 Ten years later,
masters and mistresses were warned that their salaries
would only be paid when regular reports on the children's
proficiency in reading, writing and saying the catechism
were satisfactory. 41
In 1773 it was recorded that reports
from visitors had shown that there was a great neglect of
42
education,
and such deficiences often came to light when
children were put out to apprenticeship. 43
Again and again
the Committee of Fifteen complained about the standard of
writing specimens that were forwarded to it by the schools,
and unsuita1le texts can hardly have played a major part
in that deficiency; much more likely causes were the
incompetence of the teachers and the manner in which the
55
46
children's time was crowded with labour.
Long before
there were any external investigations, the society was
aware of the manner in which many children were being
exploited by ignorant masters and mistresses, despite the
strict limits set on working hours, and in 1758 the
Society issued a directive to its schools to the effect
that it would not countenance masters who by keeping
children at labour beyond the prescribed hours curtailed
the time available for, as they put it, "instruction in
reading, writing, and learning their prayers and
44
catechism."
A primary end to which the educational process was
directed was the putting out of the children to domestic
service, farm work or a trade. The Society seems genuinely
to have tried to protect those who were apprenticed from
its schools. Eventually a register was kept, and an
inspector appointed whose duty was to investigate
complaints by either apprentices or masters.
Fitted out
with a suit of clothes and possessed of a set of biblical
and devotional books, the young apprentices were, at least
in theory, set on the road to an industrious and Protestant
way of life, 45 though sometimes, as the records show, it
was difficult enough to find masters and mistresses for
them.
And while the Society protested that it did not
coerce children into uncongenial places, there is evidence
to the contrary.
It was not only the zhildren's education that was
frequently neglected. As public enquiries were to
disclose in the early nineteenth century, children were
often under-fed, ill-clothed, and in bad health.
Here
again was a situation that the Society thought it had
guarded against, there being strict rules about diet,
health and clothing.
One of the first tasks assigned to the Committee of
Fifteen was that of preparing a dietary, 46 and according to
47
56
Committee of Fifteen minutes, the Society laid down a
dietary in 1769, printed and circulated to schools, and
stipulating a basic routine of oat or wheat meal, and
potato, supplemented by meat, (once a week in winter and
twice a week in summer, on Christmas Day and New Year's
Day).
47
In addition there was an allowance for salt,
barm, pepper, butter and sugar. Provision was also made
for 'pink' (a mixture of new milk and water), for which
butter-milk might be substituted, or occasionally beer.
The amounts were regulated by a daily per capita allowance,
and from time to time this was changed.
Where clothing was concerned, the Society tried
various policies. It would appear that at first clothes
for the children were issued to masters and mistresses and
were made up centrally. A uniform of dark brown freize
was introduced in 1770, 48 and by 1788 an allowance was
being made to the masters and mistresses for clothing the
children.
There followed a period when some schools
followed one system, some the other, and the 1825 Education
Inquiry was to discover a major scandal where the placing
of the clothing contract was concerned. 49
Upon the local committees devolved the responsibility
for supervising and inspecting the schools, and rooting out
irregularities, but whether through incapacity,
indifference, or sheer lack of inclination the Society
found these committees to be far from assiduous in their
duties. Again and again reports reached Dublin of masters
who were flouting the Society's rules in one way or another,
and local committees were exhorted to be vigilant. Not all
cases of irregularity escaped detection, abuses were
discovered and masters dismissed.
But the Society was
badly served by the local committees who failed to see, if
theydidnot positively ignore, the cruelties and
negligences that eventually came to light under public
48
scrutiny, and which were by no means the result of
callousness, let alone of deliberate policy in Dublin.
There are many instances on record of occasions on which
the Society reacted firmly to cases of abuse, and by the
standards of the day showed humanity.
50
Seeing the need for a responsible local agent who
would be beholden to the Society for remuneration, a
system of catechist-visitors was introduced in 1787 whose
duties was to visit the schools weekly, examine the
children in the principles of the Christian religion and
other learning, and report to the Society monthly on the
state of the schools .
5;
Catechists varied in effectiveness;
some were conscientious, some lazy, some dishonest and
some in collusion with masters.
All one can say is that
matters would have been worse in some places but for them.
R. Barry O'Brien's summary is too wide a generalization
when he writes that "The masters of the schools lied to
the catechists, the catechists lied to the local
committees, the local committees lied to the Committee of
Fifteen".
52
But dishonesty did abound, due in no small measure
to the calibre of persons who taught in the schools and
the very real constraints and temptations that surrounded
them.
Without strict and vigilant supervision the system
invited abuse and got it in large measure.
Given
eighteenth century lines of communication, perhaps it
could hardly have been otherwise.
Primabe Boulter's grand
design was, to quote a recent historian: 'A Taj Mahal
53
built on quicksand'.
Be that as it may, there must be
few, if any, other Irish educational endeavours of such an
early date whose modus operandi carries us into so many
corners of the eighteenth century social and economic
scene,
49
NOTES
1. S.J. Connolly, "Religion and History: A Review Article",
Irish Economic and Social History, X(1983),
(London: Longmans, 1913), pp. 66-80.
2. Ibid., p. 68.
3. W.E.H. Leaky, A history of Ireland in the eighteenth
Century, i. 235. The origins and early years of
the Incorporated Society and its schools are dealt
with in more detail in K. Milne, "Irish Charter
Schools", The Irish Journal of Education, 1974,
viii, i, pp. 3-29.
4. R.B. McDowell, "Ireland on the eve of the Famine".
The Great Famine, ed. R. Dudley Edwards and
T. Desmond Williams.
(New York:
Russell and
Russell, 1976), p. 55.
In
5. Lords Jn. Ire.
(Dublin 1779) III, 169 ff. 6 December,
1731.
(Printed in Archivium Hibernicum, 1, (1912),
1
10).
6. London, S.P.C.K. Mss. ALB. Vol.7, 4904.
Cork to Mr. Jennings.
Henry Maule at
7. Dublin 1730.
Printed in M.G. Jones, Charity School
Movement.
(London:
Cass, 1938), pp. 233-5.
8. An abstract of the proceedings of the Incorporated
Society in Dublin for promoting English Protestant
schools in Ireland: from the openina of His
Majesty's royal charter on the 6th day of February
1733 to the 25th day of March 1737.
(London, 1737,
reprinted from the Dublin edition.
9. An account of the proceedings of the Incorporated
Society... from February 1733 to 6 March following.
(Dublin 1734).
10. An abstract of the proceedings of the Incorporated
Society, 1733-7, p. 16.
11. Commons Jn. Ire.
viii, t, 182.
12. Ibid.
13. An abstract of the proceedings of the Incorporated
Society 1733-7.
(Copy in T.C.D. library includes
the plan)..
59
50
14. Ibid., pp. 8-9.
15. T.C.D. 5301, Rules and orders 1733-78, Board
resolution, 1 August 1750.
16. An abstract of the proceedings of the Incorporated
Society, 1733-7, p. 40.
17. Ibid., p.
8.
18. Ibid., pp.7-8.
19. A continuation of the proceedings of the. Incorporated
Society ... 1740-42, p.I3.
20. Ibid., p.
18.
London Corresponding Society Minute Book,
(The earliest Board minutes begin in
1761 and earliest extant Committee of Fifteen
minutes are dated 1771.
However, printed Reports
apart, other manuscript material helps to fill
the lacunae of the initial decades).
21. T.C.D. 5302.
1735-43.
22. An abstract of the proceedings of the Incorporated
Society ... 1733-7.
General rule VII.
23. Ibid., General rule V.
24. Inid., General rule VIII.
25. 23 Geo II c 11, An act to provide for begging children
and for the better regulation of charity schools.
(London 1757).
26. A sermon preached before the Society Corresponding
with the Incorporated Society ... 27 April 1757.
27. T.C.D. 5225, Board minute 7 February 1765.
28. T.C.D. 5301, citing Board resolution, 4 December 1776.
29. T.C.D. 5225, Board minute, 3 De-ember 1767.
30. Sermond preachea 23 October 1733, God's goodness
(London
visible in our deliverance from popery.
1735) Bodleian Library.
31, 17 October, 1745.
32.
21 April,
1747.
33. Hibernian Journal, 16 September 1771.
51
$0
34. T.C.D. 5301, citing Board resolution, 28 March,1748.
35. Proceedings to 1 November 1786, p. 18.
36. The First Report of the Irish Education Inquiry, H.C.
1825, (400), xii, p. 25.
37. E.g. compare the list of books given in Proceedings,
1733-7, pp. 38-9, with that in A letter from a
residing member of the Society in Dublin for
promoting charity schools in Ireland, to a
correspondig member in the country.
(Dublin:
1721), pp.57 et seq.
38. T.C.D. 5227, Board minute 6 March 1793.
Board minute 9 September 1795.
T.C.D.5243,
39. Reports presented to the House of Commons from the
Commissioners of the Board of Education in
Ireland, Third Report:
The Protestant Charter
Schools, H.C. 1809 (142), p. 40.
40. T.C.D. 5301, citing Board resolution 2 August, 1749.
41. Ibid., Committee of Fifteen resolution 23 May 1759.
42. Board Munute, 3 November 1773.
43. T.C.D. 5238, 20 September 1786.
44. T.C.D. 5301. Citing Committee of Fifteen resolution
24 May 1758.
45. T.C.D. 5301.
Citing Board resolution 6 July 1737.
46. Ibid., 7 Decdmber 1737.
47. T.C.D. 5239, 23 May
48. T.C.D. 5301.
1787.
Citing Board resolution 14 February 1770.
49. A relative of the Secretary's proved to be the
Society's contractor.
50. T.C.D. 5236 (7 October 1772) Master and mistress
disc
for excessively punishing children;
T.C.D. 5239 (30 May 1787) Master and mistress of
Monivea Nursery dismissed for improperly feeding
children; T.C.D. 5237 (5 Decdmber 1781) local
committee to investigate report that children at
Creggan are varefoot; T.C.D. 5225 (6 November
1771) reports of abuses at Inniscarru investigated.
52
51. T.C.D. 5226, 2 May 1787.
52. R. Barry O'Brien, Fifty Years of Concessions to
Ireland, 1831-81.
(London: Sampson Low, 1883),
Vol. 1, p. 58.
53. Donald H. Akenson, The Irish Education Experiment.
(London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1970), p.33.
53
62
Irish Educational Studies, vol. 4, No.
QUAKER EDUCATION IN 18TH AND 19TH CENTURY IRELAND
Cyril Gerard Brannigan
The Religious Society of Friends, more popularly
known as Quakers, was founded by George Fox, a
Leicestershire shoemaker, between the years 1648 - 1666.
The movement began in the North of England and gradually
spread southwards during the Civil War and the Interregnum.
As far as Ireland was concerned Quakerism first made its'
appearance during the Cromwellian period, and indeed the
real founder of Irish Quakerism was an old Cromwellian
soldier, William Edmundson, who settled in Ireland about
1652.
Ever since George Fox had established a school for
boys and girls in Waltham Abbey in Essex, and a school
for girls only at Shacklewell in 1668, the Society of
Friends in both England and Ireland had set great store
by education. Nevertheless, the first Irish Quaker School
did not come into existence until 1677, when a day school
was established at Mountmellick by William Edmundson,
followed by a school at Cork in 1678 and one at Dublin in
1680.
The early Quaker day schools, however, were not
very successful, and the many new ones being opened in the
first half of the eighteenth century were scarcely
sufficient to replace those that were closing.
Nevertheless, the second half of the eighteenth
century saw the establishment of more securely based
schools.
This new phase in Irish Quaker education began
with the establishment of the first Quaker national
boarding school at Edenderry in 1764. This school,
however, was for girls only. The next major stage of
Quaker educational endeavour in Ireland saw the
63
54
1, 1984.
establishment of "co-educational" provincial
boalling
schools at Lisburn in Ulster, Nountmellick in Leinster
and Newtown, Waterford in Munster.
These three boarding
schools were firmly established by the end of the
eighteenth century, and were directly under the control of
the Quaker provincial and national meetings, (the main
organs of Quaker administration).
Throughout the
nineteenth and part of the twentieth centuries the Irish
Quaker provincial boarding schools formed the basis of the
Quaker system of education in Ireland.
The shape which Quaker education in Ireland took
during the first two centuries of the seci.s settlement
here was largely determined by two major aims which lay
at the root of the educational philosophy of the Society
of Friends.
The first, and undoubtedly the more important,
of these two great aims was what could be called the
religious and moral aim, and the second may be classified
as the secular and vocational one.
For Quakers in Ireland during the eighteenth and
nineteenth centuries, education meant, first and foremost,
religious and denominational training.
1
Children were
required, from a very early age to learn the religious
principles of the Society of Friends, and parents were
expected to teach them.
Later on, with the establishment
of Quaker dayschools, the latter establishments took over
some of the religious function, but responsibility still
A
rested, to a considerable degree, with the parents.
minute of the National Meeting of 1714 put it like this:
It is the earnest desire of this Meeting
that all Friends zealously concerned to
educate and bring up their children and
servants in the knowledge of the principles
of the true Christian religion as professed
by us, that they may be able to give a
reason for the hope that is in the.::
according to the Apostles' advice.
3.15.
2
55
64
I Peter.
Indeed, if parents failed to provide a satisfactory
religious education for their children, the Society felt
obliged to intervene in order to rectify what they
considered was an extremely grave omission. 3
Probably
the most distinguished, and certainly the most prosperous
of Irish Quakers in the late seventeenth and early
eighteenth centuries, was the Dublin Merchant Anthony
Sharp.
Referring to the aims of education the latter
declared:
... Education that is good is first to
educate a child in the fear of the Lord Secondly, to be educated is the knowledge
of Holy Scriptures - Next and thirdly,
after good literature, orthography,
arithmetic, etc., a good trade honestly
to live, to help and not to be burdensome
to others.
4
The list of priorities outlined above by Anthony Sharp was
to remain the standard hierarchy of Quaker aims in
education for two centuries.
The overriding emphasis on religion in Quaker schools
in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries meant that the
Bible and the Quaker Catechism were the two most important
texts used in those establishments, and a considerable
portion of the school day was devoted to their study.
Indeed, in the majority of Irish Quaker schools, whether
they were day or boarding establishments, the school day
generally began and ended with readings from the Bible,
and classroom activities were normally punctuated with
prayers and readings from the Quaker Catechism. Although,
Sacred Scripture played an immensely important part in
Quaker education, it must be emphasized, however, that as
far as the religious principles of the Society of Friends
were 'oncerned, the Bible played a secondary role.
For
the Quakers, the Bible was not always regarded as divinely
inspired,
5
and was no substitute for the "Inner Light".
6
The doctrine of the "Inner Light" emphasized the personal
56
65
and direct nature of the relationship between God and man,
and no books, no matter how sacred, could compensate for
this.
Quaker children were brought into the meeting-
houses with their parents, where they were encouraged
through silent-worship to seek direct divine illumination.
It was hoped by the Quaker elders that such religious
worship would not only affect the personality of their
children, but would also influence for the good their
outlook on life.
The silent-worship of the Quaker meeting
house, was a form of worship in which all could take part
in ministry. It placed an emphasis on personal
inspiration which was likely to foster an attitude of
individuality and responsibility.
7
Such an attitude was
one of the primary aims of Quaker religious education.
There was another aspect to Quaker religious
education, however, which seemed at odds with the ideas
of individuality and personal responsibility emanating
from the silent-worship of the Quaker meeting house.
This
mainly concerned the methods used in the study of the
Bible and the Quaker catechism.
The principal method
studying these texts was the mechanical one of rote
learning.
of
Large sections had to be learned by heart,8 and
little concession was given to personal interpretation.
Such study was meaningless and extremely frustrating to
the majority of Quaker pupils involved, and it is
difficult to see anything of educational value in it.
To
the Quaker authorities, however, there was a dual purpose
behind such laborious activities.
Firstly, exercises in
rote learning, it was believed, provided a valuable
discipline, and secondly, the material learned, if not
properly understood by immature minds, would become a
residue of experience which could be turned to better
account later on.
9
Closely related to the religious aim of Quaker
education was the matter of character formation.
57
66
Besides
being well versed in the religious principles of their
Society, Quaker children were expected to live out their
principles in daily life.
This meant a strict and
consistent adherence to a rigid disciplinary code.
As
far as moral education was concerned Quakers were expected
to follow a code which emphasized "Plainess of speech,
behaviour and apparel",
10
and such aspects of puritanism
were strictly inculcated in the Quaker schools.
Quaker
children were expected to be, first and foremost, truthful
and honest people and every significant aspect of their
behaviour in everyday life was to be measured against the
The rules for the management of
yardstick of "truth".
Leinster provincial school, Mountmollick, for instance,
state unambiguously that:
The master and mistress are advised
particularly to ena*'our, through divine
assistance, early
.mpress upon the minds
of the children, the necessity of a str'ct
adherence to truth, an abhorrence of
falsehood, and the Remembrance of their
i..
Creater.
11
Indeed, one of the most serious faults a Quaker child
could commit was to tell lies.
In this regard, the rules
for the Quaker boarding school at Clonmel made it clear
that:
If they commit fault that they candidly
acknowledge it.
12
Quaker children were encouraged to tell the truth at all
times and were frequently tewarded for doing so. At a
schoolmaster's conference in Dublin in 1705, for instance,
it was decided that "children should not be corrected in
passion, nor for their lessons more than for untruthlike
behaviour".
13
Although a strict adherence to the truth
is a lofty and noble aim in any educational system, it
sometimes was carried to extremes in the case of some
over conscientious Quakers.
For the latter, telling the
truth meant much more than merely not telling lies.
67
5.8
It
also meant the avoidance of all forms of exaggeration or
overstatement, and even, we may presume understatement.
Mary Leadbeater, the Quaker authoress from Ballitore,
speaking of her mother's strictness in this regard, says:
... So strict was her adherence to truth
that she scarcely allowed herself to assert
anything positively, nor would she permit
us to do so; and so accustomed have I been
to this habitual caution, that even to this
day, if I hear an extravagant expression, I
examine it involuntary in my mind before I
perceive the exaggeration.
14
Clearly, this is a case where a lofty educational aim has
one too far and has done its work too well.
This rather
unfortunate state of affairs was clearly the result of a
worthy educational aim, namely the cultivation of
truthfulness, being too rigidly interpreted.
Such an
inflexible approach to rules and ,:egulations was a not
uncommon characteristic of the puritanical element in
Quakerism.
Such an approach was not unexpected in a sect
which emphasized a literal interpretation of the Bible.
The Quaker emphasis on telling the truth at all
times can be most clearly seen in the attitude of the
Society of Friends in the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries to the administering or taking of oaths.
Interpreting literally the Scriptural injunction "Swear
not at all", the early Quakers refused to take oaths, as
they claimed that the latter implied a double standard of
truthfulness.
15
Overall, however, it is probably correct
to say that the Quaker educational aim of inculcating a
strict adherence to the truth was extremely successful
and beneficial for the Society of Friends.
The emphasis
on truthfulness was a major influence on the development
of the Quaker character, and indeed such an emphasis was
of considerable assistance to the sect in its dealings
with others in the world of business.
Quakers, In the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries acquired a remarkable
59
.
68
reputation for fair dealing with people of other
denominations in the fields of trade and commerce, and
although some outsiders were annoyed, at first, by the
refusal of Quaker business men to barter, insisting
instead on a fixed price for their products, it was soon
realized that the practice was based on what :he Quakers
considered was a fair price, consistent with their notion
of trtah.
16
Philanthropy had always been an important
characteristic of the Quakers, and in the nineteenth
century in particular, it became the dominant one.
It is
not surprising therefore, to find that an important aim
of Quaker education in Ireland was to cultivate in
children a charitable disposition towards their fellow
man.
Indeed, the doctrine of the "Inner light" with its
emphasis on "that of God in each man",
17
helped to
provide a philosophical basis for Quaker benevolence
towards all mankind, and this theme was constantly
reinforced in Quaker schools.
In the rules for the girls'
boarding school, at Clonmel, for instance, the pupils
were urged to "cultivate an affectionate regard for one
another" - and "if one be offended, by no means to
revenge it, but to feel aftlr that charitable disposition" 18
In consistency with this fundamental Quaker tenet, the
pupils in Irish Quaker schools were constantly being
reminded to act in a cooperative rather than in a
competitive spirit.
James White, the master of Ballitore
boarding school from 1806-1836, was keenly aware of this
aim and he considered that any "advantage arising from
the agency of emulation is more than counterbalanced by
the spirit of envy, and the other bad passions which it
apt to excite in the breasts of disappointed candidates".19
Although emulation was sometimes resorted to by Quaker
schoolmasters, it was not encouraged by the Quaker
authorities who saw it as counter productive and contrary
69
60
ts
to the spirit of Christianity.
The ideal of Christian
charity towards one's fellow man was constantly being
emphasised in eighteenth and nineteenth century Quaker
schools, and such ideas often found expression in the
textbooks being used in those schools.
a few brief examples will suffice.
In this regard,
In Lindley Murray's
English Reader, for instance, a textbook which was
extremely popular in Irish Quaker schools in the early
nineteenth century, the philanthropic ideal was
succintly expressed in the following verse:
CHARITY
In faith and hope the world will disagree;
But all mankind's concern is charity.
20
Furthermore, in chapter three of the same publication,
under the heading "Didactic Pieces", there is an extremely
moralistic essay on "Forgiveness".
Despite trying to cultivate the ideals of charity and
christian politeness amongst their pupils, Quaker schools
in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries were not always
successful,
In a letter from a past pupil of the Munster
provincial boarding school, at Newtown, Waterford, to the
school centenary committee in 1898, it is recorded that
in the early nineteenth century "there had been too much
fagging and even a kind of cruelty practised on the little
ones for very trifling things".
21
In contrast to English
public schools, however, which were notorious for excesses
of this kind in the
ineteenth century, the incidence of
recorded cruelties in Irish Quaker schools was
considerably lower.
The Quaker philanthropic principle
which influenced the Society's schools in Ireland had a
himanizing effect on both masters and pupils, which must
have compensated, to some degree, for the austerity of the
discipline.
Admittedly there were occasions when the
Quaker testimony of peaceful living seemed to abandon the
schools.
The Leinster provincial school at Mountmellick,
61
70
for instance, went through a grim period in the 1820s and
30s,
22
and the English Quaker school at Sidcot in
Yorkshire underwent mutinies in 1846 and 1859.
23
Nevertheless, these examples are exceptional, and as far
as Ireland was concerned, Quaker masters were regularly
being reminded by the national and provincial meetings to
administer punishments only in a cool and restrained
manner.
It was further enjoined that such punishments
should always be medicinal and never retaliatory.
24
The
extent to which the masters actually adhered to this
principle, and the way in which the pupils reacted to it,
would seem, overall, to have been reasonably consistent
with the very important educational aim which inspired it.
Samuel Tuke, the English Quaker educationalist and
founder of the Friends Education Society at Ackworth in
Yorkshire in the early nineteeLth century, saw the
subjection of the will and the fostering of habits cf
steady application as important aims of Quaker education.
25
From the earliest times, the Society of Friends had
regarded the will as a very dangerous and unpredictable
faculty, and they felt that a major priority of any
system of education
should be to discipline it.
Joseph
Pike, the puritanical, though extremely influential, Cork
Quaker in the early eighteenth century, had very definite
views about the subjection of the will.
In his Journal
he complained of "the fondness and indulgence of many
parents to their children, in giving them their own way
and wills so long, until the root cf evil has grown and
spread itself forth into many evil branches, and at
length, they have been alienated from Truth and Friends".
26
In order to submit the will to discipline and to
facilitate the formation of habits of steady application,
the Society of Friends established a system of provincial
boarding schools in Ireland in the late eighteenth
century.
These schools were governed by a rigid
Mq /
1J,
62
disciplinary code, which sought to educate the children
in an extremely "guarded" manner.
The daily life of
these schools was legislated for, down to the smallest
00,,,,Aigree, so consequently there was little room left for
discretion, either on the part of the teacher or the
pupil.
Such a regimented schedule, it was hoped, would
"teach" young Quakers to be disciplined in their lives.
They rose at 6 a.m. in Summer and 7 a.m. in Winter to
the sound of a bell, and their whole day was regulated
in this manner.
What they wore,
spoke, read, ate, and
even played was determined by an unyielding disciplinary
system, the object of which was to produce consistent,
reliable, industrious, obedient and serious-minded young
Quakers.
Quaker education not only tried to discipline a
Quaker's inner life, his beliefs, attitudes and feelings,
but on a secondary level, it sought to influence even his
external appearance.
Although the doctrine of the
"Inner Light" emphasized the "inward" aspects of man, the
Quakers also laid considerable emphasis on the outer.
We have already briefly referred to regulations governing
external factors such as plainness in apparel, behaviour
and speech.
There were many other minute regulations
besides, concerning the quality and colour of clothing
and the wearing of perriwigs amongst others.
27
In
addition to these, Quaker education laid considerable
stress on the adoption of proper posture and deportment,
and there are numerous references to these aims in the
literatt.re on schools, now deposited in the Quaker archives.
At Mountmellick, for instance, the teachers were enjoined
to "inculcate a modest and humble deportment" in their
pupils, and the Mistress was to take advantage of the
garden walks in order to correct any "unbecoming awkward
gestures" in the girls.
28
In a similar vein,
Mary
Tolerton, a past pupil of Lisburn Quaker school in the
early nineteenth century, who became a housekeeper at
63
'72
Newtown in the 1820s, related how at the Ulster provincial
school:
... great care was taken as to our carriage
and deportment, lest we should contract any
bad habit of stooping or shuffling in
walking, etc. Those were the days of
backboards and seats without backs.
29
She goes on to relate what must have been a very harrowing
experience indeed, for a young girl, all for the cause of
deportment.
She says that the children at the school were
regularly asked to "stand straight with our backs against
the wall, sometimes to lie flat on the floor, or our
shoulders were held back with bandages in order to expand
our chests. Once I remember being tied up in this way,
which so distressed me that I began to cry, and as I could
not raise my hands, another girl was told to take my
handkerchief and dry my tears for me. Never again was I
bandaged for stooping". 30 One must wonder at the supposed
benefits of such a procedure as related above.
Granted,
physical education is an essential and extremely valuable
part of one's general education, and the Quakers must be
complimented on their interest in cultivating correct
carriage and posture at a time when the latter was
shamefully neglected in most contemporary school systems.
Again, it would seem, however, that Irish Quakers in the
late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries had the
right principle, but intel.preted it too rigidly.
The
result was an inflexibility and insensitivity of approach
which probably, in many cases, caused considerable
emotional distress and perhaps even permanent psychological
damage, thus offsetting the undoubted benefits which
could result from a more liberal application of the
principle.
While, the main aim of Quaker education in Ireland
during the first two centuries of the Society's ministry
here, was indisputably, religious and moral in character,
73
64
rather than literary, secular subjects had, nevertheless,
a significant role to play in the Quaker curriculum.
There was a strong utilitarian element in early Quaker
education, however, which William Penn gave voice to in
a letter to his wife and children, on leaving England in
1682.
In it he says:
For their learning be liberal ... but let
it be useful knowledge, such as is
consistent with Truth and Godliness, not
cherishing a vain conversation or idle
mind, but ingeruity mixed with industry is
good for the body and mind too. I recommend
the useful parts of mathematics, as building
houses or shops, measuring, surveying,
dialling, navigation; but agriculture is
especially in my life; let my children be
husbandmen and housewives.
31
The strong
anti-intellectual bias in early Quaker
education, stemmed partly from the doctrine of the
"Inner Light", with its stress on direct illumination
and reliance on one's personal resources, rather than on
the externally written word, and partly from the antipathy
of the early Quakers towards a learned priesthood, or
those whom they disparagingly called "professors".
In
his book Fruits of Solitude, Penn saw the true aim of
education as the making of the man rather than the
scholar,
32
and this idea dominated Quaker education in
Ireland down to the end of the nineteenth century.
For eighteenth and nineteenth century Quakers the
main aim of an education in the secular subjects was the
vocational one of preparing pupils for suitab.!e
occupations in society when they should leave school.
For
the children of those in "low circumstances", as the
phrase went, manual work, coupled with an elementary
education in the three Rs, was designed to fit the
recipients to take their allotted stations in the lower
ranks of society,
33
while in the schools for the
wealthier Quaker pupils, the aim was to prepare the latter
65
74
for occupations in trade, business or the professions.
34
Education was not seen by the early Quakers as an avenue
to social mobility, as they deprecated any attempt to
raise a son to a higher social position than that which
his father held. 35
The education provided by the Quaker
provincial boarding schools at Lisburn, Mountmellick and
Newtown, Waterford, aimed at
preparing the girls for the
role of useful household servants, and the boys for an
apprenticeship to a useful trade when they left the
school at fourteen years of age.
Indeed, the utilitarian
and vocational aspects of such an education can be clearly
seen in the fact that the provincial school committees
actively discouraged pupils from staying on at school
beyond fourteen years. 36
Although the secular education offered by the three
provincial boarding schools in the late eighteenth and
early nineteenth centuries was extremely narrow, being
largely confined to a study of the three Rs, a much wider
curriculum was offered to the children of those in "more
easy circumstances" in the few private Quaker schools in
Ireland at this period.
The most important of the private
establishments were Ballitore
boys boarding school in Co.
Kildare, Sarah Grubb's school for girls at Suir Island,
Clonmel, and Ann Shannon's "finishing school" for girls
in Mountmellick. These schools, designed for the more
affluent pupils, aimed at preparing their scholars for
roles in the middle ranks of society.
Indeed, Ballitore
school, while providing a traditional education in the
classics, also managed to incorporate the best elements of
vocationalism into its curriculum.
Abraham Shackleton
Senior, when opening his school in 1726, made the aims of
his curriculum very clear when he spoke of "fitting the
youth for business". 37
The latter point, designed mainly
for Quaker pupils destined for careers in business, was
instrumental in putting Ballitore
75
66
school far ahead of its
time in Ireland, when most second level schools taught
Indeed Ballitore,
an exclusively classical curriculum.
which also accepted non-Quakers on its rolls, was a
remarkable synthesis of two distinct approaches to
education.
The traditional liberal curriculum of Greek,
Latin and mathematics, on the one hand, was balanced by
business oriented courses in bookkeeping,
and modern languages on the other.
stenography
It is perhaps not
totally surprising therefore that Ballitore Quaker school
could provide an education for such diverse and
distinguished pupils as James Napper Tandy, Edmund Burke
and Cardinal Paul Cullen.
Sarah Grubbs' school for girls at Suir Island,
Clonmel, went beyond an elementary curriculum, but extra
subjects were severely curtailed, and were largely
38
confined to what was termed "useful History and Geography".
In fact, the Clonmel establishment was based largely on a
similar type school for girls at York, of which Sarah
Grubb was a patron.
The aims of the curriculum at Suir
Island were, to all intents and purposes, identical to
those of York, which Sarah Grubb summarized as being the
inculcation of "Simplicity of manners, and a religious
improvement of the morals of youth".
39
Ann Shannon's
school at Mountmellick was primarily a "finishing" school
where pupils were taught necessary "accomplishments" as
a preparation for their entrance into middle class Quaker
society.
Although Quaker education in Ireland in the period
under study was excessively utilitarian, the Quakers,
nevertheless, had tremenduous regard for such education,
limited though it was.
This is borne out by the National
Meeting of 1746, which recorded an extraordinary enlightened
minute for the time. in it they said:
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76
The good education of our offspring is a
matter of the highest moment, and it's
the desire of this Meeting that parents
might have it at heart, being of the
judgment that what is laid out for that
purpose may be of more service to them
than if so much were reserved to be added
to their portions.
40
The quotation above shows that years before it was a
generally accepted truth, the Society of Friends accepted
that a good education was worth spending money on, and
that nothing would compensate a child in after life,
if
the education he received was below what he should have
had.
What the early Quakers regarded as a good education,
however, was primarily a religious and denominational one,
combined with a fairly narrow selection of what was
thought most useful in the secular subjects.
Despite the Quaker emphasis on religion and on the
basic skills of literacy in their schools, there was
another important element never far from the surface of
Quaker consciousness, which exerted a considerable
influence on the curriculum, and consequently on the
Quaker character.
natural world.
This was the Quaker attitude to the
Quaker education, even in its most
limited form, always tried to inculcate in its recipients
a love and respect for the world of natural science.
41
The world of man, with its ever present threat to
morality, was to be shunned, and the Quaker child was to
be protected from such potentially evil influences, by
being educated in the "guarded" environment of the
boarding school.
This world of nature, however, with its
fauna and flora, was regarded as an important learning
environment for the Quaker child and the latter was
encouraged to study it.
The literature in Irish Quaker
schools at this period abounds in carefully selected
extracts illustrating this important nuaker value, and
articles entitled "Against cruelty to insects" or "Cruelty
77
68
to Brutes censured", speak for themselves.
42
Indeed, it
is nc, accident that gardening was one of the main
recreations of Quakers at this time, and gardening by
pupils was encouraged in all Quaker schools since it was
said to promote skill, neatness and order.
It was agreed
that gardening tended to the formation of industrious
habits and taught the value of time.43
Quaker teachers
noted a general improvement of their pupils' behaviour
"during the busy months and a relapse during the winter
ones . .
44
Quaker education was religious and vocational in aim.
It was not cultural in the sense that interests could be
pursued for their private and personal intimations of
pleasure or enrichment.
Only if those interest: had
moral and religious ends were they to be followed.
Those
subjects, therefore in which one had personal pleasure or
elation because they were beautiful, or because they
deepened human understanding, or because they enriched
emotional experience or gave intellectual satisfaction,
were not to be taught. 45
The education provided in
Quaker schools was therefore an extremely narrow one, and
all areas of the curriculum were subordinated to either
religious or vocational principles.
It was such principles,
indeed, which were to determine the basic aims of Quaker
education for two hundred years.
69
78
REFERENCES
1. Portfolio 5A - 24.
Friends Archives Dublin.
2. Minutes of Dublin Half-year's Meeting 9th no. 1714,
Friends Arch. Dublin.
3. Joseph Pike in his Journal says that when indulgent
parents disregard good advice "it becomes the
indispensable duty of the Church to interpose,
by dealing with them more closely or openly;
as the example of such parents and children, is
a hurt to our youth in particular, and a
dishonour to our holy profession in general".
The Life of Joseph Pike, by the Author. (London:
Darton and Harvey, 1837), p. 16.
4. Quoted in Isabel Grubb, Quakers in Ireland 1654-1900.
(London:
Swarthmore Press, 1927), p. 57.
5. John Reader,
Of Schools and Schoolmasters.
Quaker Home Service, 1979), p. 54.
(London:
6. Emphasizing the primacy of the "Inner Light", Robert
Barclay, the theologian of early Quakerism said
"I do freely concede to Scripture the second
place".
Quoted in Philip Wragge, The Faith of
Robert Barclay.
(London: Friends House, 194g,
p. 70.
7. Reader, Of Schools and Schoolmasters, p. 54.
8. W.A.C. Stewart, Quakers and Education.
Epsorth Press, 1953), p. 131.
(London:
9. Ibid., p. 132.
10. Grubb, Quakers in Ireland, p. 81.
11. Rules for the Government of Leinster Provincial School.
P.B. 20(25), Friends Arch. Dublin.
12. "Advices for pupils at Clonmel Female Boarding School.
C.1800".
Grubb Collection. S.124.
13. Portfolio 5A - 24.
14. Mary Leadbeater, The Leadbeater Papers. Vol.1.
(London: Bell ar.d Daldy, 1862), p. 129.
79
70
15. In an Act of 1691, which abrogated the oath of
Supremacy in Ireland, a special form of
declaration to be made by Quakers was inserted.
J.C. Beckett, Protestant Dissent in Ireland 1687
-1780.
London:
Faber and Faber, 1946), p. 132.
16. Grubb, Quakers in Ireland, p. 96.
17. William J. Whalen, "Our Neighbours, The Friends",
The Word, October 1967.
18. Advices to the Pupils of Clonmel Female Boarding
School, C1800. Grubb Collection, 5.124. Friends
Arch. Dublin.
19. Betsy Shackleston, Ballitore and its Inhabitants
Seventy Years Ago.
(Dublin:
Richard D. Webb
Son, 1862), Preface, p. VIII.
20. Lindley Murray, The English Reader.
Rees, 1799), p. 250.
21. Newtown School Centenary..
Harvey, 1898), p. 35.
(York:
(Waterford:
Longman
Newenham and
22. One Hundred Years of Mountmellick School.
Richard D. Webb and Son, 1886), p. 28.
(Dublin:
23. Reader, Of Schools and Schoolmasters, p. 34.
24. Rules for the Government of Leinster Provincial School.
P.B. 20(25).
25. Reader, Of Schools and Schoolmasters, p. 39.
26. Joseph Pike, Life of Joseph Pike.
and Harvey, 18371, p. 144.
27. Portfolio 5A - 24.
(London:
Darton
Friends Arch. Dublin.
28. One Hundred Years of Mountmellick School, p. 20.
29. Portfolio 5A - 25.
Friends Arch. Dublin.
30. Ibid.
31. S.M. Janney, Life of William Penn. 1876, p. 199.
Quoted in William C. Braithwaite, Second Period of
(London: Macmillan o Co., 1919), p.529.
Quakerism.
32. Braithwaite, Second Period of Quakerism, p. 529.
33. Reader, Of Schools and Schoolmasters, p. 31.
71
80
34. Ibid.
35. Grubb, Quakers in Ireland, p. 95.
36. Rules for the Government of Leinster Provincial School.
Friends Arch. Dublin.
37. Michael Quane, "Ballintoro School", Journal of Kidare
Archaeological Society. Vol. XIV, No. 2, (196667), pp. 174-209.
38. Sarah Grubb, Journal, 3rd ed.
Robinson, TUTIT, p. 244.
(Belfast:
William
39. Ibid.
40. Minute of Dublin Half-Years Meeting 9th no. 1746.
Friends Arch. Dublin.
41. Stewart, Quakers and Education, p.
148.
42. !Against cruelty to Insects" is a short essay in
Lindley Murray's Sequel to the English Reader.
(Dublin: William Porter, 1801).
Chapter VII,
and "Cruelty to Brutes Censured" is a short poem
by Cowper in Hurrays English Reader.
(York: 1799).
Chapter 6, Section IV.
43. Quane, "Ballitore School". Journal of Kildare
Archaeological Society,
p. 202.
44. Ibid.
45. Stewart, Quakers and Education, p. 44.
81
72
Irish Educational Studios, Vol.
4, No. 1, 1984.
IMAGES OF WOMEN IN NINETEENTH CENTURY SCHOOLBOOKS
Lorcan Walsh
The nineteenth century witnessed great changes in
the role of women in Irish society.
according to Professor Lee,
position of women.1
The Great Famine,
weakened drastically the
With the decline of domestic industry,
a change from tillage to pasture farming, and the
development of a sophisticated diet meant women's role
became less important economically, and more domestic in
effect.
Widespread emigration, and a decrease in the
marriage rate led to less well-defi.led roles for women.
It is interesting to note how these changing roles were
reflected in prevailing images of women.
An analysis of
textbooks used in schools is a legitimate method of
identifying such images.
What children are taught in
schools represents the consensus view of what a society
considers important.
By a process of selection certain
facts and images are put before the society's children.
An examination of schoolbooks used in nineteenth century
Irish schools reveals what facts and images about women
were portrayed.
The reading books examined are those of the
Commissioners of National Education and of the Christian
Brothers.
In one year alone it was estimated that the
National Board circulated approximately 619,000 of the
reading books while the Christian Brothers circulated
over 91,000 during a similar period of time.
2
Both sets
of readers were the ones most often found in Irish
classrooms.
The National Board's books were compiled in
the early 1830s, and went through several revisions.
These books were compiled to satisfy the criteria of
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82
of nondenominational education - a system which was close
to the hearts of the Commissioners.
This set of reading
books included a specific Reading Book for the Use of
Female Schools, a book which was replaced by Girls Reading
Book in the 1860s.
The Christian Brothers compiled a set
of reading books in the 1840s to reflect their
denominational system of education.
their books for boys only.
The Brothers compiled
Consequently, there is little
reference to women in their books.
However, a model of
motherhood does emerge from their books.
It needs to be pointed out that schoolbooks, except
for the ones specifically written for girls, were
addressed to boys.
child was "male".
In the minds of the compilers the
Thus while the books of the National
Board were geared for a system which was co-educational
their content reflected a thoroughly male orientation.
One has to turn to the books compiled directly for girls
to detect the explicit
attitudes and images of women
which were conveyed.
Writing about their Reading Book for the Use of
Female Schools, the Commissioners stated:
It contains informati,n peculiarly
adapted to the character and pursuits
of females in the middle and humble
ranks of life. 3
Even a cursory glance at the content of the reading books
shows what "character and pursuits" were envisaged.
The
main topics covered in the books were the care of
children, housekeeping and cooking.
Obviously these
topics were intended to cater for the legitimate pursuits
of women in nineteenth century Ireland. The development
of "character" was catered for in the discussion of the
affections, gentleness, honesty, duties of brothers and
sisters and the government of the tongue and thoughts.
83
74
The largest source of female labour in nineteenth
century Ireland was domestic service.
In 1891, 255,000
females earned their living as domestic servants.
If the
women who served brothers and sisters in a similar period
are included the figure employed in domestic service
expands to 394,000.
4
This outlet for female employment
was reflected in the Commissioners' reading books.
Readers were advised that It an early stage girls
must be socialised into taking up domestic duties:
In her own family a girl may easily be
habituated to the practice of domestic
duties, beginning with the simplest,
and going on to the more difficult... 5
The Reading Book for Female Schools carried on the
socialisation process begun in the home.
Lessons
concerning the care of children were plentiful. The future
minder of children was advised that obedience in a child
was very important:
The first thing, therefore, to be aimed
at, is to bring your child under perfect
subjection; tear-h him that he must obey
you; accustom him to immediate and
cheerful acquiescence in your will - this
is obedience, and this is absolutely
essential to gdod environment. 6
In the care of children an obvious distinction was to
be made between boys and girls.
Girls in particular were
to be taught knitting, weaving, and patchwork. The
arrangement and ordering of one's own :laythings was a
virtue advised for girls only.
7
Obviously the training in
domestic duties was not seen as fit training for boys.
Practical advice on the physical care of children abounds.8
Advice on diet, cleanliness, clothing and even the
temperature of the children's environment was included.
Specific advice was offered also on "muscular exercise,
and the animal passions".
9
75
84
The expected domestic duties of a young girl were to
include the art of cookery.
10
The reader was advised
about care of cooking utensils, the care of food. the
uses of salt, the baking of bread and mushrooms.
The
girls' training for domestic duty was completed by lessons
on the furnishing of a house.
11
Punctuality, order, and
cleanliness were the habits advised for the proper
management of a home.
As well as such demands it was
expected that the domestic servant be proficient at
bookkeeping:
She should be a good accountant, having
books in which she may note down strictly
all the current expenses of the house ...
It is her province to have the charge of
the store-room, with the preserves,
pickles, and confectionery, and to see
that no waste takes place in each article. 12
Where girls should attain such a knowledge of accountancy
is not clear as there were no lesson included to cat.:
for this need.
The role of a woman as mother was also particularly
catered for in the reading books compiled specifically
for girls.
It is ironic how in the nineteenth century
the role of the womer as mother became more specialised
but yet more downgraded.
Before the industrial revolution
women played a key role in the economic subsistence of the
family.
With the centralisation of capital and a movement
away from labour intensive farming there emerged a clearcut physical and psychological divergence between the home
and the workplace.
Women became onlookers as the business
of commerce took the centre stage.
Women looked after the
household, and cared for the children. One writer put it
in the following manner in 1884:
Home is clearly Woman's intended place; and
the duties which belong to Home are Woman's
peculiar province ... It is in the sweet
sanctities of domestic life, - in home
85
76
duties - in whatever belongs to and makes
the happiness of Home, that Woman is
taught by the spirit to find scope for
her activity - to recognise her sphere of
most appropriate service.
13
A mother writing to her daughter in 1817 had already
commented:
It is chiefly there (the home) that the
lustre of the female character is
discernible; because home is its proper
place.
14
Work outside the household was considered unbecoming
for women. Women who broke this stereotype suffered from
the prevailing prejudice.
Even successful writers found
this prejudice strong enough to assume masculine pen
names.
Anne, Charlotte and Emily Bronte wrote as Acton,
Currer and Ellis Bell.
Mary Ann Evans took the pen name
of George Eliot.
As the compilers of the schoolbooks
under examination were males, and reflected in these books
the prevailing slcial attitudes, it is no surprise to
find that Victoria% attitudes towards women were transmitted.
The SApplement to the Fourth Reading Book contained
a section which was intended particularly for girls. This
section included lessons wh.ch were "specifically intended
for the instruction of females in household and domestic
15
duties".
The domestic duty most emphasised in the Supplement
and in the Reading Book for Use in Female Schools was the
care of children. The cult of motherhood emerges strongly
through the pages of both sets of reading books. There
are many pieces of poetry where the author reveals a
tearful backward glance at his dear old mother whose love
was boundless. One orphan child was made to say:
I had a mother, once, like you,
to keep me by her side;
She cherish'd me, and lov'd me too;
But soon alas: she died;
77
Vb
Now sorrowful, and full of care,
I'm alone and weary every where.
16
The extent of a mother's love was painted as being
limitless:
Hast thou sounded the depths of yonder sea,
And counted the sands that under it be?
Hast thou measured the height of heaven above?
Then may'st thou speak of a Mother's love.
Evening ana morn hast thou watched the bee
Go f, rth on her errands of industry?
The bee for herself hath gathered and toil'd,
But the Mother's cares are all for her child. 17
The idolising of motherhood was a key theme, in all
of the National Board's books. In the Third Book the
theme was referred to in the form of question and answer:
Who fed me from her gentle breast,
And hushed me in her arms to rest,
And on my cheek sweet kisses prest?
My Mother.
When pain and sickness made me cry,
Who gazed upon my heavy eye,
And wept for fear that I should die?
My Mother. 18
The Christian Brothers in their reading books were no less
enthusiastic in eulogising the vocation of a mother.
In
one piece of poetry the poet proclaimed his devotion to
his mother and reassured her that in her old age he would
remain faithful.
19
An orphan reflecting on his mother
related:
0 Mother! Mother! in my heart
Thy image still shall be;
And I will hope in heaven, at last,
That I may, meet with thee.
20
Part of this preoccupation with motherhood was due to the
general nostalgia for a simpler and romanticised past so
prevalent in the nineteenth century.
in 1872 proclaimed:
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78
One American reader
Mother, Home, and Heaven ... are three of
the most beautiful words in the English
language.
21
An old lady it was advised in another American reader
should be helped across the road not for any intrinsic
value, but because she would be "somebody's mother". 22
Her status as a mother was what demanded attention, not
her status as a woman.
An important part of a mother's job was her spiritual
care of her childr..n.
soul
The power of a mother to guide her
to heaven was related in a poem celebrating the
power of maternal piety. 23
Religious formation was
considered a central function of a mother:
Some people talk about the management of
children as if it were a science.
Nothing
is, however, in reality, more simple.
Kindness, patience, undeviating firmness
of purpose, and a strict regard to principle
in all our dealings with them ... will,
under God's blessing, accomplish all that
can be done by early education towards
regulating the heart and understanding.
And
thus they will be prepared to zeceive the
seeds of those higher moral and religious
principles, by which, as heirs of immortality,
they ara to be educated for a better and
endless life.
24
When the spiritual preparation was catered for only then
should a mother engage in other areas of development.
The "good mother" was defined in the 4rothers' Second
Book as one who made her children say their prayers.
23In
the Brothers' books lessons on the Virgin Mary were a very
prominent feature.
readers.
She was held up as a model before the
In fact, in both sets of readers, there was a
religious model portrayed.
The use of such models served very definite functions.
Ian Barbour has described a model as:
79
88
A symbolic representation of selected
aspects of the behaviour of a complex
system for particular purposes.
It is
an imaginative tool for ordering
experience, rather than a description
of the world.
26
The model of motherhood which emerges from the schoolbooks
served both cognitive and non-cognitive functions.
Some
of the secular lessons attempted to tell the future
domestic servant and mother practical knowledge on the
care of a home and family.
However,
it was in the area of
non-cognitive functions that the model of womanhood must
have been most effective.
The imagery employed in the
reading books demanded a commitment to a secular and
religious dedication.
Stories about the spiritual role of
a mother were used to evoke definite attitudes.
In fact,
according to Braithwaite, such stories' only function was
27
to recommend attitudes.
These stories were imaginative
ways of endorsing a moral viewpoint.
It was not important
that the models put before the young readers be factually
true.
What was important was that models were used which
should inspire awe, reverence, and, finally, imitation.
These models served in laying down the ground rules for
future development of the role of women in Irish society.
The lot of the Irish mother in the late nineteenth century
was not a happy one. The threat of emigration was one of
the more concrete realities in her life.
The emergence of
a religious model of motherhood with emphasis on selfless
love and service ensured that the future generation would
be well prepared to see their sons and daughters leave
them in search of a better life.
In the works of writers
like Pearse and O'Casey a mother's sorrow was compared to
that of Mary, Mother of Sorrows.
28
Irish girls were being
socialised into assuming a role whey: sorrow would play a
central part.
This socialisation was being achieved
through the creation of a model of motherhood which made
superhuman demands and which made no mention of self-
89
80
development.
Only the office of domestic service was
considered an acceptable option outside that of motherhood.
No mention was made in the books of any other vocational
opportunities. No mention was made of woman suffrage,
even in the revised books of the last decade of the
nineteenth century.
No mention was made for the girls who
might wish to work in factories or mills at home or abroad.
This leads one to conclude that the schoolbooks under
examination were very limited in preparing girls for life.
Indeed it can be argued that the books not only failed to
open avenues but in fact closed off, in an attitudinal
manner, possible roads to future development.
The different values advocated for boys than girls
bears out the view that a very limited lifestyle was
foreseen for girls.
Readers were informed that by a
persevering diligence to the economic "virtues" of
frugality, self-denial, and timethrift, one could transgress the great divide between rich and poor..
mobility was possible.
Social
The self-made man came into his
own in the forms of William Hutton and James Ferguson. 29
Their success stories were related with enthusiasm in the
reading books. They were prime examples of men who had
achieved upward social mobility in an industrial age.
However, the examples given of such successes were always
male.
The 'oncept of the "self-made man" incorporated a
view which was definitely gender based.
Irographical
sketches of w--alen characters emphasised women who became
known for their holiness or charity, for example, Sc.
Brigid or Catherine of Liverpool.33 In the Reading Book
for Female Schools it was the example of people like Lucy
Nevers, "who knows how to make herself very useful to her
mother and her older sisters", and Catherine Benson,
whose lack of honesty was not to be imitated, who were
put before the female readers.
31
There are no references
to such self-made people as Hutton or Ferguson in the
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80
girls' reading books.
Such preoccupations for a female
would have been anachronistic in the Victorian society of
the nineteenth century.
The reading books wLnt further than ignoring various
vocational opportunities for girls.
The books revealed a
whole set of values or virtues which were deemed most
suitable for girls.
Thus such things as gentleness,
kindness, "Female Benevolence", sympathy, honesty, and
"Female Pie'-y", received special treatment.
32
Readers
were informea by the compiler:
I have always remarked that women, in all
countries, are civil, obliging, tender, and
humane; that they are ever inclined to be
gay and cheerful, timorous and modest. They
do not hesitate, like men to perform a
hospitable or generous action; not haughty,
nor arrogant, nor supercilious, but full of
courtesy, and fond of society; industrious,
economical, ingenuous; more liable, in
general, to err, than man, but in general,
also more virtuous, and performing more
good action; than he. 33
In a lesson on 'The Sick Chamber' it was claimed:
It has often been remarked, that in sickness,
there is no hand like a woman's hand, no
heart like a woman's heart; and there is not.
Compared to the paradigm of womanly care men, it was
claimed, will succumb to tiredness:
His eyes will close, and his spirit grow
impatient of the dreary task; and, though
love and anxiety remain undiminished, his
mind will own to itself a creeping or
irrestible selfishness, of which indeed he
may be ashamed, and which he may sFruggle
to reject, but which, despite all his
efforts, remains to characterise his
nature, and prove in one instance at least,
his manly weakness. 35
So it was claimed in the reading books that women
possessed a set of virtues which were particularly suited
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82
to their nature.
As Joan Burstyn says, "By the cultivation
of characteristics particularly feminine - self-denial,
forebearance, fidelity - women were to teach the whole
world how to live in virtue".
36
This exalted view of
women was essentially a device to maintain them in a
subservient position.
The characteristics of women which
were admired were the ones of little economic value.
Women were urged to cultivate these characteristics.
History shows that it has been the economic and political
values which have been the determining ones.
Kindness,
gentleness, humility, etc., have played a subservient role.
When these virtues became identified with one particular
group it was a short step to the group itself adopting a
subservient role.
The compilers of the reading books were not as
explicit as they could have been in claiming a subservient
role for women. There were only a few examples of where
it was claimed women should be sub3ect to men.
When it is
seen how explicit the same books were in suggesting the
subordinate position of the poor vis-a-vis the rich it is
a relief that such explicitness was not repeated when
talking about women. One has only to look at the posture of
feminine obedience so evident in Victorian art to see how
widespread the concept was.
Jan Everett Millais has
Victorian
sculpture portrayed the idea of the nude in "a posture of
'Ophelia' floating passively to her death.
passive endurance".
37
Even Rosseau, whose work Emile
broke from many of the traditional doctrines of education,
perpetuated the idea of female powerlessness.
A women was
defined by Rousseau as man's "helpmate":
Man should be strong and active; the woman
should be weak and passive; the one must
have both the power and the will;
it is
enough that the other should offer little
resistance.
38
83
92,
Rousseau advocated that the characteristics of "gentleness"
and "cleanliness" were to be particularly emphasised in
the education of women. It is obvious that Rousseau's
model corresponds quite closely with the attitudes
expressed in the reading books of the Commissioners of
National Education and of the Christian Brothers.
Even
the relatively liberal French writer, Necker de Saussure,
advised mothers to teach their offspring, "patience,
resignation, and all the gentle virtues that a woman
infallibly called to exercise". 39
The cultivation of
these virtues means that certain characteristics were
deemed more natural to girls.
Girls were to be formed in
a radically different way.
In summary one can see that the reading books
examined displayed an image of women which helped to
preserve the social order.
Consequently, just as the poor
must look to the rich, the child to the parent, the negro
to the white, so the women must look to ahe man.
Women
were taught to accept their position in life.
Discussion
on topics, which might affect women's thinking in a manner
which might threaten the existing order, like suffrage and
sexuality, was totally ignored.
In contrast to boys the
duty of parenthood was emphasised. Very few lessons
touched on the question of fatherhood.
The whole world of
economics and politics was opened up tc boys.
The world of
the home and domestic service was the limit of female
development.
Her separate role was matched by a separate
set of virtues and values. The roles outlined for girls
and the values inculcated were the ones of little economic
and political value.
Thus it is no surprise to find the
bearers of these economically and politically subservient
roles and values to be regarded themselves as subservient.
93.
84
FOOTNOTES
1. J. Lee, 'Women and the Church since the Famine'.
In
M. MacCurtain and D. O'Corrain, Women in Irish
Society.
(Dubl-r.:
Arlen House, 1978), P. 177
2. For a treatment of the compilation and distribution of
both sets of readers see J.L. Walsh, 'A Comparative
Analysis of the Reading Books of the Commissic.ers
of National Education and of the Christian Brothers
1831-1900', M.A. Thesis, University College,
Dublin, 1983, Chapters 2, 3.
3. An Analysis of the School Books published by ,e.:LhortLy
of the Commissioners of National Education, 1853,
p. 7.
4. M. Daly, Social and Economic History of Ireland since
1800.
(Dublin:
The Educational Company, 19%),
p. 105.
5. Girls Reading Book, Commissioners of National Education,
Alex Thom and Co., 1887), p. 223.
(Dublin:
6. Reading Book for the Use of Female Schools, Commissioners
of National Education.
(Dublin:
Alex mom and
Sons, 1854), p. 15.
7. Ibid., p.
20.
8. Ibid., pp. 72-6.
9. Ibid., p. 72.
10. Ibid., pp. 89-91.
11. Ibid., p.
127.
12. Ibid., p.
165.
13. J.W. Burgon, To educate Young Uomen Like Young Men, a
A Thing Inexpedient and Immodest.
(Oxford: 1884),
p. 17.
14. Mrs. Ann Taylor and Jane Taylor, Correspondence Between
a Mother and her Daughter at School.
(London:
1817), p. 170.
15. An Analysis, p. 6.
16. Reading Book for the Use of Female Schools, p. 157.
85
94
17. Ibid., p.
1(9.
18. Third Book of Reading Lessons, Commissioners of
National Education.
(Dublin:
Alex Thom and Co.,
1873), p. 46.
19. Third Book of P..aAng Lessons, The Christian Brothers.
Dublin.
F. Fowler, 1859), p. 233.
20. Second Book of Neading Lessons, The Christian Brothers,
M.H. Gill & Sons, 1897), pp. 126-7.
21. L. Osgood, Osgood's American Fifth Reader.
Taintor Bros. & Co., 1872) , p. 262.
(New York:
22. M. Wilson, The Fourth Reader of the Popular Series.
(Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott & Co., 1881),
pp. 346-8.
23. Reading Book for Use in Female Schools
p. 10.
24. Ibid., p. 9.
25. Second Book of Reading Lessons, The Christian Brothers,
pp. 124-5.
26. Ian Barbour, Myths, Models and Paradigms.
SCM Press, 1974), p. 6.
(London:
27. S. Braithwaite, An Empiricist's View of the Nature of
Religious Belief.
(Cambridge University Press,
1955), reprinted in John Hick led.) ,The Existence
of God.
(Macmilk.
1964), p. 239.
28. See M. MacCurtain, 'Towards an Appraisal of the
Religious Image of Women', The Crane Bag, Vol. 4,
No. 1, p. 542.
29. Sequel No. 2 to Second Book of Lessons.
Commissioners
of Nat onal Education (1841), p. 41: Supplement
to Fourth Book of Lessons. Commissioners of
National Education (1850), P. 17.
30. Fourth Book of Reading Lessons, Commissioners of
Natrona' Education (1834), pp. 311-2: Third Book
of Reading Lessons, The Christian Brothers (1859),
p. 119.
31. Reading Book for Use in Female Schools, pp. 314-5.
32. Ibid., pp.
62, 64, 112, 129, 134, 220, 251.
95
86
33. Ibid., p. 62.
34. Ibid., p.
180.
35. Ibid.
36. Joan N. Burstyn, Victorian Education and the Ideal of
Womanhood.
(London: Croom Helen, 1980), 1;:=
37. M. Bryant, The Unexpected Revolution, A Study in the
History of Women and Girls in the Nineteenth
Century.
(University of London Institute of
Education, 1979), p. 51.
38. J. Rousseau, Emile.
p. 322.
(London:
Evcrman edition, 1974),
39. Albertine-Adrienne Necker de Saussure, The Study of
the Life of Woman.
(Philadelphia, 1844), p. 71.
Cited in E.D. Hellerstein et al. (ed.), Victorlar
Women.
(California:
Stanford University Press,
TWTT, P. 63.
87
Irish Educational Studies, Vol. 4, No. 1, 1'84.
AN ASSESSMENT OF REV. PROFESSOR TIMOTHY J.CORCORAN'S MAJOR
WORKS IN THE FIELD OF IRISH EDUCATIONAL HISTORIOGRAPHY
James G. Deegan
Throughout a career connected with educational
endeavour Reverend
Professor Timothy J. Corcoran, S.J.
the first Professor of the Theory and Practice of
Education in University College, Dublin, was particularly
attracted to the study of the history of education.
To
date, Corcoran's major works in the field have only been
reviewed in obituary and essay form.
In this paper, I
intend to assess the significance of Corcoran's major
works in the field of Irish educational historiography.
So far as this theme is concerned the following three works
will be dealt with:
Studies in the History of Classical
Education, Irish and Cont nental:
1500-1700;
State Policy
in Irish Education:
1536-1816 and Education Systems in
Ireland:
1539-1816.
While studying at Saint John's College, Louvain,
during the interval 1901-1904, Corcoran became aware of the
contribution that had been made by Irish scholars working
abroad in thepast. As a result of this experience,
Corcoran began to view Irish history with respect to its
European and Catholic links.
Corcoran's first major work
in the field of the history of classical education
reflected this formative experience at Louvain.
The research and investigation of Corcoran's D.Litt.
thesis, Studies in the History of Classical Education,
Irish and Continental, 1500-1700, 1 was made possible by
the discovery in 1907 of a complete copy of the Irish Jaime
Linguarum, i.e. a new method of learning languages, applied
in the first place to Latin, but equally applicable to
97
88
other ancient and modern langauges.
The Irish Janua
Linquarum or 'Gate of Languages' was originally issued in
1611 at Salamanca by William Bathe S.J., and other membe s
of the Jesuit College there. This was a lucky discovery
in view of the undisputed claim made by Hervas in 1700
that only two copies of the original text were known to
exist.
Corcoran used this copy to make a compaiative
study between the Irish Janua and Comenius' Janua
Linguarum Resereta, issued at Leipzig in 1613.
In his treatise, Corcoran set himself the task of
proving that the well-known work of Comenius is but a
variant on the Irish Janua which preceded .t by twenty
years. Corcoran maintained that Comenius' work was
considered by several scholars of note in the seventeenth
century to be 'distinctly inferior, alike in construction
and in style to the earlier work on which Irishmen alone
2
contributed'.
Corcoran's treatise appeared within a short time of
M.W. Keatinge's The Great Didactic of John Amos Comenius.
Keatinge had earlier dismissed Bathe's Janua as being of
little educational value. His criticism of Bathe's Janua
ran as follows:
From this work (Bathe's Janua), therefore,
Ccmenius borrowed nothing but its name,
the Gate of Language, and indeed, his own
attempt showed so much originality that
it would be unfair to hint that he was
indebted to his predecessors for the chief
points in its construction.
3
In October, 1912 a reviewer for The Oxford Magazine
admitted thatCorcoran's treatise 'breaks a lance' 4 with
that of Keatinge's. The fact that Corcoran had access to
Bathe's Janua whereas Keatinge did not have this advantage,
made Corcoran's treatise very attractive.
The success of
Corcoran's work can be seen in the considerable acclaim
his work attracted at the time of its publication.
In May,
1912, the Senate of the National University of Ireland
89
9,8
accepted Corcoran's thesis as 'a piece of original
investigation qualifying the author for the degree of
D. Litt'.5
The report drafted for the Senate by Dr. M.E.
Sadler, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Leeds gave
Corcoran's thesis the following commendation:
Father Corcoran has thrown new light upon
the history of William Bathe, S.J., an
His
educational pioneer of Irish birth.
elucidation of the connection between the
work of William Bathe and his colleagues
and that of Comenius is of high historical
value and will be taken into account by
all future students of the seventeenth
century
6
The following international educational and literary
journals published reviews of his book:
The Times, The
Srectator, The Guardian, The Classical Review, The School
World and The Journal of Education.
Such critical notices
as 'full of learning'? and 'deserving the careful attention
of all educational reformers',
Corcoran's work.
8
welcomed the appearance of
Perhaps The Journal of Education
provides the most judicious understanding of Corcoran's
success.
Its review ran as follows:
We do not think the author has succeeded
in dethroning Comenius from his established
position as a great educational reformer;
but he has proved to the hilt his
indebtedness to forerunners in the reform
of language teaching and vindicated for
Bathe something more than a note of a
paragraph in future histories of education.
"As an exponent of historical method in accordance
with the best modern practice"" Corcoran published State
Policy in Irish Education A.D. 1536-1816, Exemplified in
Documents for Lectures to Postgraduate Classes, with an
Introduction
11
in 1916.
This book contains ninety-two
documents from varied sources "which illustrate the
progression or retrogression, as well as the fashion, of
Irish education from age to age and these are followed by
99'
90
longer documents of high educational interest". 12
In the
preface to the book, Corcoran explained to his readers
that the work was
primarily intended for use with students:
but it may perhaps prove of some help to
other readers. The purpose of the
Introduction is to suggest the examination
of certain issues in the History of
Education in Ireland and in other countries.
By express design, therefore, the Documents
dealt with therein are not dealt with
exhaustively.
The Indexes too, are planned
so as to aid in the use of the Documents,
but not to permit students to dispense
themselves from personal work on the texts.13
In his recent review of Corcoran's educational
historiography Titley overlooks this signi.icant prefatory
note.
According to Titley, "Corcoran was more a compiler
of documents than a historian".
14
As a consequence,
Titley falls into the pitfall of making an invidious
comparison between the pioneer work of Corcoran and the
reflective historiography of more recent educational
historians.
Corcoran's compilation of documents made its
appearance at a time when educational historians needed a
stimulating publication of this nature.
Indeed, Corcoran's
book preceded by almost thirty years a similar treatment
of Ireland's political development as exemplified in
documentary source material.
In 1943 Gwynn commenting on
this gap in Irish political historiography wrote that:
There has been no single volume in which
teacher or student could find, in
convenient form and critically edited, the
chief documents that throw light upon the
development of Irish political history.
15
By this time Irish educational historians were reaping
the rewards of Corcoran's collection of documentary source
material.
This development is evidenced by the appearance
in the late 'thirties and early 'forties of the work of
Dowling, Brenan and O'Connell, all former students of
Corcoran.
91
1 4:0
In 1928, twelve years after the publication of his
first book in the field of the history of education in
Ireland, Corcoran published Education Systems in Ireland
from the close of the Middle Ages, Selected Texts with
Introduction. 16 His earlier work in the field provided
the basis for this more restricted effort.
Once again
the purpose of the book was stated in a prefactory note.
As earlier mentioned, the publication of Corcoran's first
major work as a text for academic use and exercise was
commendable, but the later work must be greeted with much
less approval. Its chief weakness lies in the fact that
it relies heavily on repetition from his first book on
the history of education in Ireland.
Furthermore, the
earlier book has stood the test of time with greater
success. It is more commonly used today as a reference
book in educational historiography than the later
publication.
Another weakness in Corcoran's book, Education
Systems in Ireland from the Close of the Middle Ages, can
be seen in his total reliance on traveller's tales as a
means of documenting the quality and availability of
popular education in Ireland during the period 1764-1818.
Corcoran based his argument on the cdmulative testimony
of fourteen travel writers in order to prove that a
widespread appreciation of education ex,.sted.on a popular
level and was financed by the people themselves.
Towards
this end, Corcoran selected extracts from unreliable
accodnts of social and economic conditions in Ireland in
the second half of the eighteenth and early nineteenth
centuries. Included in this selection was:
Reed's
Rambles Through Ireland (1815);
Bowden's Tour Through
Ireland (1719); Twiss' A Tour in Ireland (1775) and
Corr's The Stranger in Ireland (1805).
Corcoran should have been aware of how unreliable
the works of travel writers were as authentic source
101
92
material for the scientific study of the history of
education.
These travel books were given a hostile
reception when they were originally published more than a
century before Corcoran's wri.ings on the hedge schools
I.
appeared.
1806, The New Annual Register wrote that
Carr "has
:hosen in too many instances the secondary
praise of being a judicious bookmaker to the original
merit of being a good author".
17
In 1836, the Irish paper,
The Dublin Penny Journal derided Carr's The Stranger in
18
Ireland as Carr's "touri fication".
However, it is not Corcoran's use of traveller's
tales per se that is most objectionable but rather his
misuse of the information to corroborate his argument.
There is significant evidence available to suggest that
Corcoran falsified the documentary source material which
he selected from Carr's book.
Two examples will serve to
illustrate the manner in which Corcoran _ampered with
Carr's original text.
skilful
The first example shows how
Corcoran was as an editor of documentary material.
This instance concerns Corcoran's reference to Carr's
description of life in the hedge schools.
text read as follows:
Carr's original
The instruction of the common people is in
the lowest state of degradation. In the
summer a wretched uncharactered itinerant
derives a scanty and precarious existence
by wandering from a parish to a parish,
and opening a school in some ditch covered
with heath and furze, to which the
inhabitants send their children to be
instructed by the miserable breadless being
who is nearly as ignorant as themselves;
and in the winter these pedagogue peddlers
go from door to door offering their services,
and pick up just sufficient to prevent
themselves from perishing by famine. 19
When culling the above passage Corcoran failed to
include the significant phrase "nearly as ignorant as
themselves". This omission deprives Carr's original
93
1 02
writing on the hedge schools of its full significance.
The second example shows Corcoran employing a more subtle
form of harnessing original source material to suit his
own purpose.
In this example, Corcoran deprived the
following extract of its contextual significance by
failing to quote his source in full.
Corcoran cited the
following:
A Sunday with the peasantry of Ireland is
not unlike the same day in France. After
the hours of devotion, a spirit of gaiety
shines upon every hour, the bagpipe is
heard, and every foot is in motion.
20
Corcoran did not include the next paragraph which
indicated that no sooner was the bagpipe heard and every
foot in motion than
... many droll things are said, many
engagements of friendships are made, and
many heads are broken as the power of
whisky develops itself. 21
As Carr's comments were not in line with Corcoran's
attempts to highlight the admirable qualities of the
hedge schools, they were duly bowdlerised.
Corcoran's critics have cast a fitrther criticism on
the book in question.
They have viewed his last major
publication in the field of the history of education in
Ireland in the overall context of Corcoran's failure to
produce a major synthesis of Irish educational history.
However, it is not as the historian who failed to write
this synthesis that Corcoran should be remembered but
rather as one of those historians who through their own
research and investigation made its eventual writing
possible.
Auchmuty, the author of the first synthesis of
this kind, was aware of his debt to his predecessors in
the field.
In the preface to his book entitled Irish
Education:
A Historical Survey, Auchmuty acknowledges
his indebtedness "to those scholars whose research in
94
103
special fields has provided much of the material for this
work".
Corcoran's role in this connection is confirmed by
Auchmuty's use of apposite excerpts from State Policy in
Irish Education.
Herein lies the lasting significance of
Corcoran's major works in the field of Irish educational
historiography.
Corcoran will be remembered by the many
who, not necessarily sharing his views, were inspired by
the pioneer work he left behind him.
Through his own
writings and the writings of his students, Corcoran
remained a source of inspiration for an entire generation
of Irish educational historians.
" .104
REFERENCES
1. Timothy Corcoran, Studies in the History of Classical
Lducation, Irish and Continental:
1500-1700.
(Dublin and Belfast:
The Educational Company of
Ireland, 1914).
2. Ibid., p.
(ix).
3. John Amos Comenius, The Great Didactic. Trans.
M.W. Keatinge (New York:
Russell, 1910), 1967
Reprint, p, 20.
4. Timothy Corcoran, Studies in the History of Classical
Education, reviewed by A.C.C. in The Oxford
Magazine, October 1912.
5. Report drafted for the Senate of the National
University of Ireland, May 1912, by Dr.M.E. Sadler,
Vice-Chancellor of the University of Leeds.
6. Ibid.
7. The School World, March, 1912.
8. The Classical Review, August, 1912.
9. Timothy Corcoran, Studies in the History of Classical
Education, a review prepared by the Journal of
EThria=1, November, 1911.
10. Brian Titley, The Historiography of Irish Education:
A Review Essay, in The Journal of Educational
Thought, XIII, 1979, p. 68.
11. Timothy Corcoran, State Policy in Irish Education:
1536-1816.
(Dublin;
Fallon, 1916).
12. Timothy Corcoran, State Policy in Irish Education:
1536-1816.
(Dublin:
Fallon, 1916), a review
prepared by The Times Educational Supplement,n.d.
(Appended to Timothy Corcoran, Renovation
Litterarum, Dublin: 1925).
13. Timothy Corcoran, State Policy in Irish Education,
p. 4.
14. Brian Titley, A Review Essay, p. 66.
15. Edmund Curtis and T.B. McDowell, eds. Irish Historical
Documents: 1172-1922.
(London: Methuen, 1943),
reviewed by Aubrey Gwynn in Studies, XXXII,
(December, 1943), P. 579.
105
96
16. Timothy Corcoran, Education Systems in Ireland: 15391816, Selected Texts with Introduction.
(University College Dublin, Department of
Education, 1928).
17. Sir John Carr, The Stranger in Ireland.
(London:
Gillet, 1805/, Introduction by Louis M. Cullen
(Shannon:
Irish University Press, 1970), p. VII.
18. The Dublin Penny Journal, 1836, n.d.
19. Sir John Carr, The Stranger in Ireland, p. 250.
20. Ibid., p. 254.
21. Ibid., p. 255.
22. James Johnston Achmuty, Irish Education: A Historical
Survey.
(Dublin:
Hodges Figgis and Company,
1937), Preface.
97
106
Irish Educational Studies, Vol. 4, No. 1, 1984.
ST. DOMINIC'S - THE RISE AND FALL OF A TRAINING COLLEGE
1907 - 1924
Finbarr O'Driscoll
The Reports of the Temporary Inspectors (1901-2) for
Dominican Convent, Eccles Street state that "the staff is
adequate in number and possesses satisfactory qualifications"
1
while the same reports for St. Mary's University
College, Muckross Park deemed that "the teaching was
painstaking and generally successful; in some classes it
is excellent."
2
Yet on a closer examination of the report
for Eccles Street Convent, one finds that none of the
sisters teaching there possessed any teaching qualifications.
Their years of teaching
experience was taeir qualification
and the inspectors appeared quite happy with this
arrangement.
Where St.Mary's University College was
concerned one nun, Sr. Gonzales Stone, had a B.A.
qualification from the Royal University and taught English
with distinction to her pupils.
The situation had
improved somewhat by 1903 with many of the nuns acquiring
certificates of qualification from the South Kensington
Science and Art Board in its subject areas.
Others still
had obtained qualifications in the teaching of science from
the Technical Board for Ireland.
Most, if not all, of
these qualifications had been obtained by attending summer
courses designed for that purpose.
The majority of the
teaching staffs of the two convents opted for the
qualifications in science related subjects presumably
because of the convenience factor.
The older members of
the communities most likely felt that it was too late to
begin studying for a degree qualification and took the
science-related option.
107
This entailed that the teaching
98
of arts subjects was almost entirely in the hands of extern
teachers.
With the exception of modern language teaching,
principally German and French, highly qualified extern
teachers taught the arts in the two convent schools.
The
term "Resident in France" for 2 or 3 or 5 years was
adequate qualification for the teaching of French.
Similarly with Italian and German. Being a native of any
of these countries and having a good command of the English
language was acceptable also.
Columba Freckmann
Two such nuns were Sr. M.
of Eccles Street convent who was horn
and educated in Hanover and resided in France for three
years, and Mother Albertus Hochburgher of St. Mary's
University College, who was a native of Munich.
Extern
teachers availed of this opportunity to spend a number of
years on the continent studying languages quite often on
the encouragement of the various teaching Orders.
As a
student Frofessor Mary Macken of University College, Dublin
had been vncouraged to ao abroad for language study by
Sister .luchuria of Loreto
College, Stephen's Green in1896.
She descrioes Sister Eucharia's efforts as being like "so
many of the Women Teaching Orders who have contacts
everywhtre with the Continent, an expert in finding
suitable centres in Germany, France or Italy for students
otherwise hard put to it to arrive." 3
However, in terms of teaching qualifications a
succinct difference existed between the B.A. degree and the
various certificates of the South Kensington Science and
Art Board and the Technical Board for Ireland.
All of
those qualified to teach science related subjects were
acknowledged as being so qualified by the respective
Board while those with a B.A. degree were not acknowledged
in the same way. The degree, in itself, was considered to
be a certificate of teaching ability. Only one reference
is made in all of the inspectors' reports on the Dominican
schools to any teacher,
lay or religious, having acquired
99
the Diploma in Teaching of the Royal University.
This
diploma could only be conferred on 7raduates of Arts.
The governing body of the college realised that their
Diploma in Teaching was only "a fair substitute"
better system was adopted.
4
until a
The Dale and Stephens Report
of 1905 warned of the dangers of jumping to conclusions
as to what constituted the best form of training for
secondary teachers here in Ireland. They were convinced
that the constantly referred to systems employed in
Germany and England were still at an early stage,
especially that of England, and that any proposals for
reform could be advantageously considered in detail,
only if the special conditions of intermediate education
in Ireland were borne in mind.
It was their opinion that
"years must pass before conclusions as to the best methods
of training teachers are reached."
5
A high standard of
scholarship was regarded as a condition precedent to
professional training.
The Association of Secondary and
University Teachers whose Plea for Reform
6
preceeded the
Dale and Stephen's Report by one y)ar, had stipulated
graduation in Arts as a necessary conditicn for entry into
a teacher-training course.
In fact, many other aspects
and recommendations of the latter report bear a remarkable
similarity to those of the former.
They both nominated
elements of Mental and Moral Science as related to
education, along with the Theory and History of Education
as central aspects of the curriculum from a study point of
view.
On the practical side the observation of skilled
teachers at work and the giving of lessons under criticism
were considered useful and helpful items to the student
in college.
A probationary period in an efficient school
was also recommended whereby the student's work would be
constantly supervised, thus enabling him to avoid "crude
mistakes" when starting out on his career.
This item, it
was felt, would require considerable organizing and
109
100
... the ease with which provision of this
kind may be made by co-operation between
Universities or University Colleges and the
schools situated in their neighbourhood, or
by instituting theoretical courses for
senior students in large secondary schools,
is manifest from the extraordinary rapidity
with which during the last five or six
years training of this kind 'as been
provided in a dozen English centres. 8
One such centre was the Cambridge Training College.
It had acted upon the recommendations of James Bryce,
principal of the Belfast Academy, made to the Schools
Enquiry Committee in 1868 wherein he recommended that
teachers should receive a phaosophical training.
This
training he felt ought to be given in a university.
Cambridge's response meant that in the following ten
years, 283 students would go through the college of
which 86 would have a prior university training.
Once
students completed the one-year course and passed the
examination they received the Cambridge Teacher's
Certificate.
Some Irish.women availed themselves of the
opportunity to acquire this qualification and among them
were future members of the Dominican nuns' communities
in Dublin.
The contemplative nature of their vocation
precluded them from leaving the convent once they had
entered, and therefore, any such teaching qualification
had to be acquired prior to entry.
The Cabra Annals for
1899 relate to the following:
To secure the ablest teachers and the most
approved methods, some members of the
Community took out their diplomas for
teaching, both in theory and practice, in
the Cambridge University, and went through
a complete course of training in Bedford
College, London, whilst others fitted
themselves for work by a prolonged
residence on the Continent. 9
To qualify for entry to Cambridge Irish women students had
to obtain, in the senior grade examination of the
101
110
Intermediate Board for Ireland, a pass with honours in
(i) a Modern language, (ii) the English group, (iii) Latin,
and (iv) a pass in Mathematics, or in (i) and (ii) the
same, with (iii) a pass with honours in Mathematics, and
(iv) a pass in Latin. From 1909 onwards a pass in the
Matriculation examination of the new National University
was added to the list of entrance qualifications. The
senior grade option was also maintained.
Bedford College,
London, a Catholic training college, provided a full
course in teacher training in conjunction with the
Universities of London and Cambridge.
The entry requirement for this college was a pass in the "first University
Examination in Arts of the Royal University of Ireland.""
The course in Bedford College began in the month of
:January and lasted thirty-one weeks.
Whereas the year at
Cambridge was devoted primarily to theory and practice the
corresponding year at Bedford seemed to put great emphasis
on practical work. From the theory point of view, the
content of the two courses was similar, if not identical.
On the question of teaching practice the syllabus relates
that "Arrangements have been made with several schools of
different grades under various managements by which
students have Practice in Teaching many subjects and many
classes, and are thus enahlei to develop their own powers
and special aptitudes." 11
Despite the advantages afforded to Irishwomen in
English training colleges ant th' excellent training
available there, the communi,y in the Dominican Convent,
Eccles Street felt that trainee teachers could "...
scarcely have found themselves in an environment congenial
to their religious or national feelings, or in all
respects suited to their educational needs. "12 The
community had been considering plans to rectify the
situation for a number of years now and had been aware of
the training college founded in Waterford by the Ursuline
Sisters in 1898 for the training of female secondary
111
102
teachers.
This college was affiliated to the Cambridge
Syndicate and was founded six months after the
introduction of the Diploma in Teaching course was mad,.
available by the Royal University.
It was 1907, however,
before the Dominican nuns were finally spurred into
action on the question of providing professional training
for girls intent on pursuing a teaching career.
In that
year Alexandra College opened a training department for
secondary teachers in conjunction with Trinity :ollege,
as a result of which students received a diploma in
teaching similar to that given by the Royal University.
The nuns feared that "if Catholic girls had no similar
institution they might have an excuse for seeking
admission to the Protestant College."13 This they could
not allow to happen.
It was decided to provide a
training college for Catholic female students on the
premises at Eccles Street. Enquiries were made at
Cambridge regarding the possibility of such a college
being recognised as a training centre for teachers by
14
the Teachers' Training Syndicate.
Oscar Browning, M.A.,
Secretary of the Syndicate, informed the college that an
inspection of the premises was essential before any
decision could be given.
£10. Os. Od.
The fee for inspection was
In the case of Catholic Training Colleges,
the Syndicate desired to hear from the Bishop that
recognition was in accordance with his wishes. Archbishop
Walsh did approve and informed the Mother Prioress "that
your application for recognition has my fullest sanction."
The Archbishop's approval had not been sought until
November 1907.
The nuns were aware that approval might
not be forthcoming from Cambridge on the grounds that
there were insufficient numbers of primary classes as
practising schools in the convent, and so they sought to
know whether in that event it would be possible to secure
admission for their students to classes in the immediate
103
112
15
neighbourhood.
King's Inn Street or Gardiner Street were
suggested as fulfilling all the conditions, provided the
consent of the nuns there could be obtained. Going on
the presumption that Dr. Walsh would approve, the letter
suggested that he might perhaps influence the nuns
concerned to welcome the idea.
The Dominican community
in Eccles Street had informed the Archbishop that this
project did not involve sending girls to Cambridge and
that "it was in order to give Irish girls who are being
attracted to Cambridge an equal opportunity here that the
proposal was considered." 16 All studies would be pursued
in Eccles Street with examinations being held there also.
Cambridge would be referred to only for its certificate.
The nuns sought recognition only on condition that it was
in accordance with Dr. Walsh's wishes.
Once this primary
condition had been fulfilled five further secondary
conditions then required fulfilling.
These were concerned
with:
(1) The adequacy of the entrance examination
to see whether it is required by them.
(2) The adequacy of the Teaching given at the
Training College in the Theory, History
and Practice of Education.
(3) The adequacy of the practical Training as
given by the Master or Mistress of Method.
(4) The adequacy of the Practising Schools.
(5) Security that the training is continued
for a whole year. 17
Once these were met the project could function properly.
The sisters at this time here also considering entering
their students for the Diploma in Teaching of the Royal
University.
They intended to use the B.A. degree of the
same university as their standard for entry although
exceptions would be made in special cases.
This was to
enable those nuns who did not have a university degree,
through no fault of their own, to pursue such a course
1 1 3
104
of training if they so desired.
The nuns set about drafting their prospectus, and
submitted it to Archbishop Walsh, who appeared taken
aback by the argumentative tone"runningthrough a good
deal of the paper, giving it somewhat of a combative
18
character."
The Dominican nuns appeared to have been
outlining reasons as to why they were more entitled to a
training college than their counterparts, the Ursulines.
This kind of comparison was not to the Archbishop's
liking.
One month after reading the first draft of the
prospectus, Dr. Walsh received a revised draft of which
he said "I think it very much improved."19 He then
went on to make alterations in the wording, discuss
points that were not clear, suggest an explanatory
addition to one aspect in the prospectus and, finally,
put forward an excuse for his expected lack of involvement with the project.
He stated that "the special work
that I shall in all probability have to do in connection
with the starting of the new University will put a
burden upon me, the pressure of which I do not care to
20
contemplate."
The Syndicate nominated Mr. T. Headen, Senior
Inspector of National Schools, to inspect the proposed
training college preparatory to recognition.
In order
for the certificate of approval to be given the college
had to be organised and at work, and the sisters proposed
to begin in the autumn of 1908. The nuns had suggested
to Dr. Walsh that ladies and gentlemen prominent in
Catholic educational work should form a committee to be
associated with the training college, with the Archbishop
himself as patron or president.
They forwarded a copy of
the Cavendish Square College prospectus to indicate what
was meant. They wished to have a large number of past
pupils upon the committee.
They hoped to make the course
1.14
105
of a direct practical character.
Dr. Walsh dismissed the
idea of having such a committee running the training
college, irrespective of whether he, himself, was involved
or not.
He did not suggest how it should be run but one
gets the impression that he did not want too many lay
people involved in its running.
The new project was
advertised in the newspapers in May and the general public
informed that the Dominican nuns were about to open a
training college for Catholic women as professional
teachers.
The object of the college was to give
"Professional Training to women - religious and secular who are desirous of adopting teaching as a profession. .21
It was pointed out also that because of its location in
Dublin, along with opportunities both for training and
for practice in teaching, and the advantages to be derived
from courses of lectures by distinguished university
Fellows and professors, the college was offering very
special opportunities and advantages to those women who
sought such a training.
Furthermore the Dominican nuns
were of the belief that if Irish education was to be
fruitful "... it must be inspired by the Irish spirit
consonant with Irish traditions and directed especially
to Irish needs. "22 Ample opportunities would be provided
for the students to associate with Irish Societies in
Dublin. Special attention would be paid to the method
of teaching Irish with the college keeping in close touch
with the most modern theories relating to that branch of
pedagogics.
Constant communication vith native Irish
speakers was deemed essential for promoting the Irish
cause.
All in all, the advertisement painted a bright
future for Catholic women students intendtng to follow
the teaching profession with the Dominican nuns in Eccles
Street.
A letter of 13 March, 1909, confirmed that the
training department of Dominican Convent, Ec:les Street
had been placed upon the list of training colleges
llr
...t)
106
recognised by the Syndicate.
23
Miss Agnes Moore, a former
student who obtained the Cambridge Teacher's Certificate
and had considerable experience in an unnamed Catholic
Training College, was appointed principal of the
department.
Her salary amounted to £100 per annum. Miss
Maribel Pye, B.A.,
a former exhibitioner of St. Mary's
University College and also a Cambridge Diplomee, was
appointed as assistant to Miss Moore.
She resigned her
post prior to the opening of the college in order to
accept an appointment as Junior Female Inspector under the
National Board for Education. She was succeeded by Miss
Colly whose salary was fixed at £80 per annum. The lady
principal and her assistant lectured each day on History
of Education and Methodology, and other areas required by
the syllabus. Among the other subjects of the curriculum
were the Theory of Education (including Psvchology, Logic,
and Ethics in relation to educational work), School
Hygiene, Elocution, Drill, Blackboard Drawing and School
Organisation. Mr. Magennis, the lecturer in Psychology
received 10 shillings per lecture once a week while
Mrs. Burke received 7 shillings and 6 pence per lecture
for Elocution. Miss Dickinson received £1 per week for
two hours instruction in
Production.
Swedish Drill and Voice
Sr. M. Evangelist gave lectures on Blackboard
Drill.
The students who were required to furnish
references prior to being accepted into the college,
engaged in two hours practical work daily, Saturday
excepted, from 12.30 to 2.30 p.m.
During the year each
student was required to give a number of practical lessons.
The notes and lessons were carefully supervised and
criticised. Each student in turn gave a public lesson
which was followed by discussion and criticism.
All of
the staff and students had to attend the public criticism
sessions.
The college authorities also made provision
for observing teachers at work and of studying details of
107
116
school work and management.
Occasional visits to schools
other than those in which the practical was done was
envisaged.
The training course consisted of one year of
three terms lasting from October to June.
The fees which
were £60 per annum for resident students or £20 per annum
with an option of three term payments of £7 each for day
students were payable in advance.
Special courses of
lectures on Religion would be given in the college, with
particular attention being paid to methods of catechetical
instruction in the schools. Provision for practical work
was made in the following classes, which were attended by
upwards of 400 pupils in total - Under-graduate classes of
St. Mary's University College, the science classes under
the Department of Technical Instruction, Dominican College,
and elementary classes of girls and boys, Dominican
College. The classes which were sourht for in the two
neighbouring convents were not needed after all.
It would
appear that Dr. Walsh did not give his approval to the
idea anyway.
In that year fifteen students studied for the examinations of the Syndicate.
The records provide one with
some details on twelve of these students.
One was a
Dominican nun, Sr. Benevenuta, who had obtained honours in
the 1st Arts examination of the Royal University in 1906.
Five of the students were of 2nd Arts standing and two had
a B.A. degree qualification.
Two of the students were
members of the Sisters of Mercy Order from.Loughrea in
County Galway.
These two nuns, Sisters M. Aidan and
M. Jerome were taking two years for training and were
preparing for matriculation that first year in St. Dominic's.
In July 1908 the Loughrea nuns had sought admittance to
the training course for some members of its community.
This request was made through Dr. Walsh.
Permission was
granted on condition that they did not form part of the
community in Eccles Street and live in the convent proper.
117
108
24
Between 1909 and 1921 more than one hundred students
obtained their teaching diplomas in the college.
In 1910,
of the ten students who presented themselves at the
examinations, one obtained first class in the Theory,
History and Practice of Education with distinction.
Six
were awarded second class in the same examination; two
third class. There were three distinctions in Practical
Efficiency. St. Dominic's was the only Catholic women's
college in the United Kingdom that obtained a first class.
Between 1909 and 1919 four distinctions of the first
class were obtaiRed by students of the college in Theory
and Practice of Education.
Eleven distinctions were
awarded in the same area.
However, from 1915 onwards the
majority of students took the Higher Diploma in Education
of the National University for which attendance at the
lectures in University College Dublin was necessary.
This meant that the Dominican nuns were debarred from
obtaining that qualification. In 1914 a rule was made in
University College relating to the Higher Diploma, whereby
courses could be provided in recognised colleges which
would not necessitate attendanc( at the University
25
College.
Only two colleges, both Jesuit, namely
Clongowes and Belvedere took up this offer.
An official
supervisor was appointed to take charge of the courses.
Professor Corcoran of University College, Dublin would
visit these colleges from time to time during the year to
see that everything was in order and also to give lectures
to the students. Due to the close proximity of Dominican
College, Eccles Street to Belvedere College the
possibility of Professor Corcoran giving lectures in
St. Dominic's was investigated. The outcome resulted in
Professor Corcoran being granted permission for his
lectures to count for St. Dominic's as well as for
Belvedere College.
He pointed out, in a letter to the
Mother Prioress, that this arrangement did not lessen the
109 118
validity of the lectures in Eccles Street even on subject
matter treated by himself.
26
Having outlined the
27
which included the
Catholic alternative list of books"
works of Fenelon,
Vives, Newman, da Feltre and Maria and
Richard Lovell Edgeworth,
28
he informed the Mother
Prioress that Vives and Newman were on his own programme.
Even though he intended dealing with the other three
during the course, he hoped that Sr. Benevenuta and
Katherine Duffy would treat of them during their French
and English lectures respectively.
These common lectures,
it was hoped, would be of benefit to the students of both
colleges. As St. Dominic's was not a recognised college
of the National University, the Higher Diploma students
there were not exempt from attendance at University
College.
Fr. Corceran's lectures were designed to benefit
all the students whether they intended sitting for the
Cambridge Teacher's Certificate or for the Higher Diploma
in Education.
St. Dominic's Training College, it would appear,
continued to function until 1925 or thereabouts.
There
are different opinions as to when it ceased to function as
a training college with the last reference being nude to
it in 1924 in the Eccles Street Annals.
There it is
mentioned that the students of the college held a debate
on "Cardinal Newman as Educationist."
29
It had set out to
provide a professional training course for female trainee
teachers who would otherwise have gone to Cambridge.
It
did not deter some women students from going to Cambridge,
however.
In 1910 the names of nine women students from
Dublin appear on the teacher training results sheet of
Cambridge University.
30
Along with that women yraduates
who intended sitting for the Higher Diploma in Education
examinations had to attend lectures in University College.
From 1918 onwards some students of St. Dominic's took this
option.
This entailed attending University College as well
119
110
as St. Dominic's.
They continued to hope that their
college would eventually be accepted as a recognised
college of the National University of Ireland and also
as a separate women's training college along the same
lines as Girton or Newnham at Cambridge. Without such a
concession the Dominican nuns and other Orders bound by
strict laws of enclosure were confined to obtaining the
Cambridge Teacher's Certificate.
It would appear, however, that some Orders of nuns
were anxious to have their members study in University
College.
Pressure was brought to bear on Professor
Corcoran, S.J., Head of the Education Department to
consider the issue at least and in 1914 he obliged by
drafting a memorandum entitled "On the Powers of the
National University relative to Degrees for Teaching
31
Congregations of Nuns."
In this document he outlined
th
rules relating to extern students taking degrees
wherein it was made quite clear that attendance at
approved lectures and courses was an essential requirement.
The idea of providing special diplomas, which would never
be the equivalent of a degree, for extern students wishing
to study privately, did not appeal to him. Neither was the
recognised college plan an acceptable alternative in his
opinion.
Nevertheless, he was prepared to make whatever
alterations were necessary within the rules to enable nuns
to study for degrees in the university buildings at
Earlsfort Terrace.
Fr. Corcoran saw no objection in
having a separate lecture arrangement for women within the
College, as such an arrangement could be brought about
"entirely within the College by internal administration
alone, and without recourse to the Senate." 32
The
Dominican nuns continued to press for the status of a
recognised college for St. Dominic's subject to the
approval of Archbishop Byrne.
It was intended to provide
the same type of course, both practical and theoretical,
111
120
as was in operation in University College.
This inform-
ation was revealed in a reply to the Bishops' circular of
October 1921 which had referred to the question of
training nuns as teachers.
33
The reply also made it clear
that the Dominican nuns would be prepared to cater once
again for members of other religious orders should the
Bishops so desire.
It was all in vain.
never achieved the status it sought.
St. Dominic's
Even though its stay
was short this venture by the Dominican nuns into a nea
aspect of their educational apostolate was a reasonably
successful one.
Their contribution to improving the
status of the female teacher was of great significance at
a time when diplomas in teaching were few and far between.
121
112
REFERENCES
1. Intermediate Education aoard, Reports of the Temporary
Inspectors (1901-2), Part III, p. 107.
2. Ibid.
3. Professor Mary Macken, "Women in
College: A Struggle Within
Struggle with Fortune, ed.,
(Dublin: Browne and Nolan,
University and the
a Struggle". In
Dr. Michael Tierney.
1954), pp. 152-3.
4. Appendix to the Seventeenth Report of the Royal
University, 1898; 1899 (c.9430), XXV. 552.
5. Report of Messrs. F.H. Dale and T.A. Stephens, His
Majesty's Inspectors, Board of Education, on
Intermediate Education in Ireland; 1905 Cd., 2546,
XXVIII, 790.
6. Association of Intermediate and university Teachers,
Ireland,
Secondary Education in Ireland: A Plea
for Reform.
Dublin: Robert Allen, 1904.
7. Ibid.
8. Ibid.
9. Prospectus of the Immaculate Boarding School, 1899
quoted in the Annals of St. Mary's Dominican
Convent, Cabra, p. 148.
10. Bedford College, London, Programme of Training
Department, 1892-3.
11.
Ibid.
12. Dominican Convent, Eccles Street, Eccles Street Annals,
1888-1924, p. 102.
13.
Ibid.
14. Oscar Browning to Mother Prioress, Eccles Street,
28 September 1904, Dominican Generalate Archives
thereafter - DCA.
15. Archishop Walsh to Mother Prioress, Eccles Street,
21 November 1907, DGA.
16. Dominican Convent, Eccles Street to Archbishop Walsh
in DGA.
This is a draft copy and is not dated or
signed.
113
122
17. Ibid.
18. Archbishop Walsh to Mother Prioress, Eccles Street,
22 April 1908, DGA.
19. Archbishop Walsh to Mother Prioress, Eccles Street,
31 May 1908, DGA.
20. Ibid.
21. Prospectus of St. Dominic's Training College,
Dominican Convent archives, Eccles Street.
22. Archbishop Walsh to Mother Prioress, Eccles Street,
21 May 19oa, DGA.
23. Oscar Browning, Secretary, Teacher's Training
Syndicate to Miss A. Moore, 13 March 1909, DGA.
24. Michael J. Curran to Mother Peter McGrath, 29 July
1908, DGA.
25. Interview with Fr. Fergal McGrath, S.J., 23 August,
1982.
26. T. Corcorart S.J., to Mother Prioress, Dominican
Convent, Eccles Street, 4 October 1914, DGA.
27. Ibid.
28. The texts being used, one presumes, from a study of
these authors' works relating to education, appear
to have been as follows; Fenelon, Traite de
l'Education des filles; Vives, De institutione
feminae Christiane; Newman, The Idea of a
University; Maria and Richard LovellMworth,
Letters to Literary Ladies.
It would appear in
th:d case of Vittorino da Feltro that he left no
educational works after him.
29. Dominican Convent Eccles Street, Eccles Street Annals,
January 1924 - May 1926.
30. Cambridge University, "Teacher Training Results June
1910" in Dominican Convent Archives, Eccles
Street.
31. Rev. Professor T. Corcoran, S.J., "On the Powers of
the National University relative to Degrees for
Teaching Congregations of Nuns, September 1914",
DGA.
32. Ibid.
33. Dominican Convent, Eccles Street, "The Training of
Sisters as Teachers, October 1921" in DGA.
.123
114
Irish Educational Studies, vol. 4, No. 1, 1984.
ONE APPROACH TO MORAL EDUCATION FOR SECONDARY
SCHOOLS IN THE UNITED STATES
Gerald M. Reagan
This paper explains the "moral negotiation" approach
to moral education. This approach was the basis for a
recently completed National Endowment for the Humanities
Project at The Ohio State University. The Project,
entitled "Moral Negotiations as Moral Education:
Rational Resolution of Moral Disagreements" began in the
spring of 1980 and concluded in the summer of 1982. The
Moral Negotiation approaea is based on the theoz:.ical
work in normative ethics of Professor Bernard Rosen of
the Department of Philosophy, Ohio State University.
Rosen, co-principal investigator in the Project, developed
a set of techniques intended to maximize the chances of
rational adjudication of public moral disagreements. The
project was an application of Rosen's work to (1) inservice
teacher education in the area of moral education, and (2)
development of moral education curricular materials to be
incorporated in the existing English and Social Studies
curricula in secondary schools.
The remainder of this
paper will be devoted to an explanation of this approach
to moral education.
Perspective on the MN Approach
It may well seem presumptious to suggest that one
has something useful to say about resolving rationally
value/moral disagreements and further that secondary
school students can become proficient at this difficult
task.
Most educators would probably agree that we should
provide students with the intellectual skills necessary to
115
.
124
resolve rationally those disagreements which can be so
resolved, although many are likely to believe such
disagreements limited to those we term "verbal disputes"
and "factual disputes".
In the case of moral/value
disagreements, as we all know, there are questions not
only about how such disagreements might be rationally
resolved but also about whether such resolntion is
possible.
These questions are not :rade less perplexing by
talk of the "fact-value dichotomy" or "is-ought dichtomy"
or "naturalistic fallacy".
Most of us learned as
undergraduates that an "ought" conclusion does not follow
from "is" premises alone.
We know now that the supposed
fallacy is a subje.:t of lively debate among philosophers,
but it will be avoided here.
It will be avoided not
because it is unimportant but because here it will be
argued that much can be done in
rationally resolving
moral disagreements whether one accepts or rejects the
fact/value dichotomy.
In Rosen's theoretical work he does not, of course,
leave this philosophical question untouched.
An avowed
pragmatist, he clearly rejects the fact/value dichotomy.
Yet it seems that, and Rosen agrees, the use of his
method of moral negotiation does not necessitate that we
accept his particular philosophical position.
1
Indeed
it seems that this is a major strength of the method:
we
can find a major contribution which normative ethics can
make to resolve moral disagreements even though
theoretical issues in ethics remain unresolved.
The
question facing moral educators is not what ethics could
offer if all the theoretical issues were resolved, but
what can be done in the meantime. Rosen's method of
moral negotiation is held to offer a way of maximizing
the chances of moving from disagreement on value matters
to agreement on the basis of factual inquiry.
44
116
It is important to note here that we are not talking
about how a value/obligation proposition is to be
"verified" or "justified" or "warranted".
In the
discussion here the MN method is treated simply as an
approach which encourages and facilitates the process of
moving from a value/obligation disagreement to seek
agreement both about what is being disputed and about how
that dispute might be resolved.
There is no intent to
suggest that agreement, no matter how widespread,
constitutes either verification or justification.
To seek agreement is a much less ambitious undertaking
than is showing how a value claim is properly verified or
justified or warranted.
"Proof" or "certainty" or
"demonstration" is not required for the resolution of at
least some value disagreements.
In value disputes we may
be unable to "prove" that an action is correct or right or
obligatory, and yet though we may initially disagree we
can often, through disciplined reason, come to agree.
The goal of moral negotiation is not "agreement at
any cost". The concern is with rational agreement, which
although less than proof or verification or justification
is more than irrational persuasion, sophistical reasoning,
etc.
Let us turn now to a simplified, perhaps over-
simplified, overview of the method of moral negotiation.
The Method of Moral Negotiation
Moral negotiation is a method for dealing with moral/
value conflicts by allowing the capture of those conflicts
in the form of two complex conditional statements. The
consequence of each of the conditional statements contains
one of the conflicting moral/value judgments. The
antecedent of each contains the reasons which persons hold
or provide in support of the consequent. Conditional or
hypothetical agreement has been reached when all parties
to the dispute agree that both of the conditional
117
4.! 1126
statements are true, i.e., that the statements comprising
the antecedent of each conditional statement, if true,
would be sufficient to warrant the consequent of that
statement.
In those cases in which it is possible to
demonstrate the truth of one of the antecedents, the
rational grounds are provided for unconditional as well
as conditional agreement.
2
Let us assume that two students or two groups of
students, A and B, disagree about wnether some action X
is morally permissible.
not.
A says that i. is, B says it is
Once the disagreement is recognized and made
explicit, the method of moral negotiation calls for the
discussion to move immediately from the disagreement to
the reasons which persons give or hold for each of the
moral positions.
Each reason becomes a part of an
antecedent in a complex conditional statement, e.g.
A:
If:
(reason
1'
and
B:
If:
(reason
reason 6, and
reason
reason 8, and
4
reason 7, and
) and
reason
THEN:
and
and
2'
reason.8, and
reason
(X is morally
permissible)
THEN:
)
9
(X is not morally
permissible)
Any number of reasons may be given for each consequent.
In many cases,
reasons for one consequent will be
denials of reasons given for the other consequent.
The
truth or warrant of the reasons is not judged at this
point in the process. Persons may believe that reasons
are not true or warranted and yet agree that if the
reasons were true, they would justify the moral position.
Thus by expanding the reasons given for A's position we
should be able to get B to agree with the conditional
even though she/he disagrees with both the statements
comprising the antecedent (the reasons) and the
127
118
consequent (the moral or value judgment).
To agree with
the conditional A, B's agreement is only that if the
statements in the antecedent were true (and she/he
probably thinks they are not), they would be sufficient
to warrant the consequent.
And by expanding the
antecedent in B's conditional we saould be able to get A
to agree with that conditional.
this is conditional
agreement:
both parties agree that both conditional
statements can be accepted, even though each party
probably believes that both the reasons (the antecedent)
and the moral judgment (the consequent) of the other are
unwarranted.
Our assumption in the MN project was that when
students use this approach and arrive at conditional
agreement, a great deal has been accomplished even though
there remains disagreement about the moral judgment.
The
focus of the disagreement has moved from the moral
consequents to the reasons which are held to support
those consequents. In many cases, if not in most, there
will be factual reasons which are claimed to support one
of the consequents with the denial of those same reasons
held to support the opposing consequent.
Once conditional agreement has been reached in the
classroom the teacher may encourage students to examine
the warrant of the antecedents. Are the statements in
either antecedent true or warranted?
If one antecedent
can be shown to be true, then conditions have been
provided for a move from conditional to unconditional
agreement. That is, the conditional agreement is
agreement with two conditional statements which have
contradictory moral consequents:
A:
If p, then q
B:
If r, then not q
Hence, if it can be shown that "p" is true, "q" follows.
Or if "r" can be shown to be true, "not q" follows.
119
.128
In
short, following conditional agreement, an attempt may be
If an antecedent
made to affirm one of the antecedents.
is affirmed, the result is an argument of the form modus
ponens.
If the two consequents are contradictions, and
if either of the antecedents are affirmed, the basis is
provided for unconditional agreement.
3
In practice, of
course, this procedure encounters many difficulties, a
`.1w of which will be discussed later.
The intent here is
only to give a simple overview of the approach.
If the foregoing explanation makes the moral
negotiation approach sound complicated, the fault is
awkwardness of expression rather than a feature of the
approach
Moral negotiation simply extends and organizes
fv,rther a decision-making process.often used in everyday
affairs.
Imagine a colleague who is considering leaving
To
University X to accept a position at University Y.
help make a decision, he lists in one column reasons for
staying at ,X and in a second column reasons for acceptinc
the position at Y.
Our colleague could be viewed as
having conflicting consequents--I ought to take the
position at Y/I ought not to take that position.
The
list of reasons can be seen as the antecedents for the
conflicting consequents. Some reasons for each course of
action may be known facts ("the salary is higher at Y");
some may be empirical possibilities or predictions
("salary increases are likely to be greater at X"); some
may be normative claims (there is a moral obligation to
remain at X to complete an on-going project). How these
various kinds of reasons are to be dealt with will be
discussed in the section which follows.
At this point
the intent is simply to show that the outline of the
method of moral negotiation is strikingly similar to a
decision process commonly used.
129
120
An Extended Example of Moral Negotiation
The first step for the teacher is that of helping
students identify an area of value disagreement. In the
NEH Project the issues were generally those raised in the
established curriculum.
In a U.S. History class, for
example, student disagreement as to whether it was morally
permissible for the U.S. government to relocate JapaneseAmericans during World War II or whether the U.S. ought to
have dropped the atom bomb might become topics for MN
discussions.
In literature classes most selections read
raise value issues which invite discussion, i.e., if a
class has read Julius Caesar, they may disagree about
whether political assassination is ever warranted.
Other
value disputes arise in the everyday life of the school,
e.g., is a particular school rule justified? Is it
morally permissible to require students to attend school?
For the discussion here, let us assume that students
want to discuss an issue from the last category. Suppose
we have a school in which students are concerned about an
educational issue being discussed in the community:
the
question of the moral permissibility of the use of
corporal punishment by teachers and/or administrators.
Following the identification of the disagreement, the two
conflicting value judgments would be identified.
(It is
generally possible, and when possible desirable, to state
these judgments as contradictories rather than as
contraries.)
Given our example, the conflicting judgments
could bet
A.
B.
Is it morally permissible to JSC
corporal punisnment in schoc,13, and
It is not morally permissible to
use corporal punishment in schools.
A and B are contradictories, since one must be true and
the other false.
In the case of contraries, of course,
although both cannot be true, both can be false.
121
130
Once the contradictory judgments are identified,
they become the consequents of two conditional statements,
i.e.
), then it is morally permissible
to use corporal punishment in the schools.
A.
If
B.
If
(
), then it is not morally
(
permissible to use corporal punishment in
the schools.
The process now moves to the task of identifying those
reasons held to support each judgment. The reasons given
tors judgment, no matter the number, will comprise the
antecedent of that judgment. In this "reason-giving" or
"reason-identifying" or "reason-finding" step, the truth
or warrant of the various reasons is not at issue.
The
task is not to give an exhaustive list of all possible
reasons, but to give a list that captures the plausible
reasons offered by students (plus any reasons which the
teacher might wish to suggest even if overlooked by
students).
Reasons given are likely to include several different
Some are likely to be themselves
sorts of claims.
normative claims, some factual claims that we know or can
determine to be true or fal3e, and some may be empirical
predictions. There is no set number or ideal number of
reasons. The goal at this point is simply to identify
reasons for the antecedent of each conditional until each
antecedent would be regarded by all parties, if it were
true, to be sufficient to warrant its consequent. This
judgment of sufficiency does not entail agreement with
either the reasons which constitute the antecedent or
with the judgment expressed in the consequent.
The
judgment of sufficiency is simply the judgment that if
the statements comprising the antecedent were held to be
true/warranted, then the judgment in the consequent would
be warranted.
One may be firmly convinced that the
13°
122
statements in the antecedent are false and that the
judgment in the consequent is unwarranted and yet agree
with the total conditional. The point is that in this
step the goal is to bring about a reasoned conditional or
hypothetical agreement on both of the conditionals.
At this point in the process students have
identified and displayed the reasons they hold for their
judgments. In some cases the teacher may want to stop at
this point. Students' reasons have been elicited, and
even though they continue to disagree as to whether the
reasons are warranted, the focus is now on the warrant of
reasons rather than on the simple fact of value
disagreement.
In other cases teachers will want to
attempt to move the process toward unconditional agreement.4
The teacher might begin by first helping students
identify those reasons in each antecedent which are
themselves moral or value claims. One question to ask
about such claims is whether they are simply restatements
of the consequent and are hence dispensible, e.g., "If it
is my duty to do X, then I ought to do X." A second
question is to ask whether the normative claim in the
antecedent can be reasonably viewed as the consequent to
yet another conditional which has a factual antecedent.
This is, we begin with a conditional such as:
If p
(normative)
then q
(normative)
Though questioning we may find that "p" is a consequent
of an additional conditional which has a factual antecedent:
If x
(factual)
,
then p
(normative)
We now, by conditional chain, have
If x
(factual)
,
then p
If p
(normative
,
then q
(normative)
If x
(factual)
,
then q
(normative)
123
(normative)
t.
132
We now have, in effect, found a factual antecedent to
replace the original normative antecedent.
This process
can be continued with other normative statements in the
antecedent.
There is, of course, the possibility of
indefinite if not infinite regress--one may always give
as the antecedent a normative rather than a factual
reason--but this often does not happen.
There is also
the possibility that no additional reasons will be
offered, that one may assert that the normative reason
revires no further justification. If this occurs, the
teacher has two options. The one is to turn to questions
of ethical theory in an attempt at resolution.
The other
-
is to continue the "sifting and sorting process" without
resolving this question.
Let us assume for the moment that the teacher has
either found empirical antecedents for normative statements
in the antecedents or that although such antecedents have
not been found, students are convinced that the normative
reasons are not by themselves sufficient to warrant the
consequent.
If this is the case, discussion can turn to
other reasons in the antecedents.
Another step is to check if the reasons given in each
conditional can be reduced in number.
There may be some
factual reasons which persons can demonstrate to be false.
And there may be, on occasion, factual antecedents which
do not seem capable of being construed as rational reasons
ev-n if they are true, i.e, they do not seem to be
relevant to the conclusion, e.g., "if ColumLus discovered
America, then corporel punishment is morally permissible."
If the reasons are reduced in number, the teacher might
check to see if the reduction has destroyed the conditional
agreement.
(If conditional agreement no longer exists,
the earlier process of bringing about such agreement can be
used again).
But let us assume here that the reduction of
133
124
I
reasons is not sufficient to destroy conditional agreement,
i.e., with reduced reasons, we still have agreement on the
two condtional statements.
A next step is to consider the possibility that in
one or both of the antecedents there are sub-sets of
statements which are believed to be sufficient for the
consequent. Suppose that the agreed upon conditionals are
the following:
Position #1
If
Position N2
(a and b and c and d),
then x
If (e and f and g ana h),
then not x
Now all that conditional agreement has shown is that if
we believed all of the statements fn the antecedents to
be true/warranted, then we would also hold the consequent
to be warranted.
The question now is whether there are
sub-sets of the statements comprising the antecedent which
are accepted as sufficient for the consequent. Thus, for
example, it may be agreed that Position #1 could be
warranted without all of the antecedent statements being
true or warranted, e.g. it could be agreed that,
addition to the original conditional agreement,
(1)
If
(a
b
d), then X, and
(2)
If
(a
c
d), then X, and
(3)
If
(b
c
d), then X
in
And in terms of Position #2, it might be agreed that, in
addition to the original conditional agreement,
(1)
If
(f
(2)
If
(e
(3)
If
(e
*
g
h), then not X, and
f
g), then not X, and
g
h), then not X
Now if such agreement is reached, it provides for each
conditional more than one route to affirming the
antecedent, and hence, more than on possible route in
seeking to bring about unconditional agreement. 5
125
134
There are two possible additonal guides suggested by
the search for sub-sets.
One guide is to ask how the
reasons given in the antecedent of one conditional are
related to the reasons given in the antecedent of the
other conditional.
It is typically the case that some of
the reasons in the one conditional ill coh-radict reasons
in thn other conditional, e.g., a reason given to support
the use of corporal punishment might well be that it
mot.-vates students to try harder to succeed at school
tasks while a reason given to reject the moral permissibility of corporal punishment in the schools might be a
denial that corporal punishme.,t,motivates students.
To
identify such a contradiction would seem to identify an
important factual claim which, if verified or disconfirmed, would go far in resolving the moral dispute.
A second guide emerges, or may emerge, for the
search for sub-sets of reasons which are believed to be
sufficient for the proposed consequents.
In our example,
the three sub-sets of reasons which were held to be
sufficient for the consequent "X" were:
(1)
(a
b
d)
(2)
(a
c
d)
(3)
(b
c
d)
And the three sub-sets which were held to be sufficient
for the consequent
not X" were:
(1)
(f
g
h)
(2)
(e
f
g)
(3)
(c
g
h)
Now there are at least two things which could be concluded
from this.
First, any reason which was originally given
but which is (a) not a member of a sub-set believed to be
sufficient for one of the consequents, and (b) not itself
believed to be sufficient for one of the consequents, and
135
126
(c)
not a contradiction of a reason given for the opposing
consequent, is not then a promising candidate for
verification/disconfirmation in order to resolve the
particular dispute.
Another conclusion which can be reached based on c.
subsets is that certain reasons given are not held to be
necessary for the consequent. In the case of consequent
"X", reasons (a) and (b) and (c) are not held necessary
for X, since in the case of each they are absent in sub-
sets which are held sufficient for X.
And in the case of
consequent "not X", the same can be said of (e) and (f)
and (h).
Given this, it might be suspected that (d) in
the first group of sub-sets and (g) in the second group
of sub-sets, since they occur in each sub-set in their
appropriate group, may well be held as necessary
conditions. Now in a sense if this is suspected it may
move us back to the original discussion, but it also
provides us with the possibility of a quicker resolution.
For the position arguing for consequent "X", it could now
be asked:
If it turns out that (d) is false, is it
the case that x will also be false?
And for those who argue for the consequent "not x", it
can be asked:
If it turns out that (g) is false,
is it
the case that not x will also be false?
In short, we now have the classical
disconfirmation pattern.
An affirmative answer to either of these questions will
show that the reason in question is not simply one which
combined with others is held sufficient for the consequent,
but rather that holding this reason is necessary for the
consequent--and hence the falsity of this reason is
sufficient for rejecting the consequent.
127
.1.36
But this paper has gone on far too long to make some
simple points.
Rosen's work shows us how we can, in most
cases, arrive at conditional agreement on value
disagreements.
Conditional agreement is a major step in
the rational resolution of value disputes.
the skilful
In many cases
teacher can teach students to move beyond
conditional agreement and in some cases to reach
unconditional agreement.
137
128
NOTES
1.
The method of moral negotiation is theory-dependent
in the sense that it does rule out those ethical
theories which place moral judgments outside the
realm of reason, e.g., complete relativism.
2.
We might notice that these conditional statements are
somewhat different from many we encounter. There
are conditionals which are "analytic", that is,
the relationship between the antecedent and the
consequent is a logical one, the antecedent
being logically sufficient for the consequent,
e.g., if X is a triangle, thenX has three sides.
Other conditionals are empirical, with the
antecedent held to be empirically sufficient for
the consequent, e.g., if one throws a lighted
match on spilled gasoline, then the gasoline
will ignite.
In the conditionals discussed here,
however, the relationship between the antecedent
and the consequent is neither one of logical
necessity nor one of demonstrable empirical
facts. Yet people do agree that the kind of
conditionals discussed here are true. The nature
of the relationahip between the antecedent and
consequent of these conditionals is, of course,
an interesting philosophical puzzle.
3.
The world doesn't work quite this smoothly. In an
actual debate it is likely that the "losing
party" would not immediately agree, but would
rather want to return and modify the conditionals.
4.
Most of Rosen's work focuses on bringing about
conditional agreement.
The material which
fellows is more of an extension than an
application.
5.
There is something peculiar about such sub-sets when
we are dealing with a public debate. All parties
to the dispute may agree with the sub-sets, but
it may also be the case that each sub-set
represents the reasons given by a particular
group, i.e. the sub-sets may represent sub-sets
of reasons held to be sufficient by all, or they
may represent sub-sets o' persons who hold the
reasons stated in the sub-sets.
129
138
Irish Educational Studies, Vol. 4, Mo. 1, 1984.
LANGUAGE MANIPULATION:
DOUBLESPEAK IN EDUCATION
Richard Pratte
Introduction
Almost a decade has passed since the American National
Council of Teachers of English commissioned a volume on
Language and Public Policy,
1
and six years have passed
since the Council's second book on language abuse,
Teaching About Doublespeak,
2
appeared.
The perspective
offered in the first work was designed to enlighten
teachers, especially teachers of English, regarding the
employment of "doublespeak" as found in such areas
as the
military, government, politics, and commercial advertising.
Thus whereas the first book alerted the teaching
profession generally and English teachers in particular to
categories of language manipulation, the latter work
focused on classroom exercises, bent on alerting students
to "irresponsible" uses of language.
It is worth noting that the first work focused on the
general point that language is manipulated and how
communication in general can be manipulated.
This was the
basis for the repeated claim found in both books that
"doublespeak" is a form of language manipulation, and its
study and ferreting out in argument and discussion will
free us from a "tyranny of words", empowering us to
improve the quality cf our discourse and thought.
Unfortunately, any assumed improvement of discourse
and thought rests mightily on obtaining an answer to the
prior question:
What is language manipulation?
That is,
although we are given numerous examples of language
manipulation, we are never told what constitutes an
139
130
I
analysis of language manipulation so that we may see it
at work outside the pages of the forementioned works.
Moreover, although "doublespeak" is examined in many
different contexts and ca*egories, we are never given an
answer to the question, "Why is doublespeak a manipulation
device of language?" Hence, the purpose of this effort is
twofold:
to briefly examine the nature of language
manipulation, and to make the point that doublespeak,
a
particular form of language manipulation, is not unly
confined to such institutions as the military, government,
politics, and the mass media:
formal education, schooling,
also is implicated. That is, in contradictory and often
unintended or non-deliberate fashion, teachers employ
doublespeak to manipulate their students' behavior. I
hope to show that formal education, an arena purposely set
aside for studying language and, especially, language
manipulation--propaganda analysis, techniques of
persuasion, etc.,--is not itself immune in thin regard.
Language Manipulation and Doublespeak
What things count as language manipulation? Let us
step back to ask a more general question: What is
language manipulation?
Or more precisely, what must be
true to say that somebody is engaging in language
manipulation? To avoid the lengthy task of ourselves
establishing a set of conditions, it is helpful to assume
the defensibility of an analysis that has some currency in
the literature.
As a result of developing an analysis of
manipulation, Kaste-
3
answers as follows: manipulation
takes place when there is a difference in kind4 between
what a person intends to do (X) and what he actually does
CY), when the difference between X and Y is traceable to
another person.
That is, if there is a difference in kind
between vhat one intends to do (X) and what one actually
131
140
does (Y), and if this difference is traceable to another
person, the one has been manipulated'by that person.
5
The two conditions just stated for manipulation,
unfortunately, are not sharp enough for the concept of
language manipulation.
If, however, we take the phrase
is traceable to another person" and reword it as follows:
is traceable to another person's use of language" then we
have the conditions for language manipulation.
What is
suggested here is that language manipulation occurs when
there is a difference in kind between what one intends to
do (X) and what one actually does (Y), when that differerce
is traceable to another person's use of language (in such
a way that the victim may be said to be misled).
These
conditions, in other words, are held to be individual,
necessary and jointly sufficient for marking off language
manipulation.
'Doublespeak' is an umbrella term--a terminological
convenience, a device of, the understanding--suggesting an
Orwellian connotation, particularly useful in examining
manipulative techniques in political propagdnda, rhetoric,
the media, semantics, etc.
(It is worth remarking that
doublespeak is not to be associated with "double-talk".
The latter phrase refers to someone speaking in terms not
strictly germane to the issue, perhaps intentionally or
unintentionally.)
Although it is important to teach students about the
pitfalls of accepting and employing doublespeak, what is
badly needed is a way of distinguishing what it is about
doublespeak that makes it a form of language manipulation.
I am primarily interested in it as a form of manipulation
by the use of language.
Let us see how this works.
Language manipulation embodies no restriction as to
to method whereby someone attempts to bring about a
discrepancy between the intended and actual achievements
141
132
of the manipulated.
Even rational methods of persuasion
are not ruled out in this sense.
Hence language
manipulation embodies no restriction as to the method
employed to achieve intended results. One may lie to
another to manipulate, as in the case of the man bent on
sexual conquest. The lie, "I love you," is employed to
bring about a discrepancy between the intended loving
sexual embrace (X) and the actual sexual conquest devoid
of love (Y). A difference in kind, we would agree, as
when we say, "I was duped; if I had only known he didn't
love me. It would have made a world of difference"--a
difference in kind.
Language manipulation, however, is not restricted to
There are language manipulations involving
lying.
statements which overlook facts, evade facts, and distort
6
facts.
Moreover, we may employ fallacies of relevance
and ambiguity as methods of language manipulation. 7
What is distinctive about doublespeak as a method of
language manipulation is that we sometimes use a special
kind of language, as seen in the following.
An interesting,
and horrifying, insight into doublespeak and its
manipulative function can be derived from a look at the
terminology used by the Nazis in their program of racial
genocide. Historians have searched in vain for the
document in which Hitler gave the order to kill the Jews.
The most telling bit of evidence is a memo in which there
is no reference to killing or extermination of the Jews.
Rather, one reads of the "final solution", "complete
solution", "special measures", "cleansing", "executive
measures", and so on. Moreover, the official language
designated the places where the "final
solution" was to be
carried out as "family camps" or "work camps".
In effect,
the Nazis never officially spoke of a systematic racial
genocide or extermination of the Jews.
133
1.42
What was the reasoning behind this "doublespeak"?
First, we see that there was no reference to the
extermination of over six million Jews.
This ploy
allowed the Nazi bureaucrats to go about carrying out
the "final solution" without acknowledging what they
were doing.
Commonly, most people feel badly about
killing another human being, even if,
in some cases, it
is justified. But one can go about the business of the
(X) without acknowledging that racial
"final solution"
genocide (Y)
Such language
is actually taking place.
use allows the manipulation of actions by disguising or
concealing the actual result, where the difference
between X and Y is a difference in kind, at least in the
minds of most people.
Focusing on America's Watergate also is illustrative
of doublespeak's manipulation function.
Doublespeak, for
those engaged in the Watergate "coverup", is to the
tongue what novacain is to the gums.
For "breaking and
entering", "intelligance gathering operations" was
proffered; for "burglars", "plumbers" was substituted;
For Nixon's involvement in tampering with the tapes,
"White House telephone anomalies" was substituted; for
"defaming and injuring the reputation of other
politicians", substitute "dirty tricks", and so on.
The
list seems endless, but all are employed to perform the
same function:
to manipulate other persons or groups.
As suggested earlier, any linguistic device or
method may serve to manipulate another person; there are
no restrictions.
The particular method of "doublespeak"
employed in the two preceding examples (Nazis and
Watergate) suggests a particular method:
euphemism,
8
the use of
the employment of renaming in order to hide
unpleasant connotation.
A euphemism is any agreeable
or less offensive expression that we substitute for one
we find offensive.
143
We see this clearly when talking
134
about death.
Commonly we resort to such euphemisms as
"He passed on", "She departed this life", "They went to
their reward", and so on.
Closely related to the euphemism is another
linguistic method, special pleading.9
As in the case of
euphemism, we imply that our labeling correctly describes
reality, when in fact it merely reflects our prejudical
point of view. When we engage in special pleading, we
attempt to place ourselves in a favorable light and
place others in an unfavorable light.
In other words, we
apply a double standard: one for ourselves and another
-for others.
Put differently, special pleading involves
being partial (to oneself) and inconsistent insofar as it
is to regard one's own situation as privileged while
failing to apply to others the standard we set for
ourselves.
For example, we engage in special pleading
when we speak of ourselves as "overweight" but others are
"fat"; we are "patriots" while our enemies are "terrorists";
or our enemies "surrendered" while we accepted a "cease
fire".
Obviously, the use of euphemism and special pleading
may result in manipulation. What is worth noticing in
the case of Watergate cover-up is that a burglary, a
crime, was committed, and those alleged responsible for
the crime were asked to justify their actions. Instead
of giving a justification for the break in, they chose to
employ euphemisms to justify breaking the law. The
burglary became "intelligence gathering", "a security
measure", and so on.
Special pleading was engaged in by
referring to the accusations as "White House horror
stories", suggesting that the allegations were akin to
old wives' tales of haunted graveyards. Criticism was
thus blunted by the use of language suggesting it is
nonsense to fear the allegations made about those involved.
Similarly, calling the agreement to break into the
135
144
Watergate Democratic quarters "an agreement to go out and
develop additional information" (Y) was to suggest some
sort of search for knowledge commonly engaged in rather
than a clandestine, illegal search(X).
Finally, the use
of "signed off on", a mechanistic behavior, rather than
"approval" of the break in, made the person in charge
appear less responsible for the project.
The use of euphemism and special pleading tended to
ouggest an aura of justification and respectability to
legally dubious actions. Unethical and illegal conduct
was dressed up by doublespeak.
However, doublespeak, as
language manipulation, cannot justify a crime since it
undercuts, is at odds with, what a justification demands:
honesty and truth.
Doublespeak cannot justify our
actions unless, of course, we allow our gullibility to
take charge.
Doublespeak in Education
In what immediately follows I shall present in
somewhat truncated fashion what I consider to be some
specific examples of doublespeak in education.
is not exhaustive, nor is it meant to be.
My listing
Moreover, it is
not an expose in the sense of bringing to awareness
something hitherto unnoticed.
Rather I merely wish to
point out that language manipulation does occur in
education and there is an ironic incongruity between the
school as a site for examining language manipulation and
as a site for its cultivated and widespread use.
One tactic used to control students is school
confinement.
Students, instead of being suspended from
school and allowed to roam about the community at will,
are required to attend school but are restricted to one
room all day long, even while eating lunch, and are not
a:lowed to study or talk during the school day.
1i5
136
The key to understanding the above is to grasp that
the situation is euphemistically labeled "in-house
suspension". A discrepance is set up between what
students intend doing (attending school) and what they are
actually doing (confinement akin to that of felons in
prison). The use of "in-house suspension" glosses over
the unpalatable truth that some students are no longer,
functioning as students but are serving, for a short
period of time, something'like a jail sentence.
A similar situation has to do with the removal of
a
student from class by sending him to the "time out room".
The euphemism is part of a systematic method teachers
learn to control the behavior of students who either
interfere with their own education or with the education
of others. In this exercise of doublespeak, as in the
previous example, the student intends to take "time out"
from the daily activity but is actually placed in
isolation. The "time out room" is simply another term
for isolation, but with more neutral connotations. Thus,
there is an exchange of the negative connotation of
"isolation" for the more neutral "time out room".
Social control in education often takes the form of
discipline.
Although the tactics vary considerably,
unpleasant connotations are avoided by the use of
doublespeak.
The elaborate system of school rules and
sanctions are replete with terms like "classroom
management" (classroom discipline); "assertive teaching"
(teacher control); "discipline" (punishment); "eighth
period special class" (detention); and "misbehavior"
(unacceptable behavior).
Although the use of punishment is a form of teacher
power, it is sometimes disguised, probably because a
blatant exercise of punishment is seen as systematic
oppression. For example, where school policy expressly
forbade punishment, the director of a highly acclaimed
137
146
high school marching band in central Ohio told a student,
"Go make some spirit" instead of saying, "Go march the
penalty drill".
In this case, the erring bandsman was
punished for making a mistake in the previous evening
"show".
Actually, the penalty drill is a very demanding
marching pattern totally exhausting anyone having to
execute it.
Doublespeak was employed to suggest "a
making of spirit" when in reality the punishment's
purpose is quite the opposite:
a deflating of spirit.
As well, the exercise of control over students may
lead to conflict.
The wish to avoid conflict in schools,
whether for practical reasons in a class of thirty-five.
or for psychological reasons of a more personal nature,
may take the form of a softening of the admonition, "Pay
attention" to "Get on task".
"On task" is a euphemism
for "pay attention", altered to reflect the tact that
children are expected to work at their own pace rather
than listen in a group to the teacher.
Thus, "Dick and
Mike, let's get back on task", means "Sit down", or
"Quiet down", or "Do what you're supposed to be doing".
I have associated doublespeak in education with
euphemism and special pleading, suggesting that teacher
control is an overriding factor in its employment.
But
that is only part of the story, and too great a
simplification.
Teachers are part of a bureaucracy, and
one important behavioral element of a huroaucray is
"objectivity" or "expertise" in performance.
Teachers
and school administrators often justify theic actions
by a remarkable organization that stresses hierarchy,
the division of labor, specialized knowledge, and
intensive professional preparation.
Part of being a
professional is having a specialized language, and it is
this last element that assures the professional aspect
of teaching and helps guarantee the status of teachers.
Thus when teachers talk of "exit expectations' or
147
138
"terminal expectation", these label what a student is
supposed to know at the end of a lesson, program or grade.
Similarly, "healthy interface" refers to a good working
relationship between parent and teacher or teacher and
student.
This brings us to the use of the term "unprofessional".
Although it is not necessarily the case, it is common for
administrators and teachers to label a disliked state of
affairs "unprofessional". Commonly this term casts a
less judgmental bias over the state of affairs and
suggestsa more objective, balanced view than might
actually be the case.
Similarly for most teachers some "free time" is
provided during the school day.
This usually consists of
a period during which the teacher is not assigned a class.
The fact is some teachers commonly use the non-scheduled
period for planning or for conferences with parents;
others use it to unwind and relax.
However, the notion
of "free time" may suggest that teachers have nothing to
do. It is common thus to call"free time" a "planning" or
"conference" period.
In this way teachers do have some
free time but employ it in a "professional" manner.
Moreover, "teacher burnout" is a metaphorical way
of talking about teachers who have lost their enthusiasm,
drive and self-confidence resulting, commonly, in a
rather ineffective, non-motivated teaching style.
It is
hard to feel sympathy for a teacher who has lost the zest
to teach and communicate with students, but sympathy can
be invoked for a teacher who is "burned out".
A "teacher
burnout" is perhaps deserving of our sympathy and
understanding; but an ineffective teacher is worthy of a
low evaluation and, possibly, dismissal.
In a consideration of curriculum, certain studies
are labelled "foundational".
139
If something is called
148
"foundational" rather than "required", then a standard
that requires no justification is established in favor of
these studies.
That which is foundational is justified;
required studies, however, may be in need of justification.
A discrepancy is set up between what students intend to
do (study an indispensable course) and what they actually
do (study the required course).
Any consideration of teaching leads to the fact that
teachers are expected to make judgments about students:
evaluation is a fact of life for both teacher and student.
There presently exists an elaborate system of doublespeak
to avoid unpleasant connotations associated with testing
and examinations.
Instead of talk about these, teachers
speak of "writing exercises", "a meeting of minds",
"progress reports", "quizzes","a sharing of information"
and "knowledge production".
Similarly, in making judgments about students,
teachers are aware of the problem of labeling. Today even
the most uninformed parent knows that the labeling of
young children's reading groups with names like "Robins",
"Bluebirds", and "Cardinals" rather than "superior",
"average", and "below average" is an attempt to hide or
;sack the real situation.
Reading ability is not glossed
over, but status associated with reading level is given
an egalitarian character by the use of euphemistic labels.
Moreover, those responsible for the teaching of
children with handicaps--itself a somewhat biased term- -
employ a wide range of euphemisms to avoid terms with
unpleasant connotations.
Traditionally society has marked
children who are mentally retarded, hard of hearing, deaf,
speech impaired, visually impaired, and emotionally
disturbed with quite harmful labels.
aware of these.
We are all well
It is evident that the phrase "special
education" delimits a wide range of handicapped students;
"exceptional children" is used to describe students with
140
149
the forementioneu handicaps as well as those who are
highly gifted; "mainstreaming" is a metaphorical use
suggesting that those children who have mild handicaps are
entitled to an education in the "least restrictive
environment". Translated, this means that some handicapped
students are to be integrated into the regular classroom
for portions of their educational program.
Thus "special
classes", once a euphemism for slow students, is replaced
by "least restrictive environment".
Another euphemistic way of talking about student
learning problems is the phrase "learning disabled".
This doublespeak allows teachers and administrators to
address a large number of learning problems, some properly
and others improperly identified, in a mechanistic way
analogous to the automobile mechanic who speaks of a
"transmission problem" that is disabling.
Or, put
differently, the way a medical doctor speaks of a disease,
say, cancer, that is disabling.
Teachers thus intend to
investigate a:c1 correct a mechanistic problem but what
they are actually doing is making a great many assumptions,
some of which are, if not contradictory or opposed to a
mechanistic approach, at least not accounter for in purely
or wholely mechanistic terms.
Similarly, "behavior modification" in teaching
suggests a mechanistic device for changing student
behavior, thus avoiding the negative connotation suggested
by "conditioning". Teachers can engage in "behavior
modification" uithout feeling that they are employing
methods found to be successful in shaping animal behavior.
Another way of describing a situation in which
teachers are portrayed as operating objectively and
professionally is the use of "miscue analysis" in the
teaching of reading. This method alerts the teacher to
simple mechanistic problems such as substitution, omission,
141
150
etc., somewhat easily diagnosed.
A "reading error", on
the other hand, may prove to be more formidable, not so
easily corrected, and may have a negative connotation.
Teachers intend to correct students' "miscues" but what
teachers actually are doing is correcting students'
"errors".
Finally, "maladaptive behavioral mechanism" suggests
a way of abelling that avoids unpleasant connotations
associated with student activitJes such as "drug abuse",
"cheating", "stealing", and the like.
Thus teachers and
administrators speak of the "maladaptive behavior" of
students all the while skirting the issue of their
"anti-social behavior" and its consequences for society.
In Conclusion
One further point is in order. Teaching, like other
forms of communication, presupposes trust. While it is
not necessary that teachers be liked or loved by students,
those who could not be trusted to mean what they say
would most likely find it impossible to continue teaching.
The constant use of doublespeak, as a means of controlling
the teacher-learner paradigm, would threaten the
possibility not only of the student achieving understanding or autonomy but of teaching much of anything. In
other words, student manipulation by the use of
doublespeak may lead either to submission or rebellion,
but in either case it will hinder the goal of student
understanding and autonomy.
Given such dangers to pedagogical values, not to
mention the wrongs done to students by manipulation
itself, doublespeak in education is to be condemned on
the whole and to be avoided in responsible teaching.
Since most of us would long ago have given at least verbal
151
142
'
assent to this simple conclusion, it seems necessary to
conclude by saying that a sensitivity to doublespeak in
education is a first step in "moralizing" the nature of
the teacher-learner paradigm, and it is crucial in making
it possible for teachers to abandon, mitigate, or
counteract doublespeak in the large society, whether it
is intentional or unintentional. Yet Critical as this
process is for pedagogical morality, it seems doctrinaire
to judge that it could be taken into account successfully.
Indeed, given the sad state of teacher preparation, of
teaching no longer attracting the "best and the brightest",
given the general sullibility of students and the
fallibility of "experienced" teachers (not to mention the
great stresses placed on teachers to control apathetic,
hostile, or even dangerous students), a number of lessons
in the employment of doublespeak in education may only
serve to render the serious student more circumspect
about the morality of teachers, but may exhibit a
declining marginal utility for students basically hostile
to the schooling enterprise.
There is, then, work for the teacher in this area.
But, no matter how he or she may clear the air or devise
ways of examining doublespeak, the generic problem is one
which, at the end of the day, the teacher has to tackle.
One must confront the problem that given that it is
desirable to deal with students who consent to the
teacher-controlled teaching-learning paradigm, the brute
facts of the situation are that we are much too ignorant
of doublespeak in education and the many way of teaching
merely encourage the learning and following of doublespeak.
143
152
FOOTNOTES
1. Language and Public Policy, ed. Hugh Rank.
(Urbana,
Ill.:
National Council of Teachers of English,
1974).
2. Teaching,about Doublespeak, ed. Daniel Dieterich.
Urbana, Ill.: National Council of Teachers of
English, 1976).
3. Vance Kasten, "Manipulation and Teaching". Journal of
Philosophy of Education, Vol. 14, No. 1, 1980.
4. A "difference in kind" in ordinary language is vague,
but what it suggests here is the ruling out of
changes that occur in one's experience when one
is doing what one is actually aware of doing. In
short, a "difference in kind" suggests that the
victim of manipulation is misled away from the
actual achievement (Y).
I
5. I wish to emphasize that not all manipulation is of
the negative sort in terms of undesired or nonvalued results.
Commonly people are manipulated
in order to achieve highly desired results.
For
example, students may be manipulated to learn to
read better.
In this instance, both the students
and the teacher may be said to benefit:
the
students by acquiring better reading skills and
the teacher in terms of being well thought of by
administrators and other teachers.
Perhaps this
suggests the notion of benign manipulation, and
it stands behind many of our relationships.
6. See, for example, S. Morris Engel's With Good Reason.
(New York:
St. Martin's press, 1976).
7. The fallacies of relevance include such language
methods as appealing to our bigotry, gullibility,
sympathy, modesty, vanity, sense of ignorance,
and of fear.
These appeals do not necessarily
entail language manipulation, but they are
'commonly employed to manipulate others.
8. The euphemism or the art of renaming is a fundamental
use of language.
It is, perhaps, a human
weakness to rename things and states of affairs
in order to enhance or protect a case in which
one's own interest is involved.
But we ought not
be complacent about the use of euphemism to
manipulate others.
153
144
9. We should be alert to the method of special pleading
since it establishes an exception to well-grounded
general rules. For instance, recently the mayor
of Columbus, Ohio was in an early morning car
accident, which he admitted was his fault.
Although he had been drinking, he claimed there
was no impropriety in this instance because at the
time he was merely "inspecting the city". Here
the question surely arises whether the mayor was
inconsistent in not applying the general rule to
his own case: whether his making an exception of
his city's vehicular laws is special pleading and
thereby fallacious.
By gaining a special
exemption from the law, he was attempting to
manipulate others.
145
154
Irish Educational Studies, Vol. 4, No. 1, 1984.
SOME CURRICULAR ASPECTS OF SOCIAL AND CIVIC
EDUCATION IN IRELAND, 1966-1984
Mairtfn Fahy
Few societies exist which do not in some manner
attempt to adapt the formal process of education to the
socio-civic preparation of young people.
Official policy
statements and educational practices emphasise this
dimension of schooling. However, great diversity of
opinion exists as to the most appropriate methods of
bringing the ideal to fruition.
The area ranges across a
wide continuum of philosophical viewpoints and instructional strategies and is linked to the value systems of
communities, norms of political behaviour and the extent
of societal change.
This paper sets out to delineate some of the most
salient curricular emphases associated with the social
and civic formation of Irish pupils.
The first section
will focus on the period between 1922 and 1966. Section
two will concentrate on the formal introduction of civics
to second level schools in 1966.
Section three will
outline and examine a successful and promising local
initiative, the Social and Health Education Programme
of Ogra Choreal.
It may seem surprising that the State did not
institute from its inception special programmes in
education for citizenship aimed at developing and
strengthening its role and identity in the minds of its
citizens.
The social dimensions and objectives of the
educational process, however, were pursued through the
extrinsic contributions of school subjects such as Irish
155
146
history, An Ghaeilge, religious education and geography.
An important aspect of the curricular policy of the
Irish goverltment between 1922 and 19351 was the emphasis
placed on the role of the school as a major agency
through which the transmission of a gaelic cultural
heritage could be effected. This policy of cultural and
linguistic socialisation found firm expression in the
new programmes for primary and secondary schoos and was
fashioned, to a large extent by opinions and proposals
outlined prior to 1922. It is not surprising, then,
that the reorientation of the primary school curriculum
"in accordance with Irish ideals and conditions",
represented the major curriculum thrust in the post 1922
phase of educational development.2
The nexus between history teaching and the development of citizenship in pupils has been an enduring
curricular theme since 1922. The 1922 conference report,
for example, made explicit reference to the development
of civic attitudes during the course of history classes
and it recommended that specific lessons on citizenship
should feature in the sixth and higher grades of primary
3
school.
The reports of the Council of Education on the
primary and secondary school curricula, in 1954 and 1960,
respectively maintained that history teaching would
facilitate the development of effective citizenship
qualities in pupils.
These reports maintained that
while the training of pupils to assume their place in
human society was essentially religious and moral, next
to religion, history exerted the most powerful influence
in the creation and fostering of civic virtues. The
Council rejected representations made to it, that the
formal teaching of civics should feature in the school
curricula. Rather, it recommended that civics
"be
taught incidentally in the course of religious instruction,
language teaching, history, nature study and other
141
156
subjects which lend themselves to the introduction of
questions of citizenship".
4
The social role of the educational system also
received specific attention in the report of a
parliamentary committee of the Irish Labour Party and
Trade Union Congress in 1925 and in Memorandum V.40 of
the Department of Education, Technical Instruction Branch
in 1942.
The former document recommended that a formal
course in citizenship education should be provided for
all pupils and it contained the assertion that democracy
will have failed if it did not develop the active
participation by all citizens in the life of the state.
5
Memorandum V.40, in addressing itself to 'social
education' per se noted the close association of this
aspect of continuation education with religious instruction and it contended that the adoption of a new
Constitution had produced a situation within which young
people had a creative role to play in forming a new
social order instead of being moulded and fitted for the
future by the very nature of life around them.
6
This
departmental document, in keeping with the curricular
emphases evident in earlier proposals, noted that the
Irish language possessed excellent potential as an
instrument of social education.
7
Significantly,
Memorandum V.40 mad' no reference to history teaching
and a recurring theme in the Congress reports of the
Irish Vocational Education Association in later years
was the discussion of resolutions urging the inclusion of
history in the course of study provided by every
vocational school
Thus far then, the attainment of the social goals of
the official school programmes was deemed to be the
responsibility of all subjects and particular attention
was devoted to the contribution of religious education,
Irish history and An Ghaeilge.
157
148
In general, the concept
of development embodied in these proposals was of a
conservative nature and centred on the transmission of an
established cultural heritage and social order to young
people.
This emphasis was in harmony with the prevailing
modes of thought and might be explained partially by
reference to what Akenson describes as the "cultural
implosion" in Ireland during the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s.9
It is argued that in this period, cultural, religious,
political and economic factors combined to make Ireland
shrink increasingly from interchange with the outside
world and that in terms of a social philosophy this era
was characterised by a process of retrenchment. 10
In
1958, Rev. Dr. Sean 0 Cathgin, S.J., referred to the
absence of debate and criticism of the educational
system in the 1950s and he pointed out that:
What is basically wrong with education in
this country is that enough people, teachers
and parents alike, will not sit down and ask
themselves some simple questions about our
schools, questions beginning with why? and
what? and how? and try to work out the
answers.
11
The formal introduction of a civics programme in
other systems of education has often been precipitated
not by the development of educational philosophy but by
political and social needs within communities. In the
United States, for example, the flood of immigrants
created the need for courses which would impart a basic
appreciation of the American political system, its public
aspirations and the role of the citizen. 12 In Austria,
which had ceased to exist between 1938 and 1945, civics
was introduced after the war with the explicit intention
of convincing pupils of the viability of their separate
state.
In the mid 1930s in Britain, the rise of extreme
rightwing politics resulted in the development of a
movement aimed at imbueing young people with liberal
democratic principles.13 In retrospect, the formal
149
158
introduction of civics in Ireland emerged not from any
pressing national crisis out as a response to a European
political need. In the late 1950s and early 1960s both
the E.E.C. and the Council of Europe were seeking to
establish economic, social, educational and political
structures, directed at so uniting the diverse nations of
Europe that the threats of another war would never become
a reality. The Council of Europe between 1963 and 1969
commissioned an extensive set of studies on the sociocivic role of the educational system and it assisted many
national organisations in the promotion of a European
civic consciousness among young people.
In 1964, the Committee of Ministers of the Council
of Europe, adopted a very significant resolution on
Civics and European Education, which emphasised the need
for the inclusion on all school curricula of an
area of
study to develop an awareness of European problems and
facts.
14
It seems as if the introduction of civics in
1966 represented the major vehicle for putting this
resolution into effect in the Irish context.
This
European connection is further strengthened by the fact
that the Irish Branch of the European Associaton of
Teachers, in conjunction with the Department of Education,
prepared Irish teachers for the introduction of the new
subject.
The protagonistic role of modern Irish governments,
as was evidenced by the publication of economic plans of
the late 1950s greatly assisted the development of an
increased awareness of the socio-civic role of the
educational process. Additionally, the significant and
extensive structural reorganisation of the post-primary
sector in the 1960s focussed attention on the curricular
needs of an expanding school population and the demands
which a changing political, social and economic milieu
made on the schools.
159
While the need to develop formal
150
and explicit programmes of social and civic education may
not have featured in policy statements and proposals, the
climate of change and movement facilitated the
introduction of civics.
In the Rules and Programme for Secondary School-
1967-1968, it is clearly stated that the introduction of
civics was intended not to replace any other subject in
the school's programme but rather it was to "serve as the
complement of all".15 Although civics was to be
obligatory for one class period per week, significantly,
it was not to be an examination subject.
It was accorded
this status with the positive aim of encouraging
experimental teaching methods, project work, and study
outside the confines of the classroom.
This publication,
"phrased in the high moral tones of the nineteenth century" 16
recommended two special and primary objectives for civics.
These objectives, which in the opinion of one political
scientist, were suggestive of a conservative attachment to
the status quo,
17
contained inter alia, the assertions
that:
the special object of a course in civics
will be ... to inculcate the social and
civic virtues generally; to strive to
awaken a social consciousness which will
lead to the development of a sense of
responsibility, ...to help preserve law
and order and teach the young citizen to
be ready to defend the national territory
should the need arise... 18
A significant contrast is evident between the
approaches and emphases in the Rules and Programme for
Secondary Schools and those outlined in another departmental document Notes on the Teaching of Civics, where
the student is regarded nct as the "object of indoctrination but as an explorer of his social environment".19
This latter publication identified an investigative,
questioning role for civics and challenged the efficacy
151
160
of providing pupils with information if significant
attempts were not made to develop the skills and
motivation necessary for active and creative community
participation. The innovative tone of this guide is
evident also in proposals regarding the development of
a civic spirit within schools and the central
synthesising role which civics should play in the
educational process. A significant departure from the
more traditional role structure of contemporary schools
was encouraged by a progressive extension of moral and
material responsibility to pupils and the nee,3
for schoolbased representative processes, such as elected student
councils.
20
Additionally, it was recommended that pupils
should be provided with the widest possible choice of
social activities, which should be largely self-governing.
The method of content organisation outlined in the
guide is that of an expanding environments approach, with
emphasis in successive years on personal, local, regional,
national and international topics. The use of a textbook
was recommended but not as an essential feature of
classroom study. Indeed, the guide warned against over
reliance on textbooks in attempting to provide ready-made
solutions to civics problems encountered by pupils.
Interestingly, also, this document urged the treatment of
controversial issues in civics classes, and saw this
aspect of the programme is representing a means by which
the "dry-bones of the syllabus could be enlivened". 21
In assessing the development of this new area of
study in post-primary schools since 1966 it is obvious
that the reality failed to match the enthusiasm and
promise which attended its inception.
At a seminar on
the teaching of civics organised by the Institute of
Public Administration in 1971 and attended by almost one
hundred civics teachers, a consensus emerged that the
1 (31
152
subject had failed to develop and the "overall picture
was one of fading enthusiasm". 22
A variety of factors and circumstances seem to have
combined to thwart the growth of this subject.
While the
community reaction initially had been very favourable,
little attention was focussed on how civic education
should be defined and how it might be related to the needs
of contemporary society. The sy.0abus for 1983-84 is
strikingly similar to that outlined in 1966-67 and
indicates the extent to which the course content
fossilised.
aver emphasis on factual information and on
teacher "chalk and talk" resulted in the subject failing
to develop flexible and experiential teaching methods.
Notwithstanding the publication of an excellent monthly
magazine Young Citizen by the Institute of Public
Administration, civics as a subject suffered from a major
deficiency in educational technology.
The failure to
develop a comprehensive in-service programme of training
for teachers and the lack of an adequate support system
were responsible also for the demise of this subject.
Additionally, the highly competitive and examinationoriented atmosphere in some schools resulted in civics
being relegated to a peripheral position and indeed the
practice in some cases was for other subject areas to
poach the weekly civics period for extra tuition and
revision. The Irish report of the IEA Cross National
Survey of Civics Education produced clear evidence that
in the teaching of civics "the goals are at present
extremely unclear ... the methoas which are being used to
try to attain them are not the most appropriate and the
outcomes in the area are at present most disturbing". 23
As with the American system of education at the
beginning of this present century, an increasing array of
societal problems and traumatic changes are forcing Irish
153
162
schools to seek and provide alternate curricula. Vle
Department of Education, for example, considered that
1974 was an opportune time to introduce proposals for a
new course in Irish Studies, in view of the fact that
the striking developments (demographic,
social, organisational) that have taken
place in Irish second-level education in
recent years, and the rapidly changing
cultural and economic milieu in which
Irish education has to operate have led
to a widespread demand for school
programmes more obviously related to the
new situation and especially for
programmes designed for continuous
adaptation to changing circumstances.
24
A plethora of school-based programmes of pastoral care,
the Dublin Humanities Project, The Transition Year
programme and other initiatives exemplify the curricular
responses to this "new situation". The Irish Association
for Curriculum Development has directed attention to the
urgent need for change and has stimulated fresh thinking
in many vital areas.
The Social and Health Education programme of Ogra
Chorea( may be viewed also as representing a major
curricular initiative in the process of adapting school
experience to the needs of contemporary youth and society.
As with scme of the other curriculum projects, thie
programme developed from concern about problems being
experienced by young people. These problems, such as
high levels of aggression, the dominance of alcohol in
social life and increased evidence of illegal drug-taking,
were deemed to be symptomatic of underlying lacunae in
social relationships, personal behaviour and an inability
to benefit from leisure and recreation. 25 In 1974, a
broad-based committee initiated two pilot projects with
view to developing a comprehensive programme of
experiential learning.
163
Over the past ten years the
154
a
programme has flourished and the recent Annual General
Meeting revealed that in excess of 5,000 15-17 year olds
in 56 schools in Cork City and County are participating
this year. 26
The rationale guiding this programme is based on
the premise that individuals are capable of taking
personal responsibility for the social, emotional,
physical, intellectual and spiritual dimensions of their
own health and that each person can develop the personal
resource characteristics necessary to master the
immediate environment. The programme espouses a very
positive concept of primary prevention and sets out to
equip pupils with the coping skills necessary to deal
with diverse aspects of contemporary life such as the
lack of a sense of community, the enormous growth of
bureaucratic institutions, rising unemployment, and
increasing evidence of alienation from national and
local political processes. This approach, which draws
its theoretical strength from the writings of Cappiello,
Swisher, Simon, Hopson and Skelly and others,27 is in
harmony with recent recommendations of the Council of
Europe in regard to developing educational programmes to
cope with drug abuse. The approach of the Social and
Health programme of equipping young people to take
control of their own lives, and increasing personal
competence is perhaps best summed up in the old but still
relevant truism "give a man a fish and you feed him for a
day - teach him how to fish and you feed him for a lifetime".
A
In this programme major emphasis is placed, both in
training and in the classroom, on a structured experiential
learning methodology. A sine qua non of the entire
approach is an acceptance that this method is the most
appropriate method to use when attention is being focussed
155
164
on the twin goals of personal growth and social development.
The programme concentrates initially on personal
understandings and skills and extends gradually to
relations with other groups and influences on a local,
regional, national and international level.
28
The
Rogerian basis of the programme's methodology is evident
in four salient ways:
The teacher is involved personally in the
1.
learning experience and this encompasses his
cognitions and feelings.
2.
The process of learning is self-initiated.
3.
The learning is pervasive.
4.
The learning is evaluated by both learner and
teacher.
29
This experiential method uses group work as the primary
means of helping pupils develop self-awareness, selfcompetence and self-reliance.
Each unit comprises five
stages which are arranged in the form of a complete
learning cycle:
1. Experiencing, 2. Sharing, 3. Processing,
4. Generalising, S. Applying.
A wide variety of teaching
strategies are employed in each learning unit, such as
role-playing, group discussion, mime and student work
sheets.
In many respects, this approach to teaching represents
a major departure from the more traditional methods and
teacher-pupil relationships.
Consequently, an extensive
in-service training scheme, support facilities, and
personnel have grown in tandem with the numerical increases
in school, teacher andtupil participation.
Trainee
facilitators engage in 170 hours of training over two years
and the principal aims of this training are the exploration
of personal growth and the development of facilitative
skills, such as active listening, cooperative learning
156
techniques, leadership styles and group dynamics.
Over
the ten years the content of the programme has expanded
and a comprehensive set of materials are available in
11 areas of personal and social life.
In contrast to the
summative type evaluation procedures which characterise
much pupil learning in second-level schools, the
evaluation process in this programme is formative in
nature and has resulted in changes and modifications in
method and content.
The annual reports and evaluations of this programme
provide a valuable and fertile source of information both
regarding the factors responsible for its success And the
difficulties and problems encountered over the past ten
years.
An element of critical importance has been the
emphasis placed on methodology and involving teachers in
the development of new approaches and materials.
Teachers
using the programme employ a wide range of flexible
strategies in facilitating pupil learning.
The representative composition of the executive committee has ensured
that the programme remains responsive to the needs of
schools, teachers and pupils. The themes and items
covered in the programmes have proved to be of value and
interest to the participants, and successive surveys have
indicated a high level of pupil satisfaction with the
method and content. The human resource characteristics
such as self-confidence and initiative, developed by the
programme are important to teachers and pupils alike, a
fact confirmed by the major E.S.R.I. surveys of Teachers'
and Pupils' Perceptions of the Objectives of Education
and of Examinations. 30 However, while in theory most
teachers welcome the development of independence and
initiative in young people, many often feel threatened by
it and may feel frustrated and inadequate.
This
progamme's success is due in no small part to the fact
that it provides an opportunity to channel adolescent
157
1 6 6
uncertainty and need for independence into positive growth
and development.
The support service which has grown in Ogra Chorcar
and within different schools means that a teacher
participating in the programme does not feel isolated. The
support of school principals has also been crucial
especially in areas such as :lexible timetabling.
Additionally, the programme caters to a wide and diverse
group of students, encompassing different ability levels,
types of schools and social backgrounds.
The net result
of this aspect of its development is that it is not seen
as a pragmatic device for containing "less-able and low
status pupils".
This paper has ranged over a wide continuum of
approaches and a broad spectrum of time. The three-phased
pattern of curricular development delineated seems to
mirror that associated with other systems of education.
Initial emphasis was placed on school subjects such as
history and religious education, followed by the formal
introduction of an explicit programme of citizenship which
in turn has been rendered obsolete by the broader concept
of social education. Examining the socio-civic emphasis
of the educational process is akin to examining the values,
assumptions and principles of the society which sustains
the process.
In a conservative society the "good citizen"
is often seen as an establishment person par excellence
who is supportive of the status quo and who suspects change
and development. The social goals of the educational system
in such a society tend to aim at conveying facts about the
operation of governmental and legislative processes and
ensuring that individuals are aware of their duties and
responsibilities as citizens.
In a society where change
and development characterise societal processes and
expectations the response of the educational system may be
167
158
different.
The development of powerful new technologies,
the multiplication of state agencies and institutions,
more social mobility and different relationship styles,
more discretionary time and the promotion of new value
systems and the re-statement of old ones are characteristics
and conditions of contemporary society. These are often
perceived as eroding well established certitudes and modes
of behaviour.
The tension between over-reliance on
tradition and the need for change reflects itself in the
educational system, perhaps later rather than sooner.
The response of Irish education to a pressing need for
programmes and approaches designed to assist young people
prepare for living in society in the twenty-first century
will involve an examination of the total social context
and orientation of the school. This endeavour will focus
critical attention on school administration and structures,
teacher training practices, in-service training
opportunities for teachers, evaluation processes, the
concept of recurrent education and the nature of relationships between school and society; between parents and the
school, and between teachers and pupils.
The large number
of objectives, important to the development of the
community cannot be pursued operationally within the
constraints of any single subject.
The quest for
relevance must be balanced with due regard to conserving
the most valuable aspects of our past.
New initiatives
must be deve_oped so that our schools in the future will
not as a result of educational inertia become so isolated
and meaningless that to borrow Waller's phrase they serve
only as museums of virtue. 31
159
1 68
NOTES AND REFERENCES
1. John Coolahan, "A Study of Curricular Policy for the
Primary and Secondary Schools of Ireland, 19301938, with special reference to the Irish Language
and Irish History".
(Unpublished Ph.D. Thesis,
Trinity College, Dublin, 1973).
2. Ibid., p.
175.
3. National Programme Conference, National Programme of
Primary Instruction.
(Dublin: Educational
Company, 1922), p. 3.
4. Council of Education, Report on (I) The Function of the
Primary School (II)
The Curriculum to be pursued
in the Primary School from infant age up to 12
years of age.
(Dublin:
The Stationery Office,
1954), p. 124.
5. Committee of the Irish Labour Party and Trade Union
Congress, Labour Policy_on Education.
(Dublin:
1925), p. 19.
6. Department of Education, Technical Instruction Branch,
Organisation of Whole-Time Continuation Courses
in Borough, Urban and County Areas. Memorandum
V. 40.
(Dublin: Department of Education, 1942),
p. 22.
7. Ibid., p.
8.
23.
See for example, Irish Vocational Education
Association. Mosney (1953) Congress Report, pp.
70-71.
9. Donald Akenson, A Mirror to Kathleen's Face.
Queen's University Press, 1975), p. 39.
10. David Thornley, "Ireland: The End of an Era".
LIII.
(Spring, 1964), pp. 1-17, p. 7.
(London:
Studies,
11. Rev. Segn 6 CathSln, Secondary Education in Ireland.
(Dublin: The Talbot Press, 1958), p. 111.
12. Martin R. Fahy, "Social and Civic Education in the
United States of America and Ireland".
(Unpublished M.Ed. Thesis, University College,
Cork, 1977), pp. 9-30.
1G9
160
13. Denis Gleason and Geoff Whitty, Developments in Social
Studies Teaching.
(London:
Open Books, 1976),
p. 3.
14. Institute of Public Administration, Draft Report of a
Working Party on the Teaching of Civics.
(Unpublished), n.d), p. 2.
15. Department of Education, Post-Primary Education Branch,
Rules and Programme for Secondary Schools, 19671968.
(Dublin: Stationery Office, 1968), p. 129.
16. Institute of Public Administration, op. eft., p.1.
17. Brian Farrell, "Civics and Citizenship" in Education
in Ireland: Now and the Future.
(Cork:
Mercier
Press, 1970), pp. 51-63, p. 52.
18. Department of Education, Rulen and Programme for
Secondary Schools, p. 129.
19. Institute of Public Administration, Draft Report, p.
2.
20. Department of Education, Notes on the Teaching of
Civics.
(Dublin: Department of Education, 1966),
p. 2.
21. Ibid., p. 13.
22. Institute of Public Adminstration, Draft Report, p. 4.
23. John Raven and Frank Litton, "Irish Pupils' Civic
Attitudes", Oideas, vol. 16, (Earrach, 1976),
pp. 16-30, ptn7-
24. Department of Education, proposals as a basis for a
Course in Irish Studies.
(Dublin:
Department
of Education, 1974), p. 3.
25. Ogra ChorcaI, The Social and He lth Education
Programme: A Handbook for Teachers and Other
Educators.
(Cork: Ogra Choreal, 1983), p.IV.
26. Ogra ChorcaJ, Social and Health Education Programme
Report 1983 -1984.
(Unpublished), (n.d.), p. 6.
27. Ogra Chorea/, A Handbook, p. VII.
28. Ibid.
29. Ibid., p. 17.
161
170
30. John Raven, et al., Teachers' and Pupils' Perceptions
of Educational Ovjectives and Examination. (Dublin:
Irish Association for Curriculum Development, 1975).
31. W. Waller, The Sociology of Teaching.
Wiley, 1967), p. 21.
171
162
(New York:
Irish Educational Studies, Vol. 4, No. 1, 1984.
WHAT USE IS DAY RELEASE?
J. R. McCartney
In September 1982, with the assistance of funds from
the Social Science Council, as it then was, the Northern
Ireland Council for Educational Research embarked on a
study of the value of further education to young employees,
who were attending the further education colleges on a day
or block release basis or for vocational courses during
the evening. The study was concerned to find out what
employers and employees hoped to gain from further
education and to make some assessment of the extent to
which their expectations were being fulfilled.
The study
also sought to investigate what value day and evening
vocational courses had for the colleges.
Thus the question "what's the use of day release?"
compels an examination of the three most obvious
beneficiaries of day release courses, namely employers,
employees and the colleges providing the courses.
These
three interested parties determined the structure of the
study. The fieldwork consisted of:
(i) interview with ce.11ege principals and
lecturers;
(ii) a questionnaire answeredby 633 day release
students and 178 students studying
vocational courses during the evening;
(iii) interviews with employers in 98 public and
private enterprises.
Although there has been occasional reference to day
release in Northern Ireland in publications concerned
163
1`r2
education or employment the research team was not aware of
any major investigation of its earlier position.
On the
other hand it has been the subject of considerable
scrutiny in Britain, as Evans' review (1980) reveals and
it has received attention also in the Republic of Ireland,
for example, in Claire Hasting's 1977 study.
In the paper we focus on the following questions:
1. What do employers wish to obtain through
education and training and why, in particular.
do they use further education?
2. What type of education and training do employees
want?
Why do they want it?
3. What learning takes place in colleges and does
it meet the needs of students on day release?
Employers
In the interviews with employers two things are
immediately apparent from the evidence.
Firstly, day
release for employees to colleges of further education
cannot be viewed in isolation, but rather must be seen as
one element in the overall training of a workforce.
A
firm may use day release but it could also use in-house
training methods, the Industrial Training Boards or
external consultancy firms.
Secondly, it is clear we are
not dealing with a homogeneous group. The size, location
and composition of the work force and the type of industry
are all factors which shape the firm's perception of
training needs and hence its involvement with day or block
release. The small building firm in rural Ulster may well
require a different service from the satellite of a multinational company in the greater Belfast area, which may
have more people in its personnel and training section
173
:
164
el
alone than the small firm has on its entire payroll.
new high technology firms can l
The
efer in their demands
from those such as construction and shipbuilding, which
were in the vanguard of day release in its early days. In
our sample we had two firms of comparable size and
location but where the average age of the workforce was
22 and SO respectively.
Consequently, one firm stressed
the need for innovative training whilst the other stressed
the need for refresher training for its workers, who,
having been there so long, could easily be bypassed by
changes in industrial practices.
The colleges can thus
be faced with divergent and conflicting demands from the
consumer.
Industry itself is being radically altered by
changing customer demands and this in turn filters through
to the providers of training, including the colleges.
For
instance, many operators in the cat ..ring, sector have
switched their orientation from cordon bleu to 'fast food'
techniques inside a few years and this requires a new
response.
Likewise, many of the firms in the tradiLional
craft sector stated they do not require specialist joiners
who have served their apprenticeships.
dexterous kit assemblers.
Instead they want
The end, result of this may be
that the firm does not require an input from further
education at all as new materials and tools make certain
skills redundant.
Why did some employers use further education for part
of their training? The answers to this question showed
that the criteria employers used for the granting of day
release were:
1. The necessity of the course for the improved
efficiency of the firm.
2. The relevance of the course to the individual
employee's job.
3. The motivation shown by the employee.
165
14
rm.,
4. Time - whether the firm could afford the employee
to be off the premises.
A minority of employers also placed emphasis on the use
of further education for specialist courses to produce an
elite corps within the firm, who could then pass on their
knowledge to the rest of the workforce.
The main advantages to the employee were perceived
by the employers as:
1. improved performance on the job;
2. increased chances of promotion;
3. getting proper formalised training - the college
theory backing up the day-to-day practical work.
However, employers were quick to point out that qualifications gained as a result of day release were not a
guarantee of promotion and should not be seen as such by
the employee.
If we look at the results as a whole some very
salient points emerged.
Only five firms had ever
approached a college with a suggestion for a new course
or training method, and of those that did use the college
15 percent did not monitor the courses in any way, to
assess their suitability. Firms did not see a role for
further education beyond the providing of courses and
few employers played any part in the designing of the
syllabus. Although the whole issue of training is a
topical one, when asked to predict how provision may
develop in years to come, a majority could not pinpoint
any major changes. The firms seemed content that the
colleges have a definite role to play, provided they
kept pace with changes in technology and production
processes.
166
l'7'
Employees
It is notable that 64 percent of the students on
day release were there as a requirement of the job or on
the suggestion of their employer.
A further 23 percent
had asked their employer for day release and the request
had been granted. When asked why they were taking their
present course, the three most popular reasons given were:
1. to improve general qualifications (46 percent);
2. to increase knowledge of work (33 percent);
3. to improve chances of promotion (26 percent);
These are akin to the advantages perceived by employers,
but at variance with earlier research, for example,
Claire Hastings' findings where qualifications were not
perceived as being of such importance (1977, p. 41). The
wide difference in emphasis might be explained by the
change in economic conditions since 1977.
I
48 rercent of the students saw their college
'ourse as definitely being relevant to their work
at present and 26 percent viewed it as having little o:
no relevance now. However, whereas 45 percent expected
their course to be relevant to their future work, only
5 percent were definite that it would be of no relevance
to future work.
Thus it appeared that students took a
long term view of the value of their course both in their
motives for taking it and in their assessment of its
relevance.
their work.
They expected the course to be of value to
When students were given the opportunity to
make additional comments about personal benefits which
they expected their present course to bring, they again
concentrated on the gains which it could provide to them
in their job.
Sixteen percent replied that it would
give them a better understanding of the job and 19 percent
that it would improve their job or promotion prospects.
167
176
40 percent felt that the amount of practical work
in their course was about right and 51 percent felt that it
was insufficient.
However, 64 percent thought that the
amount of theory in their course was about right, and 28
percent that there was too much theory.
Thus, although
there is a large measure of satisfaction indicated by
these figures, there is also a strong feeling from the
students that a balance between practical and theoretical
work has not been achieved in their courses.
College
staff, however, were well satisfied with the balance
between theoretical and practical work in their courses,
although a minority were conscious of a need to introduce
more work-related content or more experimental work into
their course.
The colleges' training
College staff saw their principal contribution to be
that of providing the theory to bacx up the practical
work which students received in their job.
They had the
time to ensure that students were introduced to a broader
range of skills than would be provided in their job alone.
A few expressed the view that the reduced pressure of
time meant that in one important respect the work of
further education could not reproduce the conditions on
the job. However, there wa3 general satisfaction that
the further education course was well integrated or
complemented the training which students received on the
job. The main difficulty in this respect was keeping up
to date with new developments and maintaining contact
with industry.
College staff and employers in the study wore naked
about the advantages and disadvantages of a broadly-based
as against a narrowly-based coursn. Lecturers considered
177
168
the main advantages of a broad approach to be that of
permitting the student to discover what he liked doing
best and that it gave him greater insight into his job,
whereas a narrowly based course trained him in too
limited a range of skills. An advantage of the broadlybased course to the employer was that he had a more
flexible workforce. Furthermore, it enhanced the
student's career prospects, including his chances of
moving to another employer. The main disadvantage Which
further education staff saw in a broad training was that
it did not meet employers' immediate needs for specialists,
because it limited the depth of the training. It was
acknoweldged, although not widely, that broadly-based
training might reduce
students' motivation for the
course.
Employers were convinced that job specific training
in the college did motivate their employees, because
these employees had already decided what they wanted to do.
Many endorsed the further education staff's view that they
required specialist workers and wanted specific training
which contributed to that.
However, they were also alert
to the advantage of having a flexible workforce and many
employers looked for the general development of their
employees, to which they felt a broad education could
contribute. Some appreciated that broadly-based education
and training would improve employees' career prospects
even if it meant moving to other firms.
A few provided
sufficient specialist training on the job and did not
require further education to be very job specific.
These apparently incompatible demands, to train
specialists and yet to contribute towards a more flexible
workforce, were also evident in the Scottish study (Ryrie
et al, 1978, pp. 76, 77).
However, two qualifying
points need to be made.
Firstly, all courses tend to
169
178
become more specialist as the student progresses to more
advanced stages.
Therefore, the pattern of a broad base
followed by in
,asing specialism emerges quite naturally,
if the student remains in further education beyond the
first year.
Secondly, most students are receiving some
form of training outside further education, although it
is usually confined to working alongside a more
experienced colleague. So further education's contribution
to their experience is not being made in isolation.
Prov!.ded further education staff remain in touch with the
job tasks and other training received by their students,
they can continually relate their broader input to their
students' familiar frame of reference.
This clearly makes
severe demand:, upon turthar education staffs' time.
But
it also places a responsibility upon employers to make
known their requirements to further education.
Conclusions
The Industrial Training Act of 1963 provided the
impetus for the growth of day release and by the mid
1970s the practice was largely unchallenged across a whole
range of industries. The economic recession, however, has
forced employers to reassess all aspects of the firm's
competitivbness and efficiency and this includes the
training of the workforce.
Day release, from being an
article of faith, is now being questioned on the grounds
of relevance, content, time and money.
The further
education colleges now not only have to provide the
courses, they have to market them effectively if they are
to have a chance of retaining day release students as a
significant part of their provision.
Even where there is
a college which communicates well and offers relevant
courses and ar employer who is keen to send employees,
179
170
economic factors can dictate a situation where there may
not be the numbers to make the course viable.
Apprentices
were the cornerstone of day release.
Their numbers are
dwindling. Fewer school leavers are being recruited,
hence there are fewer apprentices and less demand for day
It is by no means certain that the 'new
release.
technology' industries will utilise further education to
a degree which will make up for the recent shortfall in
numbers.
Those employees who are able to make use of day
release do not support the old belief that people were to
the college for a day off work or to 'get out of the rain'.
Their motivation appears to be the desire to gain
qualifications and a chance to progress up the career
ladder. In a high unemployment situation academic
qualifications are seen as a hedge against possible
redundancy. Problems can arise, howeve.', if a dichotomy
exists between the aspirations for career and personal
development of the employees and the orientation of the
firms which without doubt in our interviews placed the
needs of the company as paramount and the desires of the
individual as secondary. It is not to say that 'n'er the
twain shall meet' but it is important to be aware that
the employer and employee can disagree over the reasons
for granting day release.
The further education colleges have been faced with
many new demands in the last five years and obviously
need time to organise staff development programmes and
arrange new courses, but time is precisely what they are
short of. Firms are interested in applied knowledge problem solving and getting the best out of their
work!orce in the 1980s.
The further education colleges
have been at the forefront in providing expertise for
many years and it seems as if they still can play a major
180
171
part if they keep abreast of industrial change.
What
they teach has to be seen to be relevant to what the
employee does during the other four days in the week.
In the present cut-throat economic atmosphere, firms are
discarding anything which is surplus to
ments.
their require-
Further education is a commodity which, unless
it is presented well and is seen to produce results can
also be jettisoned and a new brand of training brought in.
But this bleak outlook is being carefully avoided by many
colleges and employers.
For example, we have seen an
instance where an employee can be brought off the
production line and a video film used to explain any
difficulties.
This is a striking example of training as
a cost efficient exercise, but the further education
college too had a role to play in giving intensive
theoretical back up and in having its staff visit the
company to keep abreast of any recent changes in the
production process.
In this instance good practice had
the supplier of students and the provider of courses
working together to design and monitor the course.
Our research has shown that colleges, employers and
employees share a sober and realistic approach to the
requirements of training.
Nevertheless, day L.elease is
steeped in its own folklore and every member of staff has
his own favourite horror story. Let me end with such a one
from the novel Wilt by Tom Sharpe.
For ten long years he had done his damnedest
to extend the sensibilities of Day Release
Apprentices with notable lack of success.
Exposure to culture, the Head of Liberal
Studies called it, but from Wilt's view it
looked more like his own exposure to barbarism
... The man who said the pen was mightier
than the sword ought to have tried reading
The Mill on the Floss to Motor Mechanics Three
before he opened his big mouth. In Wilt's
view, the sword had much to recommend it.
181
172
REFERENCES
1. Evans. K. (1980). Day Release - a Desk Study.
kLondon: Further Education Curriculum Review and
Development Unit.
2. Hastings, C. (1977). Apprentice Attitudes in Dublin.
(Dublin: AnCO - The Industrial Training Authority).
3. Ryrie, A. C., and Weir, A. D. (1978). Getting a Trade.
(Edinburgh: Scottish Council for Research in
Education.
173
162
Irish Educational Studies, Vol. 4, No. 1, 2984.
COMPENSATION FOR DEFICIENCES IN THE SECOND -LEVEL SYSTEM
Tom Baum and Linda McLoughlin
The central tenet of this paper, that major deficiencies exist within the secondary education system in Ireland
in terms of its relevance to many aspects of contemporary
living, is not one held exclusively by the authors. Concern
is longstanding and its expression may be identified with
wide-ranging interests, including parents, employers,
teachers, academics and government bodies.
The basis for
such concern is varied, reflecting debate from academic,
vocational, economic and social perspectives about an
educational system which has, to a large extent, remained
consistent to certail traditional, primarily academic,
objectives for the past half century.
Indeed, as Mulcahy 1
argues:
Despite the changes of recent years, at no
time during the past fifteen years or
indeed at anytime since the setting up of
the Department of Education in 1924, has
any sustained assessment and critical
analysis been undertaken in regard to the
overall purposes and programmes of postprimary education in Ireland.
The past decade has seen an unprecedented level of
questioning and criticism of traditional schooling
throughout western society, including here in Ireland.
However, it is clePxly evident that the social and
educational env'xonment of the 1980s does not allow us the
luxury for continued erudition.
Perhaps the most pressing factor behind this argument
is the situation of contemporary youth in high technology
society, facing the prospects of no guaranteed employment,
183
174
irrespective of educational level. Uncertainty of values
and personal insecurity in all facets of life present
what Bishop Brendan Comiskey2 describes as "one of the
great challenges facing schools and educators today", that
"of leadibg people from a spirit of hopelessness and a
feeling of powerlessness about their lives".
While
Comiskey's discussion is primarily concerned with unemploy-
nPnt, it is arguable that his thesis is applicable in a
wider context, as a feature endemic in a significant
proportion of modern youth. This is supported by the
perceptive insights of the National Youth Policy Committee
in their discussion document Shaping the Future, 3 which
identifies a large number of the critical issues facing
youth today.
Clearly this scenario '.errands a dynamic, wide-ranging
and pragmatic approach to educational reform.
hoped that this will en
It is to be
ate from various recent
initiatives, in particular, at the national level, through
the Minister of Education's establishment of the new
Curriculum and Examination Boards At a more local level,
various curriculum development projects are addressing
issues of practical pertinence and will, it is to be hoped,
act as precursors to overall reform.
As McKernan 4 comments
in relation to the North Tipperary Pastoral Care Project:
While an espoused goal of post-primary
education in Ireland has been to prepare
pupils for adult life, few schools have
been able to develop programmes that seek
to attain this aim.
The purpose of this paper is to review features of
the post-primary system from the perspective of an agency
committed to meeting the varied needs of young people in
further education and training at post-secondary and
in-service levels.
The Council for Education, Recruitment
and Training for the Hotel, Catering and Tourism Industry,
175
184
(CERT) was established in 1963 to meet the manpower needs,
at all levels, of the hotel and catering industry.
The
role of CERT today, acting on behalf of the State, is to
provide and co-ordinate
-
the recruitment, education, training and
structured work experience placement of both
young school leavers and unemployed persons
-
The career development opportunities for all
personnel in the hotel, catering and tourism
industry through in-company and external
programmes of education and training
-
advisory, information and support services
for the industry.
The key purpose of CERT's activity is to ensure that high
levels of quality, effectiveness and efficiency characterise all facets of the hotel, catering and tourism industry.
These concerns and responsibilities have evolved and
developed over the twenty-one years of CERT's existence,
resulting in a range of activities and :ommitments which
meet the changing needs of the industry and provide for
the continued career develcpment of personnel at all
levels.
Both these major responsibilities have involved
CERT directly with the second-level system in a variety of
ways:
-
careers promotion/informatkon services and a
centralised national :ecruitment and selection
of young people for czuft courses
-
development of national -urricula to meet the
skills and personal needs of students and
provision of education and training, through
the vocational education system, for craft
students leading to National Certification
176
185
1
-
provision of pre-employment education and
traininv modules for second-level schools.
Consequently, this close association with the second-level
system allows for certain comments to be made, relating to
deficiencies perceived from the point of view of a
primarily training-orientated organisation.
These issues
have been clearly identified within CERT and responses
implemented to compensate for these problems.
Our comments
on the second-level system reflect the various points of
contact between schools and the responsibilities which fall
under the CERT umbrella.
Each area of concern is
suppoll'ed by evidence from work undertaken by CERT and, in
most cases, has triggered a number of compensating
responses in terms of curricula, pastoral care, assessment
and provision of information.
LIFESKILLS
For many young people the transition from school to
third-level education and work can present major
difficulties in terms of integration, managing the
responsibilities of adulthood and taking charge of their
own lives in an independent and confident manner. The
extent and range of the difficulties encountered, place
considerable pressure on the coping skills of the
individuals concerned. In many instances, the highly
academic nature of their education prior to entering
either college or the workplace and the very structured
context in which second-level education operates, militates
against young people who may find themselves in situations
for which they have been ill prepared.
With the
exceptions of a few locally based educational initiatives
such as the Shannon Alternative Senior-Cycle Project, the
needs of young people have, to date, largely been ignored
at national level by the education system.
177
188
Hopson and Scally
5
suggest that:
Changes are being demanded all round for
a switch in emphasis from an academic,
subject centred curriculum to a more
practiced, needs based curriculum geared
to the changing demands of the economy
and society. The focus increasingly is
on developing a range of personal
competencies that will equip young people
to fulfil a variety of life-roles in a
rapidly changing world.
The emphasis is
on developing the students' ability to
say "I can... " as well as "I know..."
Given CERT's nationwide recruitment strategy, the
experience of CERT trainees should reflect quite
accurately that of many young people in Ireland.
Our
student records reveal significant deficiencies in the
area of likeskills
evidenced by the type of trainee
problems which college teachers and CERT training advisers
face on a regular basis.
These lifeskills deficiences
can be broadly categorised as follows:
-
lack of self-reliance and self-discipline.
Many
trainees living away from home for the fitst time
are unable to cope with their new found 'freedom'
and can experience extreme loneliness
-
poor time management in terms of planning for
leisure and study
-
little understanding of their own sexuality. The
rate of unwanted pregnancy is high
-
limited career aspirations -nd lack of career
planning skills.
Many trainees think purely in
terms of 'getting a job'
-
inexperience in managing personal finances
-
inability to cope with problems generally, and
in recognising sources of help and advice.
187
178
These problems are further compounded by poor communication
skills among trainees generally.
To support the trainee through this period of
transition and to prepare him/her for future life
transitions, CERT provide a welfare service, through a
network of training advisers, who visit students regularly
during their training in college and in industry.
These training advisers provide individual and group
counselling services, not just simply in cases where
remedial action is required but as a developmental strategy
to help students reach their full potential and to promote
an overall mature and positive approach to life.
CERT's
welfare advisory services also take responsiblity for the
promotion of understanding for the needs of the CERT
trainee with college authorities and teachers as well as
among employers and supervisors in industry so as to
develop an environment conducive to training and education
in the broadest sense.
Another response by CERT to the vital personal development needs of young people has been the design of a
Lifeskills Programme which was introduced in 1980 as an
integral part of all craft training courses and which
comprises 25 percent of the total training period.
This
represents a training budget allocation of approximately
20.5 million per annum.
The aims of the programme are to enable trainees to:
-
cope adequately with general post-3chool experience
-
approach their future life in a mature, balanced way
-
commence a career in the Hotel, Catering and Tourism
Industry, with a confidence gained through exposure
to relevant 'fringe' subjects
-
communicate effectively both verbally and in written
form.
179
188
The concept of the programme can be aptly summarised by
the adage - "Education is not just about the earning of
a living but the spending of a life".
The nature of the programme lends itself to an
experiential learning approach complementary to its
content.
The recommended teaching methodology is
characterised by continuous use of discovery-learning
techniques and practical exercises oriented to the
development of individual resourcefulness and initiative.
The design of appropriate resource materials and
evaluation processes is a CERT priority for 1984.
Developments in these areas will contribute directly to the long
term effectiveness of the programme.
CERT has extended the lifeskills concept beyond the
context of formal full-time programmes to other aspects of
its training provision. A Lifeskills Programme tailored
to the needs of one and two day release craft trainees is
currently being designed and will be implemented from
September 1984.
Also this year, CERT has increased the scope of its
taining programme for unemployed people to include a
personal development dimension to complement the primary
craft skills element of their training.
The deficiencies
already outlined in this paper combined with the demoralising experience of unemployment, make the provision of
lifeskills training for this group of over 18s particularly
relevant, necessary and worthwhile.
WORK ORIENTATION AND AWARENESS
Since the mid-seventies, CERT has witnessed a dramatic
change in the profile of applIcants for hotel and catering
courses which has had major repercussions on the drop-out
189
180
rate from full-time catering courses and on the suitability
and commitment of applicants to careers in the Hotel and
Catering Industry.
CERT'S traditional recruiting ground was vocational
schools whose students had either Group or Intermediate
Certificate standard of education with a high level of
manipulative skill as a result of taking the practical
subjects offered in the vocational education system.
Since 1975 the percentage of applicants with Leaving
Certiciate level education has increased from 5 percent to
approximately 60 percent and the numbers applying from
secondary schools has increased proportionally. While
applicants now hold higher academic qualifications, their
level of practical skill has declined significantly. This
coupled with the reduction of hours allocated to practical
home economics generally at second-level has put young
people embarking on hotel and catering careers at a
distinct disadvantage.
Another feature of this trend is that the nature and
practical e.emands of work in the hotel and catering
industry do not always meet the expectations of the more
academically gifted and the drop-out rate during college
training and while on industrial experience is of concern
to CERT, whose financial investment in trainees is high.
CERT is conscious of the needs to respond to these changing
trends and has taken compensatory action at a number of
levels.
At pre-entry level, CERT's careers service provides
up-to-date information on the career opportunities open to
school leavers within the industry and the range of
training courses available.
The important role of Careers
Guidance Counsellors is recognised by CERT. Their
co-operation is actively sought to promote greater
industry awareness among potential applicants of work in
181
130
a large service industry r.nd to inform them of the types
of aptitudes and personal qualities required of hotel and
catering personnel.
Through career talks in schools, attendance at
careers exhibitions Ad seminars for Guidance Counsellors,
concerted efforts arc. made to help school leavers to make
a more informed and appropriate career choice.
50 percent
of the respondents to CERT's "Where are they now?"6 survey
advised those thinking of entering the industry to get
part-time or holiday work experience in a relevant area
before taking up full-time training or employment.
This
advice is certainly pertinent and CERT's selection
procedures place emphasis on relevant industrial experience.
Likewise at pre-entry level, the development of the
Preliminary Course in Hotel, Catering and Tourism Studies
- a vocationally orientated programme for young people in
second-level education - is a direct response to the
changing profile of applicant! to CERT.
The Preliminary
Course has been operating successfully since 1979 and is
running in ten vocational schools.
This one year course
is designed for students in the 16 to 18 age group who
have expressed an interest in employment in the Hotel and
Catering Industry.
-
Tha overall aims of the curse are to:
provide a broad educational base on which a more
informed choice of career can be made
-
familiarise the student with the hotel, catering
and tourism industry and the associated career/
jJla opportunities
-
help the student to reach a level of achievement
in industry-related topics which will facilitate
progress to courses of further education and into
employment in industry
181.
182
-
provide an opportunity for the student to continue
his/her general education, and in particular,
to
help him/her acquire appropriate literacy and
numeracy skills
-
assist the student to become more aware of his/her
social, political and physical environment,
The course structure and content was specifically
designed to tackle many of the identified deficiencies
within the second-level system as outlined in this paper.
Its general education content, which comprises 50 percent
of the course, has a broader base than the traditional
senior-cycle curriculum and emphasis has been placed on
skills for living, e.g. practical applicationofnumeracy
and communications skills, use of leisure time,
environmental awareness, pastoral care and study skills.
The hotel and catering studies content is more wide
ranging than the traditional approach to the teaching of
home economics in second-level schools. The course
promotes the development of basic professional cookery,
food service and hotel housekeeping skills with an
awareness of customer needs and the related hospitality
skills. 1 three week work familiarisation programme is
an integral part of the course.
Tho course is now established as an alternative
method of entry to full-time craft courses as students
who successfully complete the course are guaranteed a
training place sponsored by CERT.
The Preliminary Course
gc.cs a I,n ,ay
preparing students for training within
he third -level system.
The National Craft Curricula and Certification Board,
jointly established in 1982 by CERT and the Department of
Education, is charged with the responsibility to develop
college programmes which are relevant and responsive to
183
192
the needs of the Irish hotel and catering industry.
The
new curricula place
much emphasis on the development of
practical skills relevant to the work situation and all
programmes include structured industrial experience.
The
National Craft Curricula and Certification Board approach
to assessment for all craft courses includes:
-
continuous assessment of practical coursework
-
terminal written examinations
-
assessment of industrial experience
This appraoch emphasises the importance of the practical
dimension of craft training.
Other developments at second-level to overcome the
lack of practical skills and industry awareness include:
-
the design by CERT in 1982of a one year Hotel
and Catering pre-employment Programme which is
available on request to all second-level schools
-
the development of a range of catering modules
for pre-employment programmes in the Greater
Dublin area by Trinity Curriculum Development
Unit in association with CERT, and
-
the major initiative by Shannon Curriculum
Development Unit in designing an alternative
senior cycle programme and offering a
practically oriented Food Sciences module,
which will include hotel and catering studies.
CERT is providing technical advice and support
to the project.
NUMERACY, LITERACY AND COMMUNICATION SKILLS
Despite what is now an increasing tendency for
academically better qualified school leavers to apply to
i93
184
CERT, very clew: deficiencies can be Identified with
respect to the basic skills cf numeracy, literacy and
communication. These problems are in evidehce both at
the stage of student recruitment and among successful
applicants during their collage careers.
In terms of numeracy, CERT's standardised interview
procedure, gives credit for the correct answering of
three, simple arithmetical questions, chosen to reflect
the type of calculations required in hotel and catering
work - addition, subtraction and percentage calculations,
for example. There was consistent and disturbing
evidence that over half of the approximately 5,000
applicants interviewed in 1982 and 1983 failed to give
correct answers to all these questions. It would appear
that insufficient emphasis is placed in schools on the
practical arithmetic which constitutes the basic demand
within the hotel and catering industry.
In relation to literacy and written communications
similar problems are evident. A review of some 5,000
application forms received in 1984 suggests a number of
difficulties which are reflective both of a literacy
nature and also in relation to job/course application
skills.
-
Examples of such problems include:
poor spelling and grammar; a number of cases
where names, addresses and schools were
incorrectly spelt
-
instructions on form not fully read
-
inadequate information given on previous work
experience.
As this is a major factor in
selection, the potential penalties for failure
here are high
-
little thought given to application,
particularly with respect to "Reasons for
applying".
185
194
Similar problems are also in evidence at interview where
poor articulation and an evident lack of preparation in
terms of reading the provided literature and clarifying
exactly what they are applying for frequently lets
applicants down badly.
That the written language remains
a problem once students are at college is evident.
For
example, second year chef students, sitting their City
and Guilds of London Institute 706/2 examinations are
required to take two written papers, the first a multiple
choice test and the second based primarily on short
answer questions, demanding greater written literacy
skills.
The 1981, 1982 and 1983 results in Ireland show a
significant, although not very consistent, difference in
pass rate: 7
1981
1st Written
2nd Written
PASS
88%
63%
FAIL
8%
1%
REFERRED
4%
361
NUMBER
235
98
1982
1st Written
2nd Written
PASS
93%
851
FAIL
0.71
0.8%
6%
14%
REFERRED
NUMBER
257
195
255
186
1983
1st Written
2nd Written
PASS
87%
71%
FAIL
0.3%
REFERRED
NUMBER
13%
29%
365
360
While clearly the examples quoted in relation to numeracy,
literacy and communication problems cannot purport to be
conclusive, they are indicative of a fairly widespread
deficiency among both potential and actual recruits to
hotel and catering training at craft-level.
CERT's response to this situation is reflected on a
number of fronts. Prior to entry to full-time craft
education, CERT's Preliminary Course (see above) is
designed to provide potential entrants with a balance of
industry-orientated skills and general studies relevant
to application within the work environment.
The Life
Skills Programme (see above), while not intended to be
of a remedial nature, includes a number of components
which clearly do compensate for problems of this nature.
Literacy, numeracy and communication skills are integrated
into the issue or theme based curriculum of the programme,
with an emphasis on their application.
Finally, in recognition of diverse abilities of
trainees and the need for differing skills within the
industry, the new National Certificate
courses which are
currently replacing City and Guilds programmes, have
adopted a broadly eclectic approach to assessment.
In
doing so, the intention is to assess as wide a range of
skills, knowledge and attitudes as is appropriate, at a
theoretical and practical level so that excessive reliance
187
196
on any particular assessment skill, written, oral or
practical, does not penalise students.
FOREIGN LANGUAGES
Traditionally, the hotel, catering and tourism
industry has a high level of staff mobility, both
nationally and internationally.
This can be seen as
desirable in contributing to the development of personnel
through experience in a wide variety of work environments.
CERT, in seeing to maintain this tradition, place
considerable emphasis on both study and work experience
abroad, in Great Britain, Europe and North America.
Scholarship and work experience placement, in Europe is
significantly handicapped by the inability of a large
number of technically proficient young people to
communicate effectively in requisite foreign languages,
primarily French and German.
This is a major barrier to
effective placement as it is to meeting the needs of
foreign visitors in this country.
Infc_mation from
employing agencies abroad suggests that their priority is
on language rather than technical competence as the key
to an effective work and training experience.
Applicants
who may have formal academic qualifications in foreign
languages, are ficquently unable to use these skills
conversationally.
CERT encourages conversational foreign language
instruction as part of life skills programme in catering
colleges, and special, intensive programmes in French or
German
are organised for young people selected for
placement abroad.
Additionally, a multi-media language
"survival kit" is being prepared for students going abroad
to enable them to prepare effectively for their placement
prior to travelling.
197
188
......:7,
CONCLUSION
It should be stated that this analysis of second-
level education and the responses which have been
implemented in response to it are by no means comprehenThe perspectives are limited to the particular
sive.
areas of contact which CERT maintains with the secondlevel system and the consequent action which meets
organisational aims.
However, we believe that our comments, while in no
way entirely original, have a particular relevance in
the context of contemporary developments, especially as
they eminate from outside the mainstream secondary
system.
Likewise, our responses may provide useful
suggestions and indicators for action for others.
A
major priority within CERT is to maintain and develop
the relevance of all our educational and training
programmes through constant review and the introduction
of new features and approaches.
In doing so, our
dependence on the effectivem=s of the second-level
system r.e.ains considerable and reform within this
sector will be both eagerly awaited and critically
reviewed.
198
189
NOTES
1. D.G. Mulcahy, Curriculum and Policy in Irish PostEducation.
(Dublin:
Institute of Public
Administration, 1981), p. 1.
2. Bishop Brendan Comiskey, "Unemployment - Have Schools
a Response?".
Education Ireland, Feb/March 1/2,
1984, pp. 13-14.
3. National Youth Policy Committee,
Shaping the Future:
Towards a National Youth Policy.
(Dublin:
Stationery Office, 1983).
4. .71m McKernan,"Curriculuth Development in Action: The
North Tipperary Pastoral Care Projects.
Education Ireland, Feb/March 1/2, 1984, pp.35.>c.
5. Barrie Hopson and Mike Scally, Lifeskills Teaching
Programme, No. 2.
(Leeds: Lifeskills Associates,
1982), P. 7.
6. Council for Educational Recruitment and Training,
Where Are They Now? - A Survey of CERT Trainees,
1966-1979.
(Dublin:
CERT, 1980).
7. Incomplete figures only available for 1981.
199
190
Irish Educational Studies, Vol. 4, No. 1) 1984.
SUMMER RECREATION PROVISION IN AMERICA AND
NORTHERN IRELAND - A COMPARATIVE OVERVIEW
Paul G. J. Anthony
The development of summer recreation schemes in
America cannot be divorced from the general recreation
movement which originated in the larger urban areas in the
first half of the nineteenth century.
In the period 18201840 the first outdoor gymnasiums were opened on school
premises, but the event generally accepted as distinctly
marking the beginning of the recreation movement was the
opening of the Boston Sandcardens in 1885.
As the name
suggests these were primitive sandpits initially installed
in Mission yards and later transferred to school property.
They were staffed by volunteers in the early years but as
they spread to other urban areas these were replaced by
employees paid by school committees. The sand was
gradually replaced by more formal apparatus and the name
playgrounds was applied to them. Paralleling the growth
of the playground movement was the Settlement House
Movement, the Boys Club Movement and the Summer Vacation
Schools which began to offer structured play programmes
in the summer months.
By the start of the twentieth century, the playground
movement had begun to gather momentum due to the
increasing popular awareness of the need for organised
wholesome leisure activities and the subsequent efforts
of the new breed of recreation educationalists such as
Joseph Lee.
It was largely through Lee's endeavours that
state Legislature (Massachusetts) was introduced requiring
towns and cities of over 10,000 population to establish
playgrounds.
At the same time school boards began to make
191
school buildings available for summer recreation and the
economic benefits of opening facilities such as
gymnasiums, swimming pools and playing fields - which
were idle during the summer months - were now recognised.
In 1907 the summer school movement received nationwide
attention when a school extension committee was set up
in Rochester.
An appropriation of $5,000 was made of an
investigation into the use of school centres for summer
play and a supervisor was employed to direct a programme
under the auspices of the school board.
Although only
moderately successful the experiment stimulated the wider
use of school plant in other cities.
By the end of the first decade then, summer
recreation facilities were being provided by three main
sources:
philanthropic bodies, school boards and
municipal recreation departments.
While the schemes
provided by the voluntary groups and the school boards
were relatively small scale affairs, the playgrounds set
up by the municipal bodies increased steadily in number
due in no small measure to the formation of the Playground
Association of America (1906). After the 1914-18 War,
however, the growth of specialised summer provision for
children was halted in favour of the development of
community recreation programmes with a bias towards the
leisure education of adults.
The movement lay dormant
until the White House Conference (1938) which in its
Children's Cnarter proposed:1
... for every child from birth through
adolescence, promotion of health, including
health instruction and a health programme,
wholesome physical and mental recreation
with teachers and leaders adequately
trained.
The Conference stimulated recreation schemes at all levels
and summer playgrounds increased in number and type
through the efforts of recreationalists such as Weir and
291
192
Brewer and national agencies such as the National Youth
Organisation.
By the end of World War Two the summer recreation
day centre movement had become part of the wider all-year
round provision. The programmes which were originally
intended for a few months of the year now covered the
waole year.
Initial activities which included unstructured play and free drama were extended to embrace
a
multitude of activities including music, nature study,
organised coaching in team and individual sports, art and
crafts, interested volunteers who were the first
playscheme leaders have been replaced by trained
recreation leaders.
At present there are many different
types of playground:
(a) The playlot
These are for young children and often are
simply a fenced off part of the main playground.
(b) The neighbourhood playground
This is the major ccmmunity recreation unit
with indoor and outdoor recreation facilities.
(c) The community nlavfield
This is usually attached to a High School for
simple cost effectiveness.
Most playground schemes in the summer months are
organised by the municipal authorities but voluntary
bodies also offer more informal schemes in the parks.
The municipal schemes are staffed with qualified
recreation personnel and college students and graduates;
the voluntary schemes tend to use volunteers who are
interested rather than qualified.
With regard to programming, the municipal schemes
tend to have a city-wide programme with modifications at
193
.202
local level.
schemes.
Hence there is a fixed timetable for all
Often there is a theme For each week, e.g. "the
American Indian", "the Colonial Period", "Space
Exploration", etc.,
and the non-sporting activities
would centre around these.
While the summer playground is now part of the allyear-round community recreation programme, the summer camp
is a separate seasonal entity.
Its ori.O.ns date back to
the middle of the nineteenth century. As with the
playground movement, early efforts were informal and
camps were set up by philanthropic individuals and Church
and voluntary groups.
Initial activities were confined
to nature study, woodcraft and hiking, and emphasis was
on the development of character and wholesome attitudes
to the concept of outdoor living with a strong element of
competition built into all activities.
By the start of
the twentieth century private entrepreneurs and
municipal bodies had instituted camps and in 1935 the
American Camping Association was founded to ensure
uniformity of standards over the whole country.
The early camps had a simple philosophy of recreation
but in the 1930s a greater educational element was
incorporated into the programmes and activities were
expanded to meet the needs of the growing school
curriculum.
At the same time, untrained volunteers were
replaced by staff who wer' expected to have followed a
recreation course at college level.
Present day camping
has now a threefold philosophy - the recreation and
educational philosophy and now a philosophy of social
orientation and responsibility.
The most commonly accepted and probably the most
inclusive definition of modern organised camping is the
one used by the American Camping Association in its
standards programme:
2
194
2:?-,..,1 S.
Camping provides a creative educational
experience in co-operative group living
in the out-of-doors. It utilises the
resources of the natural surroundings to
contribute significantly to the mental,
physical, social and spiritual growth.
It is a sustained experience under the
supervision of trained leadership.
And as Carlson states: 3
It is in essence the blending of education
and recreation in the natural environs of
the woods, open fields rugged mountains or
water's edge. To the child it must spell
fun and adventure; to the parent it must
imply a safe and satisfying vacation; to
the camp director it means the opportunity
to make significant contributions to the
child's physical, intellectual and
emotional growth.
Basically there are four types of camp:
1. Private Camps.
These are profit-orientated and largely cater
for middle class children. They axe concentrated
in the rugged mountains and woodland areas of
the North-east, mid-west and the coast of
California. Length of stay is about eight weeks.
2. Organisational Camps.
Such ramps arc sponsored by organisations such
as the Boy Scouts, Salvation Army and Boys Clubs
of America, and many are geared towards the
needs of underprivileged children. As a result
of the restricted capital, facilities Are
limited and length of stay at camp is usually
limited to 1-2 weeks to acnommodate as .many
children as possible.
3. Institutional Camps.
These are camps for the physically and mentally
handicapped.
Recreational facilities tend to be
195
e% ,
4V
4:
extremely limited and specialised and much of
the time is devoted to nursing and occupational
therapy.
4. Camps operated by tax-supported agencies.
This category includes camps organised by the
schools, park and recreation departments of
municipal boards and other public agencies.
Again length of stay is limited to 1-2 weeks.
In each administrative category there are day camps,
resident camps, travel camps, special interest camps and
school camps. By far the most popular is the long term
resident camp.
Here children live in natural surroundings for a period of five days to eiiht weeks. It has a
fixed site and permanent facilities and resembles a
small community in that it contains elements recognisable
as community segments. Accommodation is basic either in
log cabins or tents.
The layout of the camp varies with
location, finance, camp objectives and number of campers,
but in general there is space for camper living quarters,
access roadways, utilities, sanitary facilities,
administration buildings, service areas, recreational
fiels and general activity areas. Where possible camp
-uctures are made from native materials and an attempt
is made to blend them into the natural setting. A large
percentage of camps have access to a waterfront.
There are many variations in camp layout. A large
number of sites are circular or semi-circular centred
around facilities such as the dining hall, parade ground,
lake etc. The recent trend to towards the decentralised
pattern where the living quarters are segregated into
separate units which are almost self contained.
Campers participate in a planned programme of
activities which include watersports, nature study,
hill-walking, athletics and crafts. The programme is
2 '1 5
lJ
196
"a dynamic interplay of events ... and involves peer
relationships, spontaneous behaviour, modified behaviour,
adherence to pre-arranged schedules, conformity to
specific codes and individual adjustment to changing
conditions".
4
It is not simply a question of filling
every moment of the child's day with physical activity to
keep him occupied. The modern programme is a balance
between a highly organised routine and a 'free activity'
schedule. A detailed master plan is drawn up for the
whole period with schedules for separate weeks and days.
Flexibility is allowed in that attention is centred on
the individual rather than the activity.
schedule might be (see Figure 1).
FIG.1:
A typical daily
AN EXAMPLE OF A DAILY SCHEDULE
7.15 Reveille -
Optional swim
7.45 Flag Raising -
Personal Inspection
8.00 Breakfast -
Clean up of living quarters
9.30 First Activity period
10.30 Second Activity period
11.45 Optional swim
12.30 Lunch
1.30 Rest Hour
7.30 Third Activity period
3.30 Fourth Activity period
4.30 Supervised free time
6.00 Dinner
7.00 Flag lowering ceremony - Evening entertainment
8.30 First bell - younger children
9.30 Second bell - older children
Programme evaluation is as necessary to the efficient
running of the camp as is programme formation and
execution. There are measures available for quantitative
and qualitative evaluation of programmes.
Whereas
quantitative measurement is relatively easy, qualitative
197
206
evaluation is difficult in terms of objective measurement
as it depends upon appreciation of values ideas and
subjective appraisal of performance.
Although the major
evaluation occurs at the end of the session, it is an
on-going process with camp directors, playleaders and
children involved in the decision making process (See Fig.2).
FIG 2:
EVENT EVALUATION SCHEDULE FOR A DAY CAMP
PARTY POST MORTEM
General Effects:
1.
Was the event good fun for everyone attending?
2.
Did all the committees seem to be well
co-ordinated?
3.
Did each committee take care of its own
clean-up?
4.
Was there a sufficient build -up of advance
interest?
5.
Was there a smooth continuity of theme?
Atmosphere:
1.
Was there something easy for everyone to do
when he came in?
2.
Were there activities that avoided making
participants uncomfortable o, "on the spot"?
3.
Did these activities set the stage
sufficiently for the mood of the evening?
Refrechments:
1.
Were the refreshments a pleasant surprise
that dove-tailed into the event smoothly?
2.
Was the group served quickly and easily?
3.
Was the best use made of seating
arrangements for the refreshments?
Programme:
1.
Did the party move smoothly from one activity
and leader to another?
2.
Was there a good balance of programme for the
kind of people attending?
20th
198
FIG 2 (Continued)
3.
Was there a good balance of leadership?
4.
Did the event move at a good tempo?
5.
Rate the leaders on the following:
Did they participate in the activities
while leading?
Did they have control of the group?
Source:
Bureau of Recreation, Dayton Ohio, U.S.A.
The administration of the modern camp is a complex
structure of professional, semi-professional, specialists,
interested people and volunteers (see Fig.3).
FIG.3:
CAMP ORGANISATION CHART
!DIRECTOR(
7
1
Health
Kitchen
Staff etc.
Maintenance
and
Administrative
Staff
PROGRAMME
DI
SPECIALISTS
SECTION HEADS'
ICABIN
COUNSELLORS
ASSISTANTS
COUNS LLORS
Dependent on their position in the camp, the counsellors
are usually college students or graduate teachers with an
199
208
education and/or recreation background.
The general
counsellor has an extremely close relationship with the
children.
He looks after a group of 6-8 children and it is
usual for him to live in the same cabin and assist them
whenever help is sought. He supervises personal and cabin
cleanliness, helps to maintain a high level of morale,
ensures that the campers receive medical attention when
needed, supervises rest hours, helps with the specialised
recreational activities and acts as Counsellor-on-Duty
one night a week.
Counsellors are thus strictly vetted by
personal interviews whichareoften accompanied by a series
of personality tests.
As with programme evaluation, there
is a series of subjective and objective assessment
techniques to evaluate performance. Similarly individual
assessment is made of campers' adjustment to camp life and
their personality development etc.
As with the U.S.A. summer recreation schemes in
Northern Ireland were originally started by voluntary
The first
groups such as the Scouts, Scripture Union etc.
scheme to get funds from government was a Y.M.C.A.
project in Newtownabbey in 1964 which received 75 percent
In the following
grant from the Ministry of Education.
year, the Antrim Local Education Authority agreed to pay
the wages of the staff.
By 1967 other Y.M.C.A. schemes
had spread over the rest of the area under the Antrim
L.E.A. and in 1967 it took over the running and financing
of the schemes completely.
By 1969 Tyrone and Down L.E.A.s
were also providing summer schemes.
Direct Ministry
intervention came in April 1970 and all L.E.A.s were
urged to open up both staff and voluntary schools for
summer recreation schemes.
Both primary and secondary
schools were used and children from the corresponding age
groups went to the respective centres.
Staff and
voluntary centres received total funding from Ministry
funds.
2:19
200
In the period 1970-1977 a vast programme of recreation
activities was initiated.
The Borough Councils and the
Parks and Cemetries Department began to operate schemes
although duplication of activities became a problem.
Voluntary schemes continued to operate such as the V.S.B.
schemes and individual neighbourhoods started small scale
ventures under the guise of local festivals.
Although
there have been cut-backs in the past five years the above
situation still persists albeit on a smaller dimension,
with a few innovations such a community holidays and
adventure holidays such as the Bushmills School of Sport,
and the leisure centres which now run their own schemes.
The concept of the summer camp in Northern Ireland
is fairly recent and it has been slow to take off the
ground due perhaps in no small measure to the lack of
private enterprize.
Local Area Boards do run their own
camps as do organisations such aF the Y.M.C.A. and the
Scripture Union but these tend to be short-term affairs
as they wish to cater for as many children as possible.
The day schemes funded by the Department of Education
are mainly held on school premises. The staff are mainly
teachers and students and more recently uhemployed youth.
There is no set programme for any of the centres, as each
centre leader is free to choose (with help from his
assistants and his clientele) whatevar he wishes to do.
In addition there is no formal evaluation of the leaders
or the programmes. This is left to a subjective report
by the scheme leader at the end of the season.
ctivities on offer at each centre include football,
athleLics, indoor gym games, arts and crafts.
The daytrip is an important feature of the schemes and all
centres have at least one trip per week.
In addition the
children are also given specialist instruction in such
activities as rock climbing, canoeing, archery and
orienteering at specialised activity centres.
21 0
What then are the main differences in summer
recreation provision between the two countries?
there is a distinct difference in philosophy.
Firstly,
In America,
summer recreation is seen as part of the concept of
education in leisure awareness; it is part of a yearround-programme which encourages the development of
wholesome attitudes to recreation.
In Northern Ireland,
the schemes are run from a more functionalist - utilitarian
approach in the sense that they are primarily regarded as
time-fillers for children with long school holidays.
A second major difference is in the actual provision
of the schemes. In America municipal, voluntary and profit
making bodies are involved both in day-centre schemes and
extended camps.
On the other hand in Northern Ireland the
voluntary and private sectors take second and third place
to government funded schemes.
Thirdly, and ignoring differences in scale, there are
a greater number of different types of scheme in America.
Fourthly, there are differences in leadership.
In
America there are more teachers involved.
College students
and graduates tend to be majors in education and/or
recreation. This is not the case in Northern Ireland
although physical education students are more in demand
in the leisure centres and the activity centres. The
schemes in the U.S.A. use formal evaluation procedures
to assess leaders while in Northern Ieland subjective
'end-of-season' reports suffice.
Differences also occur in the children who attend
the schemes. In America there is a wider age range from
4-20 years while in Northern Ireland the age ranges
from
6-13 years with the largest numbers in the 10-12 band.
Finally, there are differences in programming.
In
the U.S.A. in both playgrounds aad camps, formal masterplans are drawn up at the start of the season.
2 11
202
In
Northern Ireland decision making of this sort is left to
the individual centre leaders. Programme evaluaton
follows the same pattern as leadership evaluation being
more formal and scientifically oriented in America, more
subjective in Northern Ireland.
212
203
REFERENCES
1. Quoted in R.E. Carlson, Recreation in American Life.
(California:
Wadsworth Publishing Co., 1972), p.46.
2. American Camping Association, Standards for Accrediting
Camps.
(Indiana: A.C.A. Publication, 1965), p.3.
3. Carlson, Recreation in American Life, p. 185.
4. J.S. Shrivers, Camping.
(New York:
Crofts, 1971), p. 179.
213,
204
Appelton-Century-
Irish Educational Studies, Vol. 4, No. 1, 1984.
RETHINKING THE NATURE OF EDUCATIONAL STUDIES
Padraig Hogan
I
The President of this association explored in some
detail in his address yesterday evening the unsteady fortunes
of education as a subject of study in Ireland over the last
two hundred years.
He drew attention to the point that
the present century has seen the subject suffer quite
sustained bouts of ill-health:
ill-health which was often
induced by deeply rooted misconceptions among various
interested parties in the preparation of teachers.
Ireland
is not unique in this respect - although her difficulties
here may be particularly intriguing to the observer - but
in any case, serious attempts have not been lacking at a
wider level in the last decade or so, to tackle the
misconceptions which attend our understanding of what
constitutes the study of education as a thoughtworthy
effort.
In this connection one can recall the debate
between Professors D. J. O'Connor and Paul Hirst in the
early and mid-seventies on the nature and scope of educational
theory; or the forthright critiques of John Wilson of
Oxford in his numerous books from 1972 to 1979;
or the
arguments of Hartnett and Naish in their jointly edited
Theory and the Practice of Education in 1976;
or Hirst's
most recent re-formulation in the book he edited in 1983:
Educational Theory and its Foundation Disciplines. 1
list here is far from complete.
The
Here in Ireland, at the
E.S.A.I. conferences over the past years, a number of papers
addressed themselves directly or indirectly to the question
of educational studies, or to the related question of
205
214
educational theory, and a perusal of previous years'
proceedings identifies contributions such as that of
Desmond Bell at Coleraine, those of Barry Hutchinson
of John Kelly at Limerick
and John McAleer at Belfield;
my own contributions at Coleraine and
and at Trinity;
Limerick, that of Kevin Williams at Limerick, of Michael
Denny at Queen's, and of Professor Sean Fulton and Alex
Then of course there was Professor
McEwan at Maynooth.
Seamus 0 Suilleabhain's address as guest speaker at Trinity
in 1981, provocatively titled "What are Educational
2
Another forthright attack on the problematic
Studies?".
question of educational theory has just been launched by
the previous speaker, Michael McKeown.
Now in tackling my own title: "Rethinking the nature
of Educational Studies". I might well proceed by undertaking
a review of the literature I have just listed, and attempt
to trace my way systematically through all the concerns
raised, with a view to establishing eventually the extent
to which a satisfactory conception of educational studies
I don't propose to take this detailed
has been secured.
route however, although many of the questions raised and
many of the arguments advanced by thos:. I have mentioned
will engage my thoughts diming this address.
Our time today is limited so my approach must be
concise:
in places quite direct, though not, I hope, too
To begin with, then, I would propose
condensed or abrupt.
that education, properly viewed, is a distinctive, indeed
This may sound
a unique form of human intercourse.
acceptable enough to most, and to some it may even sound
Let me call attention therefore to the
bland or trite.
emphasis I wish to place on the words "properly viewed",
I do this because many do not
"distinctive" and "unique".
view education as a distinctive or unique form of intercourse,
but rather as a "commonsense", or everyday affair where
206
215
anyone's view is probably as valid as anyone else's.
But
even among those who would acknowledge that education,
properly viewed, is indeed a unique kind of human intercourse - and these would include most people who have a
professional involvement in education;
administrators, etc.
-
teachers, researchers,
it is not at all clear that any
substantial agreement prevails in this group about what,
precisely, constitutes the uniqueness of this form of
intercourse.
Some, for instance, would hold that the
uniqueness of education lies in what is described as the
transmission of values, others would lay primary emphasis
on the special character of education as an agent for social
selection or for pursuing egalitarian policies.
Further
conceptions of the distinctiveness of educational intercourse
might stress points as diverse as the maximization of
cognitive potential, the conquest of spiritual salvation,
the pursuit of national renewal, or the tailoring of
abilities to projected manpower requirements.
I have
mentioned only a few instances here,but the number of
candidates for the position of "what constitutes the
distinctiveness of education as a form of human intercourse?"
could well run to an endless list of competing and often
conflicting priorities.
If this doesn't surprise us, then
neither should we be too surprised that the fortunes of
Education as a subject of study have had such a chequered
history, or that they still remain attended by widespread
ambiguity, and misunderstanding.
It is difficult indeed
to give conceptual dignity and coherence to a supposedly
beneficial pursuit, which is yet largely pervaded in
practice by fundamental conflicts in outlook and aspiration,
by unacknowledged inconsistencies in discourse and in action,
by an adroit, if unwilling acquiescence in the politics
of pressure, and not least, by established routines which
cannot widely be said to invite the rigours of critical
scrutiny.
207
216
I think that we have, almost overwhelmingly, become
so accustomed to conceiving of education as a vehicle for
implementing a preferred world view - a preferred disposition
in understanding and in outlook - that we find it very
difficult to conceive of the nature of the enterprise in any
And how we conceive of the nature of the
other terms.
enterprise is of first importance - indeed of crucial
importance - to what we are properly to understand as
If our basic standpoint is that
educational studies.
education is a grand crusade for the minds and hearts of
the young, we may easily, and even inevitably, find
ourselves engaged in sustained argument, or acrimonious
displAte,
as to whether this crusade should have a classical
or modern character, a "liberal" or technological thrust,
a religious or secular ethos, or, dare I say it, a
Now I don't wish
"cognitive" or "affective" emphasis.
to suggest that such disputes have no bearing on the
Clearly, such arguments and
question of education.
disputes are abundant in the pages of numerous textbooks,
What I am
journals and newspaper articles on education.
suggesting is that argument of this type - i.e. argument
between "isms" - does not constitute the distinctive
Neither does any kind of policy
business of education.
based on the political muscle of such arguments - or on
ideological compromise - identify what makes education a
distinctive form of human intercourse.
I suspect that many will find this point difficult
to accept.
Indeed I might be tackled forcefully on this
issue and invited to look at what characteristically
I might then be asked
happens in schools and colleges.
if I still hold the view that the transmiss'on of "isms" is not one of the most distinctive marks of what we call
In answer to this objection I would readily
education.
acknowledge that schools do indeed play a decisive role
208
21 7
as ideological agents; - in matters religious, moral,
intellectual, vocational, and in a more subtle way,
in matters political.
This role, of explicit agent
for a preferred world-outloc.x, is one, moreover, which
most schools actively embrace.
My argument is that
schools and colleges, insofar as they actively embrace
this role, reveal their own participation in a more widespread mis-conception of the nature of education in a
human concern.
This mis-conception is so deeply ingrained in our
consciousness - indeed in our hearts - in the Western
World, in the Eastern World and in much of what we call
the "Third World", that its removal may well be attended
by the most intractable difficulties, and may at best be
accomplished only in a piecemeal manner.
Clearly, it
is a misconception which is not generally acknowledged
as such, and it has behind it, moreover, a truly remarkable
weight of authority, tradition and practice.
I am inclined
to locate the origins of this misconception in the writings
of two exceptionally influential thinkers in the western
tradition of thought, namely:
Plato and Aristotle.
I
think this point has a crucial importance for how we view
education and how we might view educational studies, so
permit me a brief elaboration.
I hasten to add that I
am not attempting, from any sense of assumed superiority,
to dismiss Plato and Aristotle as unfortunate blemishes
on our inherited modes of thinking.
I myself am
too
deeply in their debt to maintain such a standpoint.
Indeed, I am inclined to take the view that it is at those
points where Plato and Aristotle were ut explicitly dealing
with education that the educational potential of their
thoughts is at its richest.
By contrast, when Plato
writes very directly about education in Books II and III
3
of his Republic,
a controversial, censorial peremptory
209
218
note is very much in evidence. No less remarkable are
Aristotle's agreement in Books VII and VIII of his
Politics 4 with Plato's conception of education as a grand
crusade for the minds and hearts of the young and his
(Aristotle's) insistence on making this crusade one of
his first concerns of politics.
Throughout the educational history of the West, many
have taken issue with. or supported the goals to which Plato
and Aristotle gave priority in the crusade. But both
supporters and critics seem to have accepted as entirely
natural, the Pletonic/Aristotleian conception of
education as a crusade. This conception was introduced
by Plato and Aristotle as if it were not a contestable
matter. Accordingly, the manner in which the crusading
conception of education thoroughly insinuated itself into the
Western tradition of thought with Plato and Aristotle, had
the effect of eclipsing - of shutting out in a decisive
manner - another conception of education, the outlines of
which were only just becoming established at that time.
I am referring to the Socratic conception of education.
not as a battle for the :Ands and hearts of the young, but
as a critical conversation between each new generation and
the voices of tradition. How the conception of education
is a critical conversation is radically distinct from any
crusading conception, and the import of this distinction
for the integrity of educationa,. studies. are issues which
will engage our attentions in the second part of this
address.
II
Let me start the second part with a rather bold
the question of what it means to us to be
human is the most fundamental question for all of us: and
what the enterprise of education represents, before anything
suggestion:
210
219
else, is a special form of intercourse for articulating
and engaging this question.
If this suggestion sounds
like an overture to a bout of abstract philosophical
self-indulgence on my part, let me correct this impression
immediately by calling attention to the fact that this
question:
what it means to be human, is already answered,
or taken for granted, or otherwise overlooked, in very much
of what goes on in schools and colleges every day.
In
other words, the self-understanding of pupils is continually
Influenced decisively, although often covertly, by the
routines and priorities of life in schools and colleges.
The very term "institutionalized values", a term widely
used in
describing schools and colleges nowadays,
illustrates rather well the point I am calling attention
to here.
Now, if this enterprise we call education represents
a special form of intercourse for engaging the question of
what it means to be human, then the crusading conception
of education represents a form of engagement where the
more important questions are already substantially decided:
decided moreover, in accordance with officially approved
priorities, or,
values".
if you like, "officially institutionalized
This "already decided" character can be seen
not only in the authority structure of schools and colleges
but also in most curriculum and examination structures.
It should not surprise us greatly therefore, to see why
so much of what is experienced in schools and colleges,
particularly at post-primary and higher levels, but also
in many respects at primary level, is a traffic in readymade ideas and arguments:
ideas and arguments which have
been tailored over time to net the requirements of public
examinations.
Widely acknowledged as the most major
events in the educational calendar, these examinations
serve mainly to infuse the self-understanding of pupils at
211
220
crucial points with an overall feeling of success or
Schools
failure - a sense of belonging or of rejection.
have thus a very decisive, if largely unacknowledged, part
to play in deciding what it means to be human.
To conceive of education as a critical conversation
with the voices of tradition is a very different matter
however, precisely because this conception takes a
questioning attitude to anything which asserts itself as
having already been decided.
We can recall that this was
the attitude which Socrates took to the established
knowledge in the schools of the Greek Sophists.
not that Socrates was ignorant of this knowledge;
It is
rather,
he had long considered the sophists' arguments previously
himself and had found the self-assured finality of their
answers less than satisfactory on many points.
More
importantly, he had discovered that the most enriching
kind of knowledge yields itself to the disciplined thinker
to whom every question remains in some real sense an open
and an inviting question, and who is therefore prepared to
forgo the lure of dogmatic certainty.
But despite the
plentiful examples of this point in the early Socratic
dialogues, we have not yet acknowledged on any wide scale
that an unyielding certainty on the part of a teacher
tends to stimulate nothing as much as an acquiescent
credulity on the part of students
itself often ages into dogmatism.
- a credulity which
And when an unyielding
certainty on the part of a teacher finds resistance in the
minds and hearts of pupils, this resistance widely comes
to be regarded as an impertinence.
It is not surpriging therefore that Socrates, in
order to encourage the blossoming of a critical but
disciplined spirit of enquiry among the young, saw that
a special form of intercourse, with a carefully designed
Socrates never wrote
structure, was a first necessity.
down, as far as we are aware, the details of this structure.
212
221
Plato and Aristotle, for their part, were so preoccupied
in their educational writings with what the contents
of an acceptable education should be, and with structures
for supervising this content, that they either overlooked,
or relegated, or otherwise neglected, what was most
essential in Socrates as far as education is concerned:
namely the structures of critical dialogue.
I have already suggested that this event proved
to be a momentous eclipse - albeit an unwitting act by
Plato and Aristotle and albeit an unacknowledged eclipse
to our own time.
Thus, my own effort today represents
an attempt to shift our attention away from a drive for
ideological supremacy, with the human sciences in a
supporting role, and towards an articulation of the
structure of critical conversation in a variety of
cultural settings, with the human sciences now seeking
to play a central disinterested, illuminating role.
Some
might regard this shift as nothing less than a Copernican
attempt to break apart the very modes of thinking which
sustain most of our educational procedures and practices
at present, including indeed, our educational controversies.
The Copernican analogy might be more appropriate however,
if the special form of human intercourse to which I am
drawing attention - the critical conversation and its
underlying structure - were something quite new or
undiscovered.
The word eclipse, which I have used above,
should show that this is not so.
The suggested shift
in thinking is an attempt to rediscover, to illuminate,
and to refine further, something which was in some measure
at least, a significant historical reality in Athens,
prior to Plato and Aristotle.
In any event it remains the case that the structure
of critical dialogue, as a unique form of human intercourse,
is something about which we know far too little.
Let me
suggest that in brief outline, some of the chief
213
222
characteristics which a critical dialogue might exhibit:
1.
An acknowledgement that the other person (or class
of pupils) despite his reputation, might have
something valid to say.
2.
A disciplined willingness to note what strikes one
as most significant in what the other says (in his
speech or in his actions).
3.
A commitment to engage the other person on the noted
points, while bringing one's own address or response
to these points into play.
4.
A commitment to acknowledge the authority of reason,
5.
this engagement.
A willingness to place one's own claim to truth at
to the best of one's ability, during the course of
risk.
Now, a conversation, or an educational engagement,
which succeeds in enbodying these characteristics, is
I thtnk its
indeed a unique form of human intercourse.
most distinctive mark is that when it is regularly
practiced, it gives birth to a particular kind of
disposition in the participants, and to a particular kind
of ethos, which alone, I would suggest, merits the
description " educational ethos".
The ethos and dispos-
ition in question are unique, in that they are deeply
Here I return
fraternal, and are so in the widest sense.
very briefly to Aristotle, in Hook 11 of his gthics,
5
where he is not dealing explicitly with education but with
A study of his
the origin of the word ethos itself.
observations at this point shows quite convincingly that
the ethos of any particular institution has much less to
do with the official priorities of the institution's
authorities than it has with what actually arises habitually
and naturally among the residents of that institution.
In other words an educational ethos, properly so culled,
is the natural product of an existential commitment, rather
214
223
than the product of political control.
Legislative
measures may encourage or hinder such a commitment;
they cannot replace it.
I have given a very brief sketch of what I view
as the central act of education. I have suggested that
a unique ethos can be brought into existence if, and only
if, the self-understanding and co'ni.tment of educators
are equal to the task. I would also like to suggest here
that any of the voices of tradition, for instance, the
plays of Shakespeare, the world of Parnell and Davi tt, the
Christian gospels, the mysterious world of physics, the
enchanting world of music, the intriguing worlds of
foreign languages; all of these and more, can make their
address most appropriately through the kind of structure
which I have outlined. This brings me directly to my
concluding arguments, which concern the central role of
the human sciences, to which I referred a little earlier.
These concluding remarks may help to show us how much more
we need to learn about the structure of critical dialogue
in various social settings, and accordingly, how large a
field lies ahead for educational studies to explore.
For instance, can much of the poetry of Peadar
0 Doirnin or Sean 0 Riordain speak through a teacher
in such a manner that it sets underway a critical
conversation between teacher, pupils and poet; say in
a group of bright seventeen year olds in an all-Irish
school? If so, how much of it can, and can the same
kind of conversation be achieved with a similar group in
an English-speaking school? If not, why not? Are there
some schools where these poets could be introduced only
at the cost of distorting the conversation to such an
extent that the ethos thus brought to life is the very
negation of a conversation? Has such an eventuality any
major implications for the manner in which curricula are
designed and for the choice of curricular materials?
215
.
224
These are only a few of the questions which the
teaching of Irish poetry raise for educational studies.
These questions raise in turn numerous further questions
for enquiry of a psychological and sociological kind about
pupils;
their abilities, their levels of maturity, their
pLejudices and sensibilities, their cultural backgrounds,
the influences of peers and teachers at school etc.
Ques,ions of yet another kind are raised about the subject
itself, in this case, poetry.
These are curricular
questions about how it might most appropriately be brought
into the conversation.
Still further questions of a
philosophical kind are raised concerning the selfunderntanCing of the teacher.
The importance of the
teacher s self-understanding is particularly illustrated
when we recall to mind the five-point outline of the
structure of critical dialogue.
I have reserved a special word here for the history
of education, because it is a discipline which has
increasingly been regarded as peripheral in recent years
in the preparation of teachers.
the nature of educational studies,
An adequate grasp of
in terms of the
shift in thinking which I have mentionea earlier, should
For the history of education
dramatically reverse this.
provides one of the most fruitful sources for illuminating
the kinds of arrests and distortions which the educational
conversation has suffered in the past, the kinds of milieu
in which it again found life and the kinds of human
thought and action which attended these events.
Moreover,
by awakening our historical consciousness in a disciplined
way from its slumbers, and by setting it critically to
work, the history of education also discloses itself as
a singular liberation from inurement: indeed as an
exemplary case of the critical conversation itself.
The major disciplines of education - psychology,
sociology, curriculum studies, history and philosophy,
216
2 25
can be seen to play a central part in elucidating the
structures of the special form of human intercourse which
is the primary concern of educational studies.
They can
succeed in doing so however only insofar as they keep the
requirements of the critical conversation itself firmly
in view.
Accordingly, the literature of these disciplines
might centrally include authors such as Erich Fromm, Carl
Rogers, Abraham Maslow, Erik Erikson, Ronald Laing, Paulo
Freire, Erving Goffmann, Peter Berger and Thomas Luckmann,
to give but a brief example.
Ptaget and Bruner would
still be there, but I suspect that writers like Pavlov,
Thorndike and Skinner would ",e relegated to a lower place
on the list, as the intercourse which their works describe
is not, to my mind, distinctively human.
The integrity of educational studies does not
therefore lie in any divergent movement or appeal to the
canons of different disciplines of enquiry.
Rather the
reverse is the case.
A confluence of perspectives from
the human sciences seeks to illuminate the social contexts
where the educational conversation is attempted.
This
confluence seeks also to bring to fullness our understanding
of ourselves and of what speaks through us when we address
our students and pupils.
A confluence marks the place
where tributaries flow together to make a larger stream
or river.
At the confluence the tributaries intermingle
in such a way that it is no longer appropriate to view any
part of the larger stream as a product of one tributary
rather than another.
Yet if one or other t ibutary were
blocked off, the character of the flow in tte larger river
would be altered.
I have suggested that educational
studies can properly be viewed as a confluence of
perspectives from the human sciences; perspectives which
seek to elucidate a particular kind of conversation.
What draws the different perspectives together - what gives
to educational studies the character of a confluence - is
217
2 2 61
the readiness of the various disciplines of educational
studies to hold the conversation itself resolutely
In a similar way, anthropology
at the focus of attention.
draws on philosophical, psychological, historical and
sociological perspectives in its work of elucidating
meaning in life through a study of various cultural
settings.
Educational studies can perhaps thus be
appropriately described as an anthropology concerned with
practical ways of responding to an injunction originally
voiced by Socrates.
218
227
REFERENCES
1. The articles and books mentioned in the text are as
follows:
D. J. O'Connor, The Nature and Scope of
Educational Theory" in New Essays in the
Philosophy of Education ed. by G. Longford
and D. J. O'Connor (London
Routledge and
Regan Paul 1973).
(ii)
Paul Hirst,
The Nature and Scope of
Educational Theory - a reply to D. J.
O'Connor" in New Essays (same book).
(iii) A.Hartnett and M. Naish, Theory and the
Practice of Education (London
Heinemann,
(i)
:
:
1976) .
(iv)
John Wilson, Philosophy and Educational
Research (Slough
NFER 1972).
John Wilson, Educational Theory and the
Preparation of Teachers (Slough
NFER 1975).
:
(v)
:
(vi)
John Wilson, Preface_teof
Education
(London : Routledge and Kegan
Paul, 1979).
(vii) Paul Hirst : "Educational Theory" in
Educational Theory and its Foundation
Disciplines (London : Routledge and Kegan
Paul, 1983) .
2
Most of the articles mentioned can be found in the
ESAI Proceedings and in Irish Educational Studies
Vol. I and Vol. II.
The references are as follows:
(i) Desmond L. Bell, "Child Centered Pedagogy,
Ideology and Educational Theory" in
Proceedings of ESAI, N.U.U,__Conference
Coleraine. 1978.
(ii) Barry Hutchinson, "School Based Teaching
and Evaluation - competency for what" in
Preceedinna_of ESAI Conference U.C,D. 1979.
(iii) John McAieer "Teachers' Experience and
the Study of Education: a dialogical
approach to an in-service B.Ed." in
11,C.D._Proceedings 1979.
(iv)
(v)
John Kelly, Towards a Theory for the
Practitioner in Irish 'educational Studies
Volume I 1981 (Mr. Kelly's address to the
Limerick Conference is unpublished).
Padraig Hogan:
"A Degree for All Teachers"
in N.U.U. Proceedings 1978 (my own paper
at Limerick was a shortened version of an
article entitled "A Critique of Educational
Research" which appeared in The Oxford
Review f Education, Vol. 6 1980.
219
228
Kevin Williams "Is Teaching a Profession"
in Limerick Proceedings 1980.
(vii) Michael Denny, "Educational Theory and
a case study of primary and
Practice
post-primary teachers" in Irish Educational
Studies Vol. II 1982.
"Theory
(viii)Sean Fulton and Alex McEwen,
and Practice : a discussion of the views
of Northern Ireland teachers" in Irish
Educational Studies Vol. III.
Seamas V. 0 Suilleabhain, "What are
(ix)
Educational Studies?" in Irish Educational
auslies, Vol. I.
(vi)
:
3. Plato, Republic
translated by Desmond Lee (Penguin
1975) .
4. Aristotle, Politics, translated by T. A. Sinclair
(Penguin, revised edition 1981).
5. Aristotle, Ethics, translated by J. A. K. Thompson
(Penguin, 1976).
220
229
Irish Educational Studies, Vol. 4, No. 1, 1984.
THE FIRST BLAST OF THE TRUMPET AGAINST THE
MONSTROUS REGIMENT OF THE DISCIPLINES
(THEORISING ABOUT THEORY OF EDUCATION)
Michael McKeown
A consideration of the final examination papers
in Colleges and Departments of Education in this country
provides evidence of the importance placed upon theory
of education in the formation of teachers.
It also
suggests that the disciplines of education are perceived
as nearly congruent with theory of education.
This
would indicate that the received wisdom of our time
decrees that competence in the areas of sociology,
psychology. philosophy and history of education affords
a conceptual framework of knowledge, and insights which
the acolyte teacher can apply to the task in hand of
running a classroom.
That this view is not necessarily shared by the
practitioners at the chalk face nor indeed by all those
engaged in teacher education can hardly be gainsaid.
Eric Hoyle
1
has pointed out:
The rather tenuous link between theory, at
least the body of theory purveyed by
institutions of teacher education, and
practice, has been reported by many writers
within the institutions of Teacher Education.
John Wilson, 2 the philosopher, has suggested possibly
tongue in cheek:
Most sensible people (uncorrupted by fashion
or institutionalized fantasy) believe that
most of what passes for educational theory
is demonstrably absurd . . . and that educational
practice is largely dominated by fashion,
politics and various types of neurosis.
221
230
Michael Denny
3
has reported to the 1982 conference of
this Association his tentative findings about teachers'
judgments of their initial training courses.
One of
the three related factors which they had considered
unsatisfactory was "an apparent over-emphasis on
educational theory".
would indicate that
A recent article by David Harris4
teachers in England am.. Wales share
the Irish teachers' scepticism about the value of
educational theory.
Such judgments tend to confirm the
anecdotal evidence which leads one to believe that
practising teachers and student teachers find it difficult
to locate the interface between theory and practice and
may indeed doubt whether it exists.
Given the present
paramountcy conferred on the disciplines, belief in the
existence of an interface entails commitment to the
proposition that an agglomerate of insights and data
culled from the studies of history, sociology, psychology
and philosophy anc: transmitted to a cohort of students
lacking real classroom experience will somehow enable them
to devise a set of parameters which will guide their
practical judgments.
To expect belief in such a
proposition is to put a great strain upon faith.
Indeed
the proposition seems so untenable that it is necessary
to look for the genesis of such an unlikely notion and
consider how it gained such widespread currency.
The Historical Origins of Present Practices
The particular circumstances in which this faith
took root and flourished are to be found in a singular
conjunction of pressures which developed in the United
States and in Britain during the sixties.
The interwoven
strands of these developments when unravelled reveal a
number of discrete considerations.
222
231
They were:
1)
Tho democratic impulse to provide equality of
opportunity through equality of access to a
common school experience was increasing the
demand for teachers.
2)
The same impulse was generating criticism of the
existing stratifications within the teaching
profession.
3)
The heightened demand for teachers was imposing
a strain upon the facilities of the traditional
teacher training colleges.
Their physical
expansion raised questions about the role, control,
and independence of these free standing monotechnic
institutions.
4)
Within the teaching force the thrust for enhanced
social status with its consequential enhancement of
reward was fuelling a demand for full professional
recognition which in turn entailed a more theoretically
grounded course of study pursued over a longer
period of time.
5)
The social sciences, those which Philip Howard5
has described as
the soft sciences' in that
the
human imponderable plays an important part' were
establishing their academic respectability and
were thought to have a contribution to make to the
practice of teaching.
6)
While the Universities had accepted the academic
legitimacy of the 'soft sciences' and were happy to
accept Training Colleges within their sphere of
influence, they were still inhibited by their
anti vocational bias from affording recognition
to the acquisition of practical skills.
It will be seen that while 501110 of these trends were
logically linked others were only linked contingently
but they all were coming together in a conflux during
that decade.
Out of the dial.ogue which this generated,
223
232
Perhaps the
certain key propositions began to emerge.
most coherent statement is to be found in the comments
of the former President of Harvard, James B. Conant,
1963.
6
in
In his delineation of the essential elements in
a teacher training programme he remarked:
History, philosophy, political science,
anthropology and psychology are the academic
disciplines that have something to say
to future teachers.
While that statement is unexceptional, Conant went on
to make the significant but unwarranted jump which seems
to have characterized the evolution of this concept in
all its stages.
He added:
I believe that the role of the professor of
education in the undergraduate training of
teachers is at its best that of an intermediary
to bridge the ravine that separates theory
If this is true then the
and practice.
professors of educational philosophy,
educational history, educational sociology
and educational psychology should be
professors of philosophy, history, sociology
and psychology who have a commitment to the
public schools and their improvement.
Here we see an example of what can be called the
"that because student
educators' naturalistic fallacy:
teachers have something to learn from the educational
disciplines t .ay should be taught these disciplines".
In Britain the same process of formulation could
be observed in the comments of Miss J. D. Browne
7
of
Coventry College, addressing the Colson symposium in
1968.
The theoretical framework afforded to the teacher
she suggested:
should be concerned in the first place with
the norms of a child's development . . .
This point will be followed up by the
student in individual child studies
The structure and culture of the groups to
ich the child belongs, the family, the
.
224
233
.
.
neighbourhood and the social class . . .
will also be a subject of study by all
students.
The role of the adult including
the teacher in the world of childhood will
be considered with inevitable attention
being given to such ideas as authority,
freedom and discipline .
.
They will
look at some of these questions in time
and space for historical and comparative
study can throw a new light on present
issues in our society.
.
Miss Browne and President Conant - an ocean apart - were
at one in agreeing the importance of psychology, sociology,
philosophy and history.
The respectability of such
a stance is evidenced by the welcome afforded it by
Professor Bantock, 8 a somewhat conservative observer,
when speaking at the same conference as Miss Browne:
the sociology of education and then
educational philosophy hie taken considerable
leaps forward as autonomous areas of academic
concern : both have achieved a considerable
measure of respectability over the last ten
years.
And this they have gained just in
time to meet the new demands of the B.ed.
degree.
However, Bantock went on to state explicitly what Conant
had.left implicit:
As the separate disciplines of philosophy,
psychology, sociology and history develop
their literatures, it is going to be quite
impossible to maintain that a single teacher
can cope with all aspects of the theoretical
work.
The direction of the argument is clear.
The teaching
has to be on the basis of the disciplines.
What I am
calling the "educators naturalistic fallacy" in this
argument is revealed in his following statement that:
a proper and formal presentation of their
specific discipline is essential if the
student is to be induced to think fruitfully
within it, to handle its concepts and
225
234.
convention with any degree of confidence
and hence to receive even more the practical
benefits of the disciplines.
It is not
possible to come to terms with the sociology
of education in the snippets which might be
relevant to some general treatment of the
theme of equality of opportunity in education,
for instance.
The slippage in logic which Bantock has admitted to his
argument is that here he is not talking about initiation
into a practical skill but initiation into a particular
field of knowledge.
He is talking not about training
teachers, but about training educational sociologists.
Professor Bantock viewed the matter from what might
be termed a traditionalist stance.
Eric Robinson,9 the
apostle of the technical tradition in British education
and the advocate of relevant
approached the question
from a near polar ideological position, but yet in 1971,
adopted much the same viewpoint as Bantock:
A modern course in education should be I
course in educational science, training the
student to formulate and solve educational
problems inside the classroom and out.
Within such a concept there is no conflict
between the training of a teacher and
raising his intellectual level.
If the
teaching of philosophy, psychology and
sociology acquires for the student a
value and significance in guiding his
actions as a teacher he has no need of
academic ma,n subjects for his personal
education.
Putting aside the merits of his own conclusion - which
I would be inclined to agree with - vale premises of his
argument are illuminating.
The teaching of the
disciplines is initiation into theory and theory has been
elevated to a science.
It is quite a jump from the
somewhat tentative probings of Conant in '63 to the
certainties of Robinson eight years later.
It might
have been however, not so much the case of a good idea
226
235
whose time had come, but rather a plausible idea falling
into an historical vacuum.
That its plausibility had
won it a general acceptance within the academic community
was reflected in the remarks of Professor Sean Fulton 10
in his inaugural lecture in 1978.
In a review of recent
developments he could say:
A professional education which embraces
these aims affirms that the product of
the course should be an educated person
who has achieved competence in both the
academic and professional fields.
It
implies that the pre-service course of teacher
euucation should contain three elements,
academic studies (the academic subjects),
educational studies (the foundation
disciplines - psychology, philosophy,
sociology and so on) and professional
studies (pedagogical methods and teaching
practice).
There is little argument that
these three elements should be present in all
teacher training courses.
Professor Fulton went on, however, to acknowledge that the
implications of this position were not necessarily agreed:
The study of Education is generally presumed
to provide the theoretical basis for the
professional courses, yet controversy rages
not only about its importance but about
its legitimacy.
The controversy he located in:
the danger
: Education becoming a group of
disjointed and unrelated studies resulting
in a neglect of educational issues, which
demand the sophisticated integration of
insights and comments from a number of
disciplines.
The appointment of staff wellqualified in the disciplines would tend to make
the danger more real.
.
227
236
A Critique of the Disciplinary Approach
It is my thesis to-day that what Sean Fulton
perceived as a danger, a hazard, a potentiality has in
Lest I draw upon myself the
fact become a reality.
wrath of my colleagues well qualified in the disciplines",
I will gird myself in a medicine shirt woven by Paul
Hirst
11
who has argued:
The significance of the disciplines for
practice is, however, properly indirect.
Their findings will promote intelligent
practice only if they are incorporated
coherently into the web of existing
practice, rather than allowed to dominate
that practice in a manner that seeks to
deny the existence of all the other
significant elements both tacit and
explicit.
The specific criticisms which can be made of the disciplinary
approach to the training of teachers are:
1)
The level of abstraction and conceptualization
entailed is too far removed from the concreteness
2)
of the classroom situation.
The concepts which are offered can barely be
grasped by students lacking the practical experience
3)
of the contexts from which these concepts emerge.
Their curricular importance in the Colleges reflects
a top down model of knowledge generation and
transmission which is singularly inappropriate for
teachers struggling with curricula
4)
devitalized
by this very process.
Their discrete approaches to the problems of practice
demand a further teaching input to achieve the
"sophisticated integration" which Fulton stressed.
This further input imposes an unwarranted and
probably intolerable burden on Colleges in terms
5)
of manpower and administration and time.
Since the disciplinary approach reflects a Platonic
228
2 3'?
view of knowledge, it might be said that a study
of the disciplines lies along the upper segments
of the Platonic "Divided Line" and this should
be studied at a much later point in the professional
life of the teacher.
The lower segments of that
Divided Line - what Plato called the "visible world" is the proper subject of study in a pre-service course.
Before proceeding to suggest an alternative approach
it might be interesting to speculate on the reasons why
the disciplinary approach emerged to reconcile the
pressures and tensions of the sixties.
three reasons which are significant here.
There are possibly
The first, to
which in this forum I will not devote too much space, is
concerned with the aggrandizing impulse of domains of
knowledge.
The "territorial imperative" is as strong in
the intellectual world as it is in the animal world.
Eric
Hoyle has quoted Reiff12 approvingly:
professionals tend to dress up common sense
as theoretical knowledge in the interests of
their own status.
Secondly, and in my view more importantly, the concept of
a theory of education is in a pre paradigmatic state.
Thomas Kuhn 13 has defined a paradigm in his book
The
Structures of Scientific Revolution as:
some accepted examples of actual scientific
practice, examples which include laws,
theory, application and instrumentation
together - provide models from which spring
particular coherent traditions of
scientific research.
He argues that
Acquisition of a paradigm and of the more
esoteric type of research it permits is a sign
of maturity in the development of any given
scientific field.
229
238
He goes on to suggest that:
Paradigms gain their status because they
are more successful than their competitors
in solving a few problems that a group of
practitioners has come to recognize as acute.
He also pointed out:
In the absence of a paradigm or some candidate
for a paradigm all of the facts that could
possibly pertain to the development of a given
science are likely to seem equally relevant.
The contribution of the disciplines to classroom practice
corresponds to the pre paradigmatic condition of a science
as defined by Kuhn.
I would suggest that the disciplinary approach will
not attain the status of a paradigm for a theory of
education and indeed that the study is maybe not yet
mature enough to sustain a paradigm.
It is undoubtedly
true that we are not yet at a stage when we can distinguish
between the relevant and the non relevant.
The third reason I adduce for the failure to find
the right direction for educational studies might well be
It was hinted
derivative from the lack of a paradigm.
14
to a conference
at in a comment of Professor Henry Knox's
Reflecting on changes
of this association some years ago.
in teacher training he remarked:
It may be doubted whether the term College
of Education since it lacks specificity is a
great improvement on the older training
. we have no word in common use
college .
to denote the specialized study of teacher
preparation and simply use the term
"education" in an extended way.
.
I believe that the extension noted by Knox has gone
far beyond the needs or purposes of the teacher training
These institutions are as Conant pointed
institutions.
out in the American context concerned with supplying the
230
239
"public schools". They have little direct role at the
present time to play in the training of personnel for the
administration of education, the provision of recurrent
education, the training of teachers for third level.
Nor are our schools likely to have in the foreseeable
future a cadre of professional non teaching personnel.
It is true that non teaching educational agencies recruit
from the ranks of teachers, that adult education organizers
will have been teachers, that even indeed some educational
administrators might have been teachers but I would suggest
that these are recruited on the basis of their experience
rather than their initial training.
In making the vast
polymorphous field of education their concern, the teacher
institutions have over-extended themselves and misdirected
themselves.
M Alternative_to_a theory of Education
Their paramount function is to equip suitable
applicants to work in schools and to do this effectively;
what is required is not a theory of education but a theory
of schooling. I know that the whole concept of schooling
is one that is now despised as an activity appropriate
only for horses but not for children. Between the contempt
of the deschoolers like Illich on the one hand and the
scorn of the Marxist sociologists such as Samuel Bowles
and Herbert Gintis on the other, schooling has come to be
viewed as a degrading manipulative process inconsistent
with education. I believe that the time has come to
rehabilitate the word and use it as the loadstar to chart
our future course. If Colleges accept that their role
is to equip teachers to engage in the task of schooling,
the theoretical component of the course must then be
located in a study of the phenomena of the school.
These
phenomena are the pupils (and I use that term rather than
231
240
children as that is the role they play in the school), the
curriculum, the physical edifice of the school and its
resources, the organic entity of the school and its
control, the teaching staff and the families of the
pupils.
What I am here suggesting is that a theory of schooling
could best derive from a phenomenological mode of
It has been suggested by Schmitt15 that a
knowledge.
phenomenological statement must satisfy five conditions:
it must be about essences,
it must be self validating,
it must be the result of bracketing experience,
it must be about intentional acts,
it must lay down the criteria of coherence of
intentional acts.
The peculiar nature of the teaching activity and the
difficulty of presenting this activity within a theoretic
framework to students makes it particularly amenable to
Schmidt has added that:
a phenomenological mode of enquiry.
it is the task of phenonemology to bring to
light the criteria implicit in the international
acts we perform in everyday life in which we
act in, get to know about and learn to master
that everyday world which Husseri christened
The
LEBENSWELT (world in which we live).
emphasis here is on putting into words what
is commonly and familiarly done without one's
knowing how to describe accurately what he is
doing.
The contention that such an approach might have a
singular relevance for a descriptive and classifacatory
theory of the practise of teaching can draw some support
from the inadequacy of the neologisms and coinages which
have emerged out of the attempts to put "into words what
is commonly and familiarly done without one's knowing
how to describe accurately what he is doing".
232
241
When an old established practice called tilling in
the gaps surfaces reconstructed as "cloze procedure",
when texts on methodology can invoke terms like
"withitness" and "flip flops" in an attempt to objectify
the intangible, it is little wonder that it breeds that
cynicism about terminology which labels such language
as educanto.
It is again possibly a measure of the
immaturity of this area of study that it has yet to find
an adequate vocabulary for its purposes.
(Consider if
you will the elasticity and imprecision of a term such as
child centredness.
A proclaimed adherence to that
principle tells us very little about the teaching procedures
which such a principle entails.)
Putting that consideration aside, however, the
phenomenological goals identified by Schmitt are surely
those very goals which teacher
be concerned with.
trainers are and should
As such, Schmitt's statement about
purposes is in its general sense akin to the particularized
thrust of Joseph Schwab,16 when he observes that:
education is a "practical" science rather
than a "theoretical" one in the sense that
the central function of its enquiries is
to supply the grounds for choice among
alternative actions.
A theory of schooling then will be concerned with the
dynamics of each of the "essences" in the total frame the curriculum and so on.
It will emerge for the
student from his recognition of these, his reflection
upon their nature and his attempts to quantify or modify
the limits of the effects of the "intentional acts".
It will attain the status of a valid theory when the
judgment is intuitive or self validating or, to put it
another way, when it has been internalized.
In this
sense pragmatism is the last refuge of the student teacher.
"It works :
therefore it is true."
Pursuing the
pragmatic argument on,: stage further, it does not seem
233
242
to be necessary to have to adopt a phenomenological
stance in order to be able to assent to the proposition
that student teachers pursuing issue based multi-
disciplinary courses in each of the elements I have
mentioned, would emerge with a keener perception of
the relevance of theory to practice than is afforded by
the emphasis upon the disciplines.
In so far as each is symbiotically linked with the
other in a way the disciplines are not, there would be
In so
an integrative dimension to each of the courses.
far as the essences have a concrete reality which will
tend to surface above the abstractions of the academics,
they will emerge clearly as part of that visible world at
Above all they would
the bottom of Plato's Divided Line.
locate the focus of study on the phenomena of the classroom
rather than in the lecture hall, the laboratory or the
library.
Since much of the paper has been an argument in
favour of a fields of knowledge approach ,:ather than a
form of knowledge approach. I hope it would not be
considered cavalier to invoke the father of forys,Plato,
in support of the argument.
You will recall that in the
allegory of The Cave, Plato described how those who were
released from their chains gained a totally new perception
of things.
I am suggesting that our students, instead
of being kept shackled at the back of the Cave, should be
relieved from the chains of the disciplines and brought
a bit nearer to the mouth of the cave.
While they still
lack experience and don't know how to look at things
properly, they will never actually see the day-light but
they might at least hear and smell the external phenomena.
Their sense of the outer reality will be enhanced, and
that I suspect is as much as we can hope for.
234
243
SUMMARY
The paper refers to the volume of comment querying
the relevance of theory of education for the development
of the practical skill of classroom teaching.
It traces
the historical development during the past twenty years
of the increasing importance attached to the study of the
educational disciplines within the field of theory.
A critique of the utility of the educational disciplines
is offered.
The author suggests that they reflect the
pre-paradigmatic condition of educational studies.
It
is suggested that a more appropriate model of enquiry
would be one concerned with a theory of schooling which
employed a phenomenological approach to the problem.
235
244
REFERENCES
The Professionalization of Teachers :
nal
J. rnai f Edu
A paradox", B t'
Studies, Vol. XXX, No. 2 (June 1982. p. 167,
1.
Eric Hoyle,
2.
Barbara Cowell and John Wilson, "Making Educational
Studies Respectable", European Journal of
Vol. 6. No. 1 (1983), p. 15.
Teacher Education,
3.
Michael Denny, "Educational Theory and Practice : a
Comparative Case Study among Primary and
Secondary Teachers", Irish Educational Studies,
Vol. 2.
4.
(1982),
p. 94.
David Harris, "Professional and Theoretical Perspectives
in Teacher Training : a school based study".
European Journal of Teacher Education.
Vol. 6, No. 1 (1983). pp. 41-50.
(London
Hamish and
5.
Philip Howard, WeasQl Words,
Hamilton. 1978). p. 13.
6.
James B. Conant. The Education _of American Teachers.
(New York : McGraw Hill, 1964) et seq.
7
f
9.
:
J. D. Browne. "The Balance of Studies in Colleges of
Education in Towards a Policy for the Education
Proceedings of the Twentieth
of Teachers"
Symposium of the Colston Research Society.
ed. by William Tyler (London : Butterworths
1969), p. 104.
G. H. Bantock, "Conflicts of Values in Teacher
Education", ibid. p. 129 et seq.
Eric Robinson, "Degrees for Teachers" in Dear Lord James
ed. by Tyrell
A Critique of Teacher Education.
Burgess, (London : Penguin Books Limited. 1971)
:
p. 134.
(Belfast :
10. John F. Fulton, Teachers - made not born,
The Queen's University of Belfast. 1978) p. 17
et seq.
11. Paul H. Hirst, "Professional Authority : Its Foundations
and Limits". British Journal of Educational
Vol. XXX, No. 2 (June 1982) p. 179.
Studies.
12. Eric Hoyle,
The Professionalization of Teachers", p. 168.
236
24 5
13. Thomas Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions
International Encyclopaedia of Unified Science
(Chicago : The University of Chicago Press
1970), p. 10 et seq.
14. H. M. Knox, "Developments in Te?cher Education in
Northern Ireland 194° - 1982), Irish Educational
Studies, Vol. 2: (1982) p. 231.
15. Richard Schmitt, "Phenomenology", The Encyclopaedia
pf Philosophy Vols, 5 and 6,
(London
Macmillan and The Free Press) p. 139
:
et
seq.
16. Joseph J. Schwab, Dialectical Means Versus Dogmatic
Extremes in Relation to Liberal Education.
Harvard Educational Review, Vol. XXI, No. 1,
p. 63.
237
24'6
Irish Educational Studies, Vol. 4, No. 1, 1984.
S^ME PHILOSOPHICAL ISSUES RELATING TO THE
IDENTIFICATION OF EDUCATION WITH THE
DEVELOPMENT OF REASON
Peter Joseph Gargan
INTRODUCTUN
The idea of education as the "development of reason"
has received widespread attention and allegiance among
philosophers of education in recent years. The three
volume work Education and the Develo.ment of Rea
t
edited by R. F. Dearden, P. H. Hirst and R. S. Peters
1
has contributions from several British philosophers of
This work represents an attempt to establish
education.
some basic ideas about what is essential to an
educational process, ideas which can serve as reference
points in educational debate and planning; the most
basic and general of these being, of course, the develop-
ment of reason.
The attempts of these philosophers must be viewed
in the context of the many curriculum innovations of recent
decades, the various additions justified under such
headings as "needs-based curricula", "education for life"
etc.
Their stress on "basic ideas" has earned them
The
the appropriate label of "essentialists".
essentialists are, for the moat part, sceptical of the
various innovations, seeing them as unsystematic and
based on shaky foundations.
Their emphasis :.11 on
basing curriculum policy on well established public
traditions or "forms of knowledge", for tnly these can
provide the criteria according to which claims to truth
can be appraised.
The essentialists are generally against
238
the idea of child-centredness (or what I prefer to call
pupil-centredness).
Their stress is on the content of
the forms of knowledge to be handed on and learned.
Hirst insists on the necessity of formal learning in all
the forms.
2
I think it is fair to say that certain basic ideas
which can serve as reference points in educational debate
are necessary and that without these discussion and
planning will be confused.
In this and in accepting
that education is especially concerned with the
development of reason I am in agreement with the essentialists.
My conclusions, however, are to quite an extent
at variance with theirs.
In this paper I will argue that
the essentialists' almost undivided attention to one aspect
of reason lends undue plausibility to their conclusions
and that the validity of their emphasis depends on
acceptance of a particular view of reason.
I hope to show
that focussing on another aspect of reason makes this clear.
Although the essentialists have stressed their concern
to ground their notion of education on the idea of the
development of reason they have confined their discussion
almost exclusively to one aspect of reason, that which is
concerned with truth - with what is the case, i.e. the
theoretical aspect. 3
Now many philosophers of reason
have thought of it as having a "practical" aspect.
can number Aristotle and Kant among these.
We
Recent
champions of the idea include R. M. Hare 4 and Roy Edgley. 5
What is meant by saying that reason can be practical?
Basically, that a question of the form what ought to be
done? and not just questions about what is the case can
be settled rationally, by reason.
Or, put another way,
that reason is active, i.e., it can operate in what we
do in actions and not just in judgments about what is
the case.
The neglect of this aspect of reason in
discussion on education can be explained or justified
239
248
in either of two ways,
(1) by rejecting the idea of reason's
being practical or (ii) by accepting the idea but holding
the view that education is not concerned with the
practical aspect of reason.6
In refuting the first of
these positions I hope to show that the second is also
based on a fundamental misunderstanding of the nature
of reason.
I will argue that not only can reason be
practical but that theoretical reason itself has a
practical aspect.
I will then discuss briefly the
educational implications of my argument.
THEORETICAL AND PRACTICAL REASON
One philosopher who held that reason cannot be
practical was David Hume.
7
Reason, according to him, is
perfectly inert - it cannot operate in action or in emotion.
Reason is the discovery of truth and falsehood.
summarise Hume's arguments briefly because
8
I will
(1) they
represent such a powerful, tough-minded statement against
the idea of reason's being practical and (ii) the
assumptions and emphases of the essentialists must
ultimately derive from a denial of the possibility of
reason's being practical or at least from a view that it
is essentially theoretical.
In claiming that reason is the discovery of truth
Hume builds his case on his famous distinction between
"representatives" and "original existences".
Representatives
include verbal symbols, concepts, propositions - things
which can be said.
in the real world,
They are distinguished from things
i.e.
original existences.
These
include natural events, actions, psychological states, etc.
Its products represent or
Reason is representative.
misrepresent things in the real world.
A reason is a
fact or truth and what follows from a reason must have
a truth-value, a conclusion which is true or false.
240
24 9
Actions are original existences, they cannot be inferred
or be conclusions in an argument, they cannot be true or
false.
Therefore there cannot be reasons for doing
anything.
9
This appears an extraordinary denial of practical
reason.
For what are we to make of practical judgments,
judgments about what ought to be done?
Arc these not
Can they not follow or be inferred
from others in an argument? e.g. "You should tell the
truth on th,
occasion" following from "One should never
representative?
hide the tra:11 on this matter".
But Hume has a strong
argument against acceptance of these appearances.
He
10
apparently sees
the problem as resulting from connecting
the terms "practical" and "judgment".
If these judgments
are genuinely practical, i.e. logically related to action,
then a reason for the practical judgment that something
ought to be done would also be a reason for doing that
thing.
But there cannot be reasons for doing anything
because actions cannot be Inferred, they cannot be true
or false, they cannot be conclusions in an argument.
These judgments, then, are not practical at all.
If Hume is right in claiming that there cannot be a
reason for an original existence then how are we to deal
with the case of believing something?
Believing is a
psychological state, an original existence.
If there
cannot be reasons for believing something to be the
case Hume's arguments can be used by extension against
theoretical reason.
Hume avoids this reduction ad
absurdum in his distinction between "what is believed"
and believing that thing, referring to belief in the
Appendix to the Treatise as a kind of feeling. 11
But
if there can be a reason for what is believed, i.e. a
theoretical judgment, is not this also a reason for
believing the judgment?
For if this is not the case, if
241
250-
Hume is right in claiming that a reason can only be a
reason for another fact - representative, then one could
not have a reason.
For the only way in which one could
have reasons is to have them for believing, thinking,
doing things, i.e., for original existences.
What sense
could we make of the idea of reason as a "human possession"
or endowment if we could not have reasons for anything?
The phrase "a reason for
is usually followed by
such verbs as believing, thinking, feeling, doing.
In answer to the question, for example, "What is your
reason for thinking that it will rain?" I may answer,
"the fact that it is overcast".
be a fact
The reason is said to
(as Hume views tt), but it is said to be a
"reason for" thinking something - an original existence.
It appears also that it is my thinking something that
makes the fact a reason for something else.
In other
words reason is not seen as operating in the fact itself
but in my thinking.
The reason, which is a fact, appears
to have a normative bearing on what I think.
The fact
that it is overcast justifies my thinking that it will
We need to take a closer look at the case of
rain.
believing or thinking something and at what the
relationship between what is believed and believing that
thing.
The question to be faced is whether there is a
necessary connection between the theoretical judgment and
believing the judgment.
In attempting to resolve this
problem I will draw on Edgley's12 arguments and his "two
lists" of statements.
List A contains truths of reason,
e.g. "p implies q", "q follows from p".
The statements
in List B contain both evaluative and psychological
concepts, e.g. "I believe that p implies q", "It is
inconsistent to think that p and at the same time that not-q",
The fact that p justifies the belie" that q".
242
251
Is there
a necessary connection between the statements in List A
and those in List B.
We are inclined to answer in the
affirmative despite the occurrence of concepts in the
second list which do not occur in the first.
For a
start it would be contradictory to assert A and deny
13
B.
D. Pole
argues that truths of logic must bear on
one's thinking at some point.
normatively.
They bear upon it
Edgley14 argues that the meaning or force
of any expression is a function not only of its
content but also of what it is used to do, e.g. express
a person's belief.
And he argues that, taking any
statement, any form of words expressing something which
is true or false,
its basic use is to express or state the
user's belief, conviction, or opinion . . .
thus understanding the meaning of, e.g.
"It is raining" involves knowing that these
words alone, without the addition of the
word believe or any of its synonyms or
near-synonyms can be properly used to state,
express or communicate one's belief
that it is raining.
15
Having seen how the problem of the psychological
concepts can be resolved we can see how normative notions
occur in List B.
or wrong.
Basically what I think may be right
It is logically possible for me to think
inconsistent things but it is logically impermissible.
This is the normative bearing of truths of logic.
It
appears then, that despite Hume's conviction that there
can be reasons for original existences, e.g. for thinking
or believing something, and that the notion of "a reason
for" something is basically a normative one.
Hume
demanded that original existences be inferrable for them
to have logical relations.
But the logical relations
required are those of consistency - my thinking should
be consistent with the facts.
243
252
The significance of these points is that they show
the normal context of reason is one's thinking, believing,
What conforms or is contrary to reason,
doing etc.
is reasonable or unreasonable, is something thinking that
The fact that it is overcast is the reason
p implies q.
for my thinking that it will rain - the fast functions as
a reason for my thinking something, it justifies my
thinking it.
If nobody thought that it was going to
rain the fact would not function as a reason for anything.
Reason, therefore operates in what one thinks, in
what one believes, in what one does - in original existences.
In this sense it is practical, it operates in one's
reasoning.
Reason is operative not in propositions
but in someone's asserting them, not in conclusions
but in someone's drawing conclusions.
Facts in themselves
are not reasonable or unreasonable (i.e. do not have reason
It is our believing or disbelieving
operating in them).
them that may be so.
EDUCATIONAL IMPLICATIONS
What I have said so far can be summarised as follows:
(i)
we can see how reason can be practical;
that it is
active, it operates in what we do.
(ii) Theoretical reason has a practical aspect, that it
is active,
i.e. it operates in what we do, our
thinking, believing, reasoning, etc.
It follows therefore that in talking about the development
of reason we are talking about the development of both
aspects - and in talking about the development of
theoretical reason we must remember that it has a practical
aspect.
We are talking about the development of the
pupil's use of theoretical reason, which implies his
independen'l use.
This means something more than the
244
2:53
acquisition of facts about what is the case, and of the
criteria for testing whether statements are true or false.
This is not to deny that the latter have an essential
role in the development of reason.
Neither do I suggest
that they are not exercises of reason.
But what is at
issue is the development of reason, the developed
exercise of reason, not an exhibition of the minimal
criteria of the exercise of reason.
A pupil may acquire several true facts in a wide
range of subjects, may acquire criteria for appraising
them as true without himself becoming genuinely involved
in what he is "doing" - perhaps it might be more
accurate to say "what is being done to him".
Such
cases are not hard to come by:
the pupil who is "well
prepared" by his teacher for an examination, who can
regurgitate the facts about what is the case and the
criteria for appraising them, can go through the motions
without ever "getting into" the thing.
Such a pupil
is fulfilling the minimum criteria of Hirst's idea
of the use of reason.
Such an absurdity as calling
this the "development of reason" arises because of the
failure to recognise the practical aspect of it, the
aspect which demands genuine involvement.
At the beginning I pointed out that the essentialists
are generally against pupil-centredness - their primary
focus is on the content to be learned rather than on what
the pupil does.
Now this obviously should be the case
if the development of reason is to be identified as the
acquisition of truth.
But recognition of the practical
aspect, by definition, shifts our concern to what the
pupil does.
What we are now emphasising is an active
agent.
An education of reason must be pupil-centred in
the sense that he must be involved, that it is the use
of his reason that is to be developed.
For passive
245
254
acquisition of the products of other's use of reason
cannot pass as the development of his own in anything but
a very limited sense.
It is also easy to see how one
should insist on formal learning in all the forms of
knowledge if an education of reason is identified with
But in recognising the
the acquisition of truth.
practical aspect what we are emphasising is not extensive
acquisition but that his own use of reason develops.
Our concern with the forms of knowledge is how they
facilitate the latter.
It cannot be assumed that the
more forms that are encountered, or the more facts that
are learned, the more likely it will be that his use of
reason will develop, particularly if extensive acquisition
hinders genuine involvement.
It may seem surprising that I have not brought up the
question of moral education especially since discussion
of practical reason normally occurs in the context of
But what
actions of a moral or prudential significance.
I am particularly concerned to show in this paper is
that theoretical reason itself has a practical aspect.
But the question may be used to bear out what I have
said.
Hirst
16
attempts to deal with moral learning by
making it a matter of learning about what is the case.
17
about critical tests of truth for moral
(He talks
judgments, though these are not as developed as in other
disciplines.)
Now this of course proves a great
For if anything demands genuine involvement
We could
from the agent reason in moral matters must.
difficulty.
not, for example, accept that an agent had settled his
moral questions by arriving at a set of judgments if
he continually failed to act in accordance with them.
CONCLUSION
If we accept the basic idea of the development of
246
255
reason as essential in an educational process we must
be very clear about what we mean by reason, and its
developed exercise. An over emphasis, we have seen,
may seriously distort our educational conclusions. I
have taken one aspect of reason, the practical aspect,
and shown how important recognition of it is in discussion
on education.
it prompts us to focus on what the pupil
does, on an active independent agent; that the reason
which is our concern is his reason and how it operates
in what he does. Failure to recognise this aspect may
result in our talking, not about the development of
reason at all, but simply about learning the products
of others' use of reason.
247
256
REFERENCES
1.
R. F. Dearden, P. H. Hirst and R. 3. Peters (eds.)
Education and the Development of Reason
Routledge and
(hereafter E.D.R.)) (London
Kegan Paul, 1972.
:
2.
P. H. Hirst, "Liberal Education and the Nature of
Knowledge" in E.D.R. pp. 391-414.
3.
For example, Hirst's overwhelming emphasis on the
acquisition of truth in "Liberal Education and
the Nature of Knowledge", and in his lecture
in Trinity College, Dublin, November 1983.
4.
R. M. Hare, The Lanouage of Morals, (Oxford :
University Press, 1952).
5.
R. Edgley, Reason in Theory and Practice, (London :
Hutchinson, 1969).
6.
R. S. Downie, E. M. Loudfoot and E. Telfer attempt
to mark off the concerns of education in
precisely this way in Education and Personal
Relationships
(London : Methuen, 1974)
pp. 67-70.
7.
D. hams, Treatise of Human Nature ed. by L. A. SelbyBigge (Oxford : University Press, 1975) e.g.
Book II Part III Sect. III, pp. 413-417 and
Book III, Part 1 Sect. 1, pp. 455-469.
8.
Ibid., p. 458.
9.
Ibid., pp. 413-417, 455-469.
10.
Ibid., pp. 452-466.
11.
Ibid., pp. 623-624.
12.
Edgley, Reason in Theory and Practice, pp. 49-50.
13.
D. Pole,
14.
Edgley, Reason in Theory and Practice, pp. 71.
15.
Ibid.
16
Hirst, "Liberal Education and the Nature of Knowledge",
p. 406.
17
Ibid.
The Concept of Reason", in Ea.2,,
pp. 151-175.
248
257
Irish Educational Studios, vol. 4, (Jo. 1, 1984.
PREDICTING SUCCESS IN FIRST UNIVERSITY
EXAMINATIONS IN HOME ECONOMICS COLLEGES
OF EDUCATION
Eamonn 0 Baiollain
Introduction
A review of some available research findings
indicated that the challenge of predicting academic
success in third level education is very demanding and
may not be very rewarding.
Prediction studies invariably use correlational
measures.
Ideally, one would look for studies which
correlate independent variables with the final
examination for the award of degree, diploma or
certificate qualification, but this may not be required
because it would appear that where significant relationships are established with success in first year
examinations, the expectation is that the subjects will
successfully complete the course of studies (Nevin. 1974;
Balser, 1976; Muia and Bleismer, 1976).
Review of Literature
A variety of independent variables have been used
as predictors.
positive relationships between entrance
examination results and the results in first university
examinations were reported for Australian universities
by Saunders (1948), but the extent of the relationships
was not such as to give grounds for predictive
complacency.
Powell (1973) reported that the best
249
258
predictive measure for a sample of 2,791 study '3. who
entered five Scottish universities, was the ay.-age of
the four highest grades attained in the Scottish
Certificate of Education examination ihich were weighted
according to a points score that reflected the quality of
the grades obtained.
Humphreys 11977) in a study carried
out on a sample of 282 entrants to University College,
Cork, in Autumn 1976 also found that the single best
predictor of subsequent performance in the first
university examination was the points score in the
Leaving Certificate examination.
Moran and Crowley (1978)
found that variations of the points system made little
or no difference to variance in the dependent variable,
thus suggesting the relative stability of the cumulative
Leaving Certificate examination result as a predictor of
Zirst university examinations to Cork.
Performance on scholastic aptitude tests at point
of entry was found by Powell (1973) to be a very poor
predictor of performance in university, and their
introduction, even as a supplementary measure to the
Scottish Certificate of Education results, was not
justified.
Test scores on Heim's A. H. 5 Aptitude
test were very poorly related to subsequent university
performance in Cork (Humphreys, 1977).
Reading measures would appear to have a worthwhile
potential to predict academic success at third-level from
a review of American research findings (Halfter and
Tillman, 1972:
Bednar and Weinberg, 1970;
Douglass, 1958:
Fairbanks, 1974).
Research Methodolonv
This paper reports findings from research carried
out in the Home Economics colleges of education in the
Republic of Ireland - St. Angela's College, Sligo, and
250
25
St. Catherine's College, Dublin - which investigated the
potential of a number of independent variables,
individually and combined, to predict success in the
First University Examinations at the colleges (0 Baiollain,
1982) .
The researcher had available to him the entrance
order of merit from which students were allotted places
in the respective colleges as well as the subject grades
awarded in the Leaving Certificate Examination to the
entrants.
Two reading tests and an intelligence test
were administered to 105 students which was a 91% sample
of the student-population intakes to the colleges in the
1977-'78 and 1978-'79 academic years (N = 115).
The Nelson-Denny Reading Test, Form D (Brown, 1973)
yielded measures of vocabulary, comprehension, total
reading competency computed from the vocabulary and
comprehension tests, and reading rate.
The Marino
Graded Word Reading Scale (0 Suilleabhain, 1970) was a
test of oral word recognition &lid pronunciation which
reported results in reading ages.
The Advanced Progressive
Matrices Set II (Raven, 1965) measured the intelligence
of students non-verbally.
The various Independent
variables were correlated with the First University
(Summer) Examinations.
The Colleges were dealt with
separately for the purposes of predicting first university
examination results because the degree courses offered in
the colleges were dismissal ar.
Different universities
were responsible for validating the end of year examinations:
University College, G.Ilway,in the case of St. Angela's
and Dublin University in the case of St. Catherine's.
The diverse nature of the various independent
variables demanded that a variety of correlational
procedu.s be employed, namely product-moment,
rank-order and tetrachoric.
Spearman
The regression of the first
251
260
university examination results on suitable independent
variables was used to yield predictive equations of the
linear type.
Finally, multiple correlation was used to
maximise relationships and to assess the success or
otherwise of predicting success in the first university
examinations.
Findinas
The section will report (a) correlation studies
which will be followed by a summary discussion:
(b)
regression studies, and (c) multiple prediction.
(a)
Correlation Studies
Table 1 gives correlations between entrance order
and first university examination results in the colleges.
TABLE 1
Spearman Rank Correlations Between Entrance
Order and First University Examinations At Home
Economics Colleges of Education
(i) St. Angela's
(N = 47)
(ii)
St. Catherine'
(N = 52)
0.24
0.22
0.38
(P = 0.0080)
0.18
Home Management
0.23
0.20
Food Studies
0.27
0.16
Dress and Design
0.38
Education
Science
(P = 0.0080)
0.34
(P = 0.0188)
Aggregate
252
26
-0.01
0. 19
The entrance order of subjects to St. Angela's
was moderately but significantly associated with their
end of first year examination results in Science, Dress
and Design, and Aggregate, whereas the entrance order
of subjects to St. Catherine's was not significantly
associated with end of first year results.
Tables 2 and 3 report the significant
relationships between Leaving Certificate grades and
first university examinations in the colletes.
TABLE 2
Tetrachoric Correlations between Leaving Certificate
Grades and First University Examination Results at
St. Angela's
Home
Food
Dress
Education Science Management Studies Design
Gaeilge
0.57
(P.0.0150)
English
P
Modern/
Classical
Languages
Aggregate
0.44
0.05
0.71
(P=0.0042)
0.34
0.59
(P=0.0250) F=0.0150)
Mathematics/
.cience
History/
Geography
Home
Economics
253
262
Tetrachoric Correlations Between Leaving Certificate
Grades and First University Examination Results at
St. Catherine's
TABLE 3
Hone
Family &
Education Science Society
Food
Tech- Dress &
nology Design
Aggregate
Gaei lge
English
Modern/
Classical
Languages
0.66
(P=0.0052)
0.54
Mathematics/
Science
0.47
(P=0.0128) 0.37 (P=0.0272)
(P=0.0046)
Hi story/
Geography
Home
Economics
0.5S
(P=(x.0286)
Only Modern/Classical languages yielded correlations
approaching the substantial: 0.71 with Science at
St. Angela's (Table 2) and 0.66 with Education at St.
Catherine's (Table 3).
Clearly Modern/Classical
languages were best predictors at end of year examinations
at St. Angela's:
they correlated significantly with
Science (0.71), Dress and Design (0.34) and the
Aggregate Result (0.59) (Table 2).
Mathematics/Science
grades were the best predictors of end of year results
at St. Catherine's: they correlated significantly with
Food (0.54), Dress (0.37), and the Aggregate (0.47)
(Table 3).
The Leaving Certificate grades in Gaeilge, English,
History/Geography and Home Economics were found to have
little or no potential for predicting end of year
examination results at the colleges.
Attainment in
Home Economics as measured by Leaving Certificate grades
might have been expected to correlate significantly
with end of first year attainment at cllege in the Home
Economics subjects of Food, Dress and Home Management,
but such did not prove to be the case.
The correlation
of 0.55 reported between Home Economics Leaving
Certificate grades and results in Home, Family and
Society at St. Catherine's (Table 3)
was clearly
influenced by the strong sociological content area of the
course.
It was also apparent that the importance given
generally to English in the selection of entrants to
the colleges was not justified by the potensual of the
Leaving Certificate English grades to predict end of
first yer examination results at college.
Table 4 sets out the predictive potential of the
cumulative Leaving Certificate results.
TABLE 4
Product-Moment Correlations Between Leaving
Certificate Points Aggregate from Best Six
Subjects and First University Examination
Results at the Home Economics Colletes
(1) St. Angela's
(ii) St. Catherine's
Education
0.54(P
0.0001)
0.18
Science
0.45(P
0.0025)
0.37
Home Management
0.32(P
0.05)
0.13
Food Studies
0.43(P
0.005)
Dress & Design
0.27(P. 0.05)
Aggregate Result
0.48(P
0.001)
(P
0.01)
0.03
-0.02
0.17
The cumulative result from six ',keying Certificate
subjects was moderately predictive at end of year attainment
at St. Angela's whereas only one significant correlation
was sported for St. Catherine's.
When it was noted
that the overall Leaving Certificate levels from best
six subjects of testees at St. Catherine's were superior
255
264
to those at St. Angela's at the 0.05 level approximately,
it was open to speculate that the contrasting predictive
potential of achievement in best six Leaving Certificate
subjects may have been reflecting the differential
ratios of theory to practical in the end of year
examinations at the colleges (a 60 : 40 ratio in favour
of theory in the examinations of St. Angela's contrasted
with a similar ratio in favour of the practical at St.
Catherine's) .
The validity coefficients for the colleges in
respect of the reading variables and intelligence are
detailed in Tables 5 and 6.
Pr9duct-Moment Correlations Between Measures of
Reading and Intelligence and First University
Examination Results at St. Angela's
TABLE 5
Vocabulary
Education
Comprehension
0.38
0.47
(P 0.01) (P 0.001)
Total
0.39
(P 0.01)
Reading
Rate
Marino
A.P.M.
(11)
0.36
0.29
(P 0.025) (P 0.05)
Science
Home
0.33
management
(P 0.025)
Food
(P
Studies
Dress &
Design
Aggregate
0.33
(P 0.05)
256
265
0.29
(P 0.05)
0.34
0.025)
TABLE 6
Product-Moment Correlations Between Measures of Reading
and Intelligence and First University Examination
Results at St. Catherine's.
Vocab-
ulary
Compreh-
ension
Read-
ing
Total
Marino
A.P.M.
(11)
Rate
Education
0.28
(P 0.05)
Science
0.29
0.30
(P 0.05)(P 0.05)
0.26
2.8
(P 0.05)
0.29
0.37
(P 0.05) (P 0.05)
(P 0.05)
Home,
Fami ly &
Society
Food
Tech-
-0.25
nology
(P
0.05)
Dress &
Design
Aggregate
0.27
(P 0.05)
Twenty-five percent of the relationships between
the research test variables and the end of year examination
results in each college were significant at or beyond
the 0.05 level.
The coefficients were moderate to low,
ranging in absolute size from 0.47 to 0.29 at St.
Angela's (Table 5) and 0.37 to 0.29 at St. Catherine's
(Table 6) .
Education
results were the
most often predicted
at both colleges.
The First University Aggregate Result
at St. Angela's was predicted by Total (V + C) test
(0.33; P
0.05) and the Marino Scale (0.29; P
0.05).
University Aggregate Result at St. Catherine's
was predicted by the Marino Scale (0.27; P 0.05)
Though these coefficients were low, they are important
because the Examination is awarded on the aggregate result.
The First
257
266
.,
Summary Discussion
An assessment of the potential of the various
predictors in the Home Economics colleges points to the
greater likelihood of better prediction of the first
university examination results at St. Angela's.
Six
variables correlated significantly with the First
University Aggregate at St. Angela's:
merit (0.34)
(Table 1);
entrance order of
Leaving Certificate grades achieved
in Modern/Classical languages (0.59)
(Table 2);
the
Leaving Certificate points aggregate from best six
subjects (0.48) (Table 4);
Nelson-Denny Test (V + C)
(0.29) (Table 5).
attainment on the Total
(0.33), and Marino reading age
In the case of St. Catherine's,
only two variables correlated significantly with the
First University Aggregate Result: Leaving Certificate
grades in Science (0.47)
(Table 3) and *akin() reading ages
(0.27) (Table 6).
The correlation of the Leaving Certificate points
aggregate from best six subjects yielded contrasting results
for the colleges.
The cumulative Leaving Certificate
result correlated significantly with each subject examined
at the end of first year in St. Angela's whereas only
one significant relationship was reported in th- case
of St. Catherine's (Table 4).
Modern/Classical languages at St. Angela's (Table
2) and grades achieved in Science subjects at St. Catherine's
(Table 3) were found to be de.erving of extra weighting
in the selection of entrants to the respective colleges.
The measure of non-verbel intelligence, Advanced
Progressive Matrices Set II, did not correlate significantly
with the First University Examination Aggregate Results
at the colleges (Tables 5 and 6).
It was also apparent
from Tables 5 and 6 that the reading variables tended to
predict end of first year results in Education at St.
Angela's, and Education and Science results in St.
258
267
Catherine's. The prediction pattern derived from the
reading variables was certainly no less sketchy for the
colleges than that provided by other categories of
predictors.
The significant relationship between the NelsonDenny Total Test scores and First University Examination
Aggregate Result at St. Angela's (Table 5) was more of
academic interest than of practical importance because
the independent variable was a weighted composite of
vocabulary and comprehension test scores which required
35 - 40 minutes to derive. On the other hand, the
significant relationships between Marino reading ages
and the First University Aggregate Results at both
colleges (Tables 5 and 6), though of a low order,
were practicable because they were derived from an
ordered arrangement of words from age-level 12 upwards
of the Scale, administered according to a phoentic marking
scheme in under 5 minutes (0 Baio llain, Chapter 15, 451-452;
Appendix 16, 952-957).
It was therefore decided to
investigate the regression of one on the other.
b)
Regression Studies
The regression of the Aggregate Results on the Marino
reading ages yielded the following equations and prediction
ranges (Table 7).
TABLE 7
Regression of First University Examination
Aggregates on Marino Graded Word Reading Scale
for (1) St. Angela's and (ii) St. Catherines
Regression Equation Prediction Range Percentage of Subjects
who scored within the
Prediction Range
Y1=29.58 + 12.916X
(i)St. Angela's
185-288
94
(ii)St. Catherine's
Y1=208.63 + 5.560X
275.320
61
259
268
The Marino Graded Word Reading Scale could therefore
be recommended as an effective predictor of the First
University Examination at St. Angela's, and a less
effective but still satisfactory predictor of success
at St. Catherine's.
(c)
Multiple Prediction
The usefulness of multiple predictors in the
0 Baiollain study was explored in relation to (i)
four
reading variables - Nelson-Denny Vocabulary, Comprehension
and Reading Rate Subtests, and the Marino Graded Word
Reading Scale - and (ii) twelve variables, which in
addition to the four reading variables included Advanced
Progressive Matrices Set II, the Leaving Certificate points
aggregate from best six subjects, Leaving Certificate
grades awarded in Gaeilge, English, Modern/Classical
Languages, Mathematics/Science, History/Geography and Home
Economics.
Multiple correlation coefficients with the
First University Examination Aggregates at the colleges
are reported in Table 8.
TABLE 8
Multiple Correlations of (i) Four Reading
Variables with First University Examination
Aggregates at (a) St. Angela's and (b) St.
Catherines
(i)
1.2345
(ii)
1.23
.
.
. 13
(a)
St. Angela's
(P = 0.0066)
0.69
(P
0.00006)
(b)
St. Catherine's 0.39 (P = 0.0046)
0.54
(P
0.00006)
0.35
As expected, the use of multiple predictors
strengthened the validity coefficients for reading, and
the twelve-variable prediction maximised the correlation
260
269
with Aggregate Results to
0.54 at St. Catherine's.
59 at St. Angela's and
The four-variable reading
coefficients only marginally improved on the amount of
variance in the First University Examination Aggregates
which had been previously accounted for by the singlevariable, Marino reading age (cf. Tables 5 and 6).
The
substantial amounts of variance not accounted by the
twelve-variable correlation (53% at St. Angela's and
71% at St. Catherine's) highlighted the difficulty of
predicting success in the First University Examinations.
Conclusion
The research findings reported correlations with
the end of first year examinations at the colleges which
were generally at a low to moderate order.
It emerged
clearly that the prediction of academic success was
specific to the various courses and to each colJige.
The need to replicate prediction studies in other
institutions is obvious.
The findings also indicated that reading measures
have a worthwhile potential to predict success at thirdlevel.
While the use of Marino reading age in a
prediction equation relating to first year university
examinations is certainly contrary to expectation, it
should lead to further investigation into the usefulness
of the Marino Scale with other testees.
Substantial amounts of variance in the dependent
variable, first university examination results, were
left unaccounted by the multiple correlation involving
twelve variables.
It must be noted that the myriad
of non-academic factors which militate against good
prediction were not formally considered in the research.
261
270
It was concluded that prediction of academic success
is a very demanding and complex area of research, and
it would appear utopian to expect that any given
combination of independent variables, not to speak of
one of them, will fully predict academic success.
271
262
REFERENCES
Balser, E. A.
(1976).
The Relationship Between Text
Readability And Student Reading Level
and its Effect on College Achievement.
Ed. D. Dissertation, West Virginia
University.
Bednar, R. L. and Weinberg, S. L. (1970).
Ingredients
of successful Treatment Porgrams for
Underarchievers, lournal of Counseling
PsycholooY,17, 1-7.
Brown, J. I.
(1973).
Nelsgn-Denny Reading Test,
Form D. Boston
Houghton Mifflin.
:
Fairbanks, M. M. (1974).
The Effect of College Reading
Improvement Programs on Academic Achievement,
Twenty -Third Yearbook of the National Reading
Conference. In Nacke, P. L. (ed.)
Clemson, South Carolina, 105-114.
Halfter, I. T. and Douglass F. M. (1958).
"Inadequate"
College Readers.
Journal Of Developmental
Reading, 1, 48, 42-53.
Humphreys, A.
(1977).
Cognitive, Non-Cognitive,
Biographic and Demographic Correlates of
Students' Performance in First University
Examination.
M.A. Thesis, Univers:Ay
College Cork.
Moran, M. A. and Crowley, M. J. (1978).
The Leaving
Cert ficate apd First Year University
Performance. Department of Statistics,
University College. Cork.
Muia, J. A. and Bleismer, E. P. (1976).
Prediction of
Academic Success of Special Groups of
University Freshmen, Twenty-Fifth Yearbook
of the National Readina Conference in
McNinch, G. H. and Miller, W. D. (eds.),
Clemson, South Carolina, 88-95.
Nevin, M.
(1974)
School Performance a d_Uniyersity
Achievement. Research Series No. 1,
Higher Education Authority, Dublin.
263
272
O Baiollain, E.
The Reading Factor in First
(1982).
Year of Degree Courses in Home Economics
Colleges of Education in the Republic
of Ireland : An Investigation with
Special Reference to StUdent Selection
Doctoral Thesis,
and Study Success.
National University of Ireland.
The Marino_graded Word
0 Suilleabhain, S. (1970).
Reading Scale. Dublin : Longman, Brown
& Nolan.
Powell, J. L.
(1973).
Scotland.
Selection for University In
University of London Press.
Raven, J. C.
(1965).
Advanced Progressive Matrices
Sets 1 and 11. London : J. K. Lewis & Co.
Saunders, C.
Studert Selection And Academic
(1948).
Success.
Commonwealth Office of
Education : Education Series No. 1, Sydney.
Measuring Outcomes in College
Tillman, C. E. (1972).
Reading Programs, Twenty -first Yearbook of
the National Reading Conference, (11).
in Greene, F. P. (ed.). Boone, North
Carolina, 205-212.
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273
Irish Educational Studios, Vol. 4, No. 1, 1984.
IMAGINATION : THAT ONE TALENT THAT LIES BURIED
Samas V.
1
6
Sifilleabhgin
INTRODUCTION
One often comes across the word 'imagination' in
an educational context.
There is seldom much more than
that.
The power and implications of this human capacity
are seldom analysed or developed.
This, I suggest, is
regretable.
We have been given this talent and yet we
leave it buried.
We do not use it to the full.
Because
that is so I suggest we become locked within a rigid system
with very high wall boundaries.
Imagination is one of those
neglected avenues vnich, also, leads towards the perception
of meaning and truth.
In this short paper I would like
to develop some points which might suggest a new appraisal
of the imagination in the education process.
Before doing
that may I read two quotations.
The first is a comment by Gerald Haigh.
This
appeared in the Times Educational Supplement of the 30th
December, 1983.
From a much longer article I take the
following:
I suggest that what we need to do in 1984.
of all years, is look again at what we mean
by 'teaching' and 'education' and then vow
with solemnity and vehemence that we will
resist all further attempts on the part of
the people with briefcases to subvert the
transcendental purposes of our calling.
The point is that education is not essentially
(my italics) about systems at all.
It is
concerned with imagination and creativity.
The prime purpose.of the teacher is to liberate
the imagination so that pupils may grow and
mature as creative and autonomous people.
Good
teachers have always been able to do this and
will continue to do so regardless of where they
265
274
What is important
find themselves.
about a teacher is not what system he
works in, or uses, or believes in, but
whether he can, at that narrow glinting
point where all the systems and methods
converge, strike sparks from the pupils
around.
Education is about 'sparks' and not about 'systems'.
I
would also like in opening this paper ..%) give you a second
This time it is from Susanne K. Langer in her
quotation.
book Problems of Art, she writes:
Technique is the means to the creation of
expressive form, the symbol of sentience?
the art process is the application of some
The
human skill to this essential purpose.
making of this expressive form is the creative
process that enlists a man's utmost technical
skill in the service of his utmost conceptual
1
power, imagination.
The point of these two auotations is to give us the
opportunity
to jump over the wall' and then having escaped
to realize our freedom.
No doubt any national system of education will have
high on its list such things as acco...ntability, advisory
committees, panels of experts, administrative simplicity
Given the cowlexity of our times
and five year plans.
any responsible sate agency must have regard to these
things.
What I am putting forward, however, is a plea that,
on the one hand, the system does not introde too much
within the real live classroom an.1 secondly a plea to
teacher, to use their creative imagination to seize upon
whatever opportunities there are to liberate themselves
and their pupils from whatever form of pre-packaged
education they are asked to dispense.
There is an interesting observation by Liam Hudson
in his book The Cult of the Fact, he writes:
In the course of the last six chapters I have
edged towards the view that, in any educational
266
275
establishment worthy of the name, malleable
youth is coerced to think in ways of which
their teachers approve.
If there are one
kind of excellence in matters of the mind,
such a process would be uncontroversial.
Training a man's mind would be like training
him to lift weights: it could be done more
or less well.
It was just this athletic
analogy that occurred to Francis Galton a contemporary of Acton's and the founding
father of mental testing.
It has remained
lodged in
imaginations of mental testers
ever since.
2
And again discussing his own university education he notes:
Excellence was defined in terms of verbal
precision; meaning was defined whether in
terms of public fact or of formal logic.
Such a system ensures that any examination
of gensral and imprecise ideas is viewed as
bogus, or self-evidently mistaken.
3
One further point, R. D. Laing in his work, The Politics
of Experience, had this to say regarding the thought of
Jules Henry:
It is Henry's contention that education
in practice has never been an instrument
to free the mind and the spirit of man,
but to bind them
.
Children do not give
up their innate imagination, curiosity,
dreaminess easily.
You have to love them to
get them to do that.
Love is the path
through permissiveness to discipline: and
through discipline only too often, to
betrayal of self.
What school must do is
to induce children to want to think the
way school wants them to think.
4
.
.
These few observations point to a current, narrow
and highly particularised view of excellence, of what it
means to be Aucated.
These observations ko, people who
themselves ate in the tradition of what we might call
academically respectable disciplines point to the singular
lack of imagxnation, flexibility, creativity that seems
to be part and parcel of ocr system.
At present the system is tecoming more so than less
so.
For instance accountabilitl cannot measure imagination.
267
276
It can measure specified targets, skills, products and
results.
The present discussion upon criterion -
referenced testing in England, an offshoot to my mind of
accountability, the search for measurable outcomes, is
putting emphasis upon factual knowledge, skills, and set
targets for each to reach.
Further, one notes an
increasing move towards multiple-choice questions and
mechanical, or machine marking, of tests.
In the languages
there is a tendency to move towards oral competence as
distinct from the more expressive forms of the language
to oe found in literature.
I am not condemning these moves
as they do have some legitimacy.
What I am saying is
that imagination, that one talent that lies buried, looks
as if it is going to remaiA buried.
I have spoken at some length elsewhere about the
current emphasis upon content in our school programmes.
Obviously there must be content;
we are the inheritors
If one reflects on that heritage
of a very rich tradition.
it soom becomes clear that some of the greatest
contributions to that tradition were themselves people
of imagination for instance Homer, Plato, Virgil, Galileo,
Michael Angelo, Copernicus, Shakespeare, Beethoven, Freud,
Kierkegaard, Einstein and Schweizer, to name only a few.
Every great human advance begins with reflection - reflection
upon some aspect of the human condition or some aspect of
the wider reality.
That reflection is generally helped
along by the free play of the mind moving from one thought
to another, from one image to another.
It is this freedom
from conventional boundaries and from fixed positions
which allows a new thought to come forth.
originate with great minds.
Great thoughts
While conceding that point,
however, let us not forget that we all have this 'imaginative,
talent.
In each life, especially during the period of
formal education, there must be time for reflection, for
contemplation;
otherwise we become dried up dessicated
268
2 77
people.
In our professional work as educators we should
try to emulate Coleridge who united, as few others have,
a poetic power of reconstructing experience in its
fullness and uniqueness with a philosophic power of
creative speculation
In my own case I have found great mental excitement
in using my imagination.
This is particularly true in
two dimensions.
One is reflecting on the world of nature
especially the sea with its restlessness, its hidden pow...r,
its mystery.
problems.
The other, quite different, is in making up
This is not at all the same as asking yourself
questions or solving problems which others present.
What then is the natu.e of this talent which I suggest
lies so often hidden and unused and bringing us in no return?
II
THE NATURE OF IMAGINATION
1
Terms
When we come to examine the situation we find a
number of terms all springing from the same etymological
background.
We find 'image', 'imaging', 'imagery',
'imagining' and 'imagination'.
first three straight away.
I will dispose of the
'Image refers to a 'likeness',
a 'representation' in the mind but not necessarily visual.
'Imaging' refers to the activity of having images.
a word not found in every dictionary.
It is
'Imagery' refers
to images in general, to mental pictures, or fitures of
speech.
Let it be further noted tnat 'image'
from the Latin 'imago' through Old French.
feature is the basic link between 'image',
is derived
An interesting
'imaging' and
our word 'imitate'.
These two words appear to have a common
root in a distant Indo-European origin although recent
language experts consider this sharing somewhat dubious.
269
278
We recognise that
to imitate' means to resemble someone
in one way or another.
The other terms directly related to our first three,
tnat is 'image',
'imaging' and 'imagery' are 'imagining'
and 'imagination'.
These terms are wider in scope and
go beyond an 'image' to involve 'supposition', or a
new construction.
Looking at the overall context in which these words
are used we can see two rather general senses:
(1)
the general power or process of having mental images.
In this sense it seems better to use the terms
'imaging' and 'imagery' rather than 'Imagining' or
secondly,
(2)
the process of forming new ideal combinations which
depend on the relative absence of objective restrictions,
and the consequent freedom of subjective selection.
Bearing these two points in mind it is this relative
freedom which forms the connecting link between imagination
in the sense of imagery and imagination in the sense of
free selective combinations.
This latter freedom allows
an escape from the concrete and real restrictions of
past or present events into a world where other possibilities
may lie.
:t is in relation to this other world of
possibilities that I suggest that our imaginative talent
lies btsied and unused.
In a response to observed needs
we have all heard about open-plan classrooms, setting,
team teaching and teachers who write their own reading
texts.
More recently we have heard about community based
learning, school based mini companies, pastoral care
programmes and so forth.
These are imaginative reactions
to these observed needs.
This talent does not stand in isolation.
270
279
It is very
closely linked with those other human capacities which
form the basis of our knowing and acting. Imagination
is very much involved in our ways of perceiving which is
basic for knowing and in our ways of regarding consequences
which is basic for acting. As our professional work in
school is largely based upon knowing and acting we can
ill afford to leave this human talent of imaginatior unused.
2
Origin
Let us attempt now to look closer into the nature of
imagination by initially looking to some of it., operations.
The old scholastic phrase still holds good operatic)
sequitur esse" which signifies that the way a thing works
depends upon its nature. We may note that whenever a
person has to do anything that is not strictly repetitive
he imagines what needs to be done and what are likely to
be the consequences before he decides on action. There
is ar element of seeking (appetitive tendency) in this.
There is the seeking for an approach leading to a solution,
leading to knowledge, leading to meaning, and also there is
a seeking for a 'good' result, an affect. One can see
therefore that in some senses this imaginative capability
has a deliberate 3 lement in deciding on action (the will)
and a feeling element in seeking for affect (the emotion) .
Fror this it is clear that imagination is essentially
part of our very human being linked as it is to our search
for understanding and to our search for affect. Imagination
and sensibility are closely related as one may regard
sensibility as a mode of perceiving, ordering, valuing
and realising experience, in part a cognitive, in part an
affective operation. 6 It appears then that this capacity
is both passive as fancy and active as construction. It
the f esh and the spirit. The
repetitive task is based upon fact. The nonrepetitive
task calls for a new approach
For example, the pupil
is asked to write an essay on 'A Day in the Life of a
can serve two masters:
271
280
Newspaper Cameraman'.
How does one approach this task?
Or given a certain amount of say cardboard (with cellotape,
tools .
.) how would you design the maximum interior
house space?
Or you as a teacher have a class not very
interested in a section of the history programme.
How
.
do you fare the challenge?
Mecnanical responses would
One has to imagine and construct new
be inadequate.
approaches.
Hence we have the striving for new perceptions
tried out in action.
Thus constructive imagination is
dominated by this systematic unity of plan which controls
and directs the process of selective combination.
Ryle,
in his work The Concept of Mind, remarked that
no one thing can be called imagination but rather, he said.
we must consider a variety of activities that are
imaginative such as pretending, impersonating, fancying
and so forth.
7
Hence the importance of play and make
believe for the young.
All good teachers realise that
there is a world of possibilities in all these areas of
role-playing, pretending, supposing, impersonating and so
Language teaching, history, literature, religion
on.
are obvious areas of direct interest.
The natural sciences
may also be involved especially in the junior classes.
For Piaget, the focus of attention with regard to
the place of imagination lies in the natural unfolding
of the child's symbolic capacities in accommodating to
environmental stimulation (need to reach out) and
assimilating these environn2ctel circumstances (seeking
for a match or fit or pattern fur the stimuli from the
environment).
Development CEpends upon both.
Assimilation recognises patterns and this sense of
achievement or delight promotes further exploration of
stimulation.
Quite early on (18 months), recognition
may be consolidated by make believe.
Thus we find that
play and make believe are intrinsic features of cognitive
and affective development.
272
281
From here we can see the
impulse for potential creativity, exploration, and
sensitivity to one's world.
Pattern recognition occurs
for the young child in speech recognition.
Delight at
making sense out of a mixture of sounds leads to imitation,
trying out a pattern, and later on the child pretends to
be mother, or the teacher, or the postman.
The
recognition of pattern, that is some recognisable structure
to stimulation, always gives us a gradual sense of
meaning, of control, of expectation.
With imagination
we may repeat, or anticipate, or re-enact previous
stimulation, or devise new styles of stimulation based
upon old patterns.
We used to be told that one of the
essential characteristics of intelligence was the recognition
of relationships and, more importantly for the development
of intelligence, the building up of new relationships.
Logic does play a part but so does this free ranging
unrestricted play of the imagination.
To carry the argument a stage further we find
H. H. Price in his work on Thinking and Experience writing:
. both words and images are used as
symbols.
They symbolise in quite different
ways, and neither sort of symbolisation is
reducible to or dependent on the other.
8
.
.
The key to man's cognitive capacity, his capacity to bring
meaning to his world, lies largely in this ability to
symbolise, that is to represent things, happenings, and
feelings.
In this way any man recognises patterns in time
and in space and over time and over space.
He can link
patterns to other patterns, develop concepts, create order,
strive or meaning.
Imagination also uses symbolisation
and is thus a rart of this great symbolic power.
This
ability to symbolise is man's great talent which lifts him
beyond the 'sensible',
the here and now, the immediate.
Imagination crosses the three fundamental human characteristics
of cognition, conation, and affection or in more familiar
language learning, striving and loving.
The origin of
273
2 8'2
imagination has the same origin as all these three
capacities.
It is essentially human in its widest
reaches.
What are the uses, then, of this wonderful talent?
3
Uses of Imagination
Imagination functions in two broad ways.
It may
revive or reproduce past experiences within the context
Unless there is an abnormal condition
of image or images.
these recalled or reproduced images are recognised as past.
Somehow, too, imagination is linked to memory where the
remembrance of things past is either pleasant or unpleasant
in the broadest sense.
Consequently in a context of the
present this reproductive imagination linked to memory may
very readily lead us into an area of judgement which is an
act of reason and may lead us into a present decision which
is an act of will.
On the other hand imagination functions
The man of science may give rein
to create something new.
to his imagination when searching for a possible
explanation in the way he frames hypotheses.
As the facts
become known his freedom to hypothesize becomes correspondingly restricted.
From a base of knowledge one sets
up a variety of possibilities.
activity.
This is imaginative
The imagination of the poet and the novelist
is free from objective restrictions in as much as their
mental activity is not immediately directed to the
development of knowledge of the real world or to the
attainment of practical ends.
They intercept reality
This freedom, like that of the
through their creations.
scientist, gradually becomes curtailed and is, of course,
not absolute but relative.
Imagination gives us a
certain power to explore possibilities, to day dream our
wishes, to control the environment, to interpret the
world, to close the gaps, to spot the ridiculous.
If
our world were totally quantified, totally fixed, then we
274
283
would not be in a position to look for the unexpected,
to see the unconventional, to break the mould.
Furlong has written:
E. J.
. to act with imagination is to act with
freedom, with spontaneity; it is to break
with the trammels of the orthodox of the
accepted:
it is to be original, constructive
.
.
It is clear that imagination is linked to our
capacity to know.
Some further expansion of this link
might be of interest here.
III
THE RELATION OF IMAGINATION TO KNOWING
As was mentioned earlier on in this paper imagination
is a capacity or power, linked with others, and used when
we are seeking meaning or understanding.
The scientist
hypothesizes using at times imagination to do so.
The
poet uses imagination to communicate his feelings, his
view of man.
The novelist uses imagination to give us
his interpretation of some aspect of life.
The craftsman
uses imagination in an effort to visualise or comprehend
his particular solution to his particular problem.
The
medical clinician uses imagination to eliminate hypotheses
and to set up others for testing.
The teacher uses
imagination when he asks how he may introduce a new topic
or surmount some classroom obstacle.
All of these cases
go beyond routine, beyond habitual responses.
These
cases are seeking meaning, understanding, suiutions,
approaches.
In short, these various forms are seeking
knowledge.
Without delving too deeply into the philosophical
concepts of knowledge, of which there are a number, it
is clear that in one important sense knowledge is a
subjective correspondence with external reality.
There
is an objective concrete reality, knowing which we call
275
264
knowledge.
If my experience does not reach to this
objective world how can I contact it.
Take for example
life among the Eskimos, life in the Sudan, life in the
That is one form of reality
Amazon forests of Brazil.
which without experience I only know through imagination
based upon linked experience with the aid of outside
Something very similar applies in history.
information.
There are, however, other forms of knowledge where
we try to understand the patterns, sometimes evident,
This is
he world about us.
sometimes not so evident, in
the domain of the scientist, be he a natural scientist,
or a social scientist.
The search for system or repetitive
patterns is greatly aided by imagination which can, in
its own fashion, escape beyond the restrictions of present
A step beyond pattern recognition is the
interpretation.
search for causation, another step in our struggle for
Sometimes logic may lead us
meaning, for understanding.
from effect to cause;
other times a free wheeling play
within the imagination may help.
Imagination
As Kant once said let us work
can play a part here too.
on the base of an
Finally, knowledge is
Why is that so?
also concerned with purpose.
'as if'.
imagination is not knowledge.
May I stress, however, that
It is a human capacity
to aid our thinking, our reasoning, our judgement.
The
outcomes of imagination will be judged by their correspondence with reality, with reason, with logic, and with
proof.
In popular usage imagination is generally held to
be the power for forming mental images or other concepts
Yet, in spite of
not directly derived from sensation.
popular usage,
the majority of philosophers from Aristotle
to Kant considered imagination in relation to knowledge
or opinion.
Many considered imagination as an element
in knowledge or as an obstacle to it, especially where
fancy runs riot.
Hume said that imagination was vital
276
2;95
This view was supported by Kant who
to knowleglge.1°
wrote about imagination ".
.
have no knowledge whatever .
. without which we would
.
In his view
.".
reproductive imagination helps to complete our perceptions,
for example,
that a cube has six sides, even if we can
only see three.
Further he maintained that, the productive
Imagination was the "transcendental synthesis of
imagination which combines our experience into a single
connected whole".
11
'Transcendental' in this context
means conditions of possibility.
For him the productive
imagination makes possible the linking up of experience
without which the world would represent a chaotic confusion
of diverse unconnected elements.
Just as memory links
my present to my past as a known continuum so to imagination
plays a rather similar role in helping to shape varieties
of experience into a connected whole.
If
I may refer to Wordsworth's poem
The Prelude'.
In this poem Wordsworth shows the link between imagination
and knowing for in
The Prelude' reason means intellect
enlivened by feeli:14, made nervous by sensibility,
dignified by a concern for value and intimately connected
with words (part VI, lines 113-134).
Above all, according
to William Walsh, it means intellect kindled by imagination
for at the highest stage Wordsworth will allow no division
between these. 12
As Jerome L. Singer writes:
This human capacity to behave in the subjective
mood, so to speak, implies an early development
of flexibility in dealing with concrete objects
of the human environment, and may be one of the
keys to ultimate adult creativity and ability
to control the environment as well as a bssis
for some of the more complex subtleties and
difficulties in interpersonal relationships
that beset men and women.
13
277
286
To advance knowledge - even on a minute personal scale implies flexibility, creativity and sensitivity.
In
the area of human relations, no small part of human
activity, imagination plays no small part.
To appreciate
the other, his problems, his difficulties, his particular
circumstances dem
s a sensitivity which is unknown to
the self-centred to those lacking imagination, to those
locked within the, perhaps, limited parameters of their
own experience.
be
Imaginative sensitivity allows me to
the other' whether headmaster, colleague, or pupil.
This, too, is a form of knowing.
One interesting comment in this whole area is
concerned with truth.
Some would argue that if we say
'imagine', we are dealing in supposition and because
'imagine' is not real it is therefore false.
is a great mistake.
This
Truth may be proven through
replication.
There is one form.
Truth may also lie
in a perception which, either then or maybe later, may
not be replicable but is none the less true.
Finally, let it be said that there is no real basis
for feeling that the procedure of representing objects
or other events through representations such as models or
images is any less "natural" than describing them by
means of words.
We are a verbal society.
Our education
is verbal.
This is good a, language is perhaps man's
greatest talent to symbolize, to show pattern, to draw
out meaning.
Imagination also is a way of symbolizing.
There is no good reason to discard one because the other
is a way of symbolizing.
There is no good reason to
discard one because the other is well developed.
Perhaps
we tend to over emphasise the word at the expense of
imagination.
Let us now turn our attention more
specifically to the connection between imagination and
the education process.
Much of what has been already
278
281
discussed is equally relevant if not so specific.
IV
'I D'I .__All)THE EDUCATION PROCESS
One or two simple examples may not be amiss.
Probably most of us would agree that the purpose
of a teacher is to guide his pupil towards new
and richer experience, towards eliciting the
meaning of that experience and composing
it into a coherent pattern, with the aim
finally of increasing the pupil's power of
action.
Education, that is begins with the
particular. goes or to theory in the widest
sense, namely the study of structure and
organisation, and concludes again in a
heightened sense of the particular.
If it
does not begin with the particular. then it
will not be personally significant to the
pupil; if it does not go on to a general
explanation, then it will not extend
consciousness and promote the grasp of
principle but merely inculcate a clumsy rule
of thumb;
if it does not brxag about increased
power over the particular. then it will be no
more than theoretical and academic in the worst
way.
14
The act of knowing, one of the high points of education,
centres around two distinct impulses of the mind which
are related by a mutual tension and support.
One is
an eagerness to light on the highest degree of individuality
of things and the other is a concern to generalise, to
establish an order of thought among the particulars.
The full act of understanding, the full act of knowing
is only created oy the union of these two impulses of
the mind.
15
I recall a rather intriguing start to a lesson in
science.
The opening remarks were "How is it that
electricity can boil water and freeze water?"
For a
young class of 12 or 13 year olds that was a rather
279
288
riveting opening.
I also recall a number of other
similar incidents.
For example the key to one problem
lay in realizing that 8 was the same as 10 minus 2.
Another interesting point was that the stone spiral
staircase in old castles always curved to the left thus
giving advantage to the right handed sword defenders.
I remember asking a boy one time what did he see as the
difference between a very large lake and the sea.
He gave me a one word reply:
These are very
'power'.
simple illustrations of the force which a little
imagination can have.
For the teacher imagination is a talent which
greatly comes to the aid of the teacher's professional
skills.
There are three main uses all of which are
very obvious and do not need stressing.
Imagination
can play a part in the teacher's out of class preparations -
mental set, presentation, attack, questioning.
Secondly
imagination plays a part in one's approach to one's
subject.
This is indeed extremely important for interest,
for motivation. for new insights, for keeping one fully
alive to the possibilities and beauty in one's discapline.
One of my most impressive memories was of a mathematics
teacher who really opened our eyes to the aesthetic
element in the neatness and economy of a solution.
Thirdly, the teacher uses his own imaginative approaches
to stimulate the imagination of the pupils.
For instance
in Geography a well known concept is to talk about the
"personality "of a particular area.
In History one may
talk about reconstructing the life of a typical person,
village. farm or factory.
all imagination.
learned.
Needless to say it is not
Certain facts and ideas have to be
Certain skills have to be acquired.
As was
mentioned earlier much of the work in our schools is
factual, uniform and convergent.
Imagination can add
a further dimension to these necessary modes of knowing.
280
2,q9
But in its own right imagination can contribute to new
ways of perceiving and thus aid a creative process.
We must not lose sight of the fact that the mind is a
shaper and not just a receptacle of its experience.
This point takes on a great deal of importance in the
area of curriculum development.
Elliot W. Eisner in
his work on The Educational Imagination writes:
Curriculum development is the process of
transforming images and aspirations about
education into programs that will effectively
realize the visions that initiated the
process.
I use the term images and
aspirations intentionally.
16
and again he notes:
Goals and content are necessary but not
sufficient for the development of a
curriculum.
The educational imagination
must come into play in order to transform
goals and content to the kinds of events
that will have educational consequences for
students.
17
Teaching is an art and imagination is always involved
in art.
There are four main aspects of teaching all of
which echo many of the points being made in this paper.
Teaching is a skill with an aesthetic element.
implies judgement as things unfold.
Teaching
Good teaching is not
dominated by routine:
in short there is a freedom there.
Lastly, as in all art, ends are often created in process.
In talking about imagination in school it is well to
recall the various happenings which seem to be inhibiting
the use of imagination.
I feel sometimes that the
professional aspect of teaching is being whittled away
by the way subject syllabi are structured and presented,
by the nature of our examination system, by the increasing
use of 'experts' such as guidance counsellors, school
psychologists, health officials, pastoral care personnel.
Many of these things, however good and necessary they may
281
290
be are really marginal to the work of the teacher who is
at the very centre of the education process which is in
the classroom.
Too many outside agencies with some
decision making authority gradually leave less and less
to the imaginative grasp of the professional in the face
of an unfolding context for which no routine or guidelines
will ever be adequate.
It is at the root of action
that the quality of practice will be determined.
The basic question for all teachers is : What ideal
do you wish to bring to life?
Our challenge is to give
No one can say that imagination is
that ideal life.
not involved in that process.
What enters into our being as a result of
school and college is a blend of values,
attitudes and assumption, a certain moral
tone, a special quality of imagination,
a particular flavour of sensibility - the
things that constituted the soul of our
education.
18
It would appear that the disposition most valuable la
education is closer to the poetic than to the mathematical
intelligence.
This is not an either or situation.
It
is simply expressing a type of priority.
Finally I would like to take a look at educational
research.
In my view educational research should be
more directly located through a reflective and sensitive
appraisal of actual classroom behaviour.
Too much of
current educational research is dominated by t!le social
science model of data, which is then removed from source
and analysed numerically leading to averages expressed
in quantities.
kind of research.
'Mere is, of course, a place for that
I have Cone quite an Emount myself
and have supervised quite a great deal more.
Nevertheless
more concentration on perceiving classroom subtleties
and nuances would further our developing insights into
Imagination would be of help here.
classroom behaviour.
282
291
1
If I may quote Eisner on this he writes:
What I believe we need are approaches to
the study of educational problems that
give f11 range to the varieites of
rationality of which humans are capable,
that
are not linked to one set of
assumptions about how we come to know,
that use methods outside of as well as
inside the social sciences to describe,
to interpret, and to evaluate what
occurs in schools.
Orthodoxy often
creates blinkers to new possibilities,
and I believe the field of education has
worn blinkers for too long.
20
An observation by Thomas S. Kuhn whose work on The
Structure of Scientific Bevolutions caused quite
a
stir, might be of interest in the broad context of
research.
The transition from a paradigm in crisis to a
new one from which a new tradition of normal
science can emerge is far from a cumulative
process, one achieved by an articulation or
extension of the old paradigm.
Rather it is
a reconstruction that changes some of the
field's most elementary theoretical generalizations
as well as many of its paradigm methods and
applications.
Finally in any profession dealing with people both
science and art will be involved.
Science will occupy
much time in accit ring the academic foundation of one's
professional discipline whereas the art plays its part
in the actual exercise of the discipline through contact
with people.
This is very true of teaching.
Science
and Art give us different perspectives.
Science focuses
on the unique characteristics :If the particulars themselves.
Ernest Cassirer in his Essay on Man expresses a very
interesting viewpoint which has very direct implications
for us as teachers.
He writes
The two views of truth are in contrast with
one another, but not in conflict or
283
292
contradiction.
Since art and science
move in entirely different planes they
cannot contradict or thwart one another.
The conceptual interpretation of science
does not preclude the intuitive interpretation
of art.
Each has its own perspective and,
so to speak, its own angle of refraction . . .
In ordinary experiences we connect phenomena
according to the cagegory of causality or
finality.
According as we are interested
in the theoretical reasons for the practical
effects of things, we think of them as causes
or as means.
Thus, we habitually lose sight
of their immediate appearance until we can
no longer see them face to face.
Art, on
the other hand, teaches us to visualize, not
merely to conceptualize or utilize things.
Art gives a richer more vivid and colorful
image of reality, and a more profound insight
into its formal structure.
It is characteristic
of the nature of man that he is not limited
to one specific and single approach to reality
but can choose his point )f view and so pass
from one aspect of things to another.
21
Finally let me finish with a remark made by Walsh
written over a quarter of a century ago and i.deed much
more relevant today than then.
Meanness of understanding, ugliness of
milieu, the attitudes of the robot, these
are the characteristics of an age suffering
from the anaemia of the imagination, the
organ most vividly and intimately concerned
.
The consequences of a life
with life
lived or gone through with a starved imagination
The
consequences
of a life lived or
is boredom'.
cone through w..th a starved imagination is boredom
'the great and total fruit of our civilization'.
Man is bored because he experiences nothing and
he experiences nothing because the wonder has gone
out of him.
22
.
.
We shall not cease from exploration
And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
and know the place for the first time.
T. S. Eliot.
284
233
REFERENCES
1
Susanne K. Langer, Problems of Art (New York :
Charles Scribner's Sons, 1957).
2
Liam Hudson, The Cult of_the Fact (London : Jonathan
Cape, 1972) p. 93
3
Ibid., p. 97.
4
R. D. Laing, The Politics of Experience
Penguin, 1967) p. 59.
5
William Walsh, The Use of Imagination (London
Chatto and Windus, 1960) p. 14.
6
Ibid., pp. 94-95.
7
G. Ryle, The Concept of Mind (London : Hutchinson,
1949) Chapter VIII.
8
H. H. Price, Thinking and Experience
Hutchinson, 1953) p. 299.
9
E. J. Furlong, Imagination
& Unwin, 1961) p. 25.
10
D. Hume, Treatise of Human Nature Book I, Part IV,
Section vii.
11
I. Kant, Critigile of Pure Reason, translated by
Norman Kemp Smith, (London : Macmillan 1970).
12
Walsh, The Use of Imagination, p. 50.
13
Jerome L. Singer, as given in William Walsh, The Use
of imagination (see number 5 above).
14
Walsh, The Use of Imagination, p. 121.
15
Ibid., p. 124.
16
Elliot E. Eisner, The Educational Imagination
Macmillan, 1979) p. 108.
(New York
(London
:
:
:
: George Allen
(London
:
17
Ibid., p. 119.
18
Walsh, The Use of Imagination, p. 54.
19
Ibid., p. 189.
285
294
(London
.
20
Eisner, The Educational imagination, P. 17.
21
Ernest Cassirer, An Essay on Man (New York :
Yale University Press, 1944, Reprinted 1972).
22
Walsh, The Us
of imagination, pp. 206-207.
Irish Educational Studies, Vol.
No. 1, 1984:
SCHOOL CHOICE AND SCHOOL CATCHMENT :
EDUCATION IN GALWAY CITY
POST-PRIMARY
Seamus Grimes
While research to date at the national level has
adequately illustrated the nature and extent of class
bias in Irish education, there has been little attempt
to examine the spatial organisation of the system at the
local level.
Research in Britain on the other hand has
shown how catchment areas can become barriers, dividing
This paper argues
children along social class lines.'
the need to carry out a spatial analysis of the educational
system, and in focussing on post-primary education in
Galway, it examines the varying degrees of educational
opportunity throughout the composite catchment area.
Since the introduction of free education in 1967
the nubers in secondary schools have increased by twothirds.
2
There has been only a small increase, however,
in participation in secondary education by children from
low status families, and early drop-out rates among these
groups remain high.
Rottman claims that the Irish
educational system reflects social class, barriers and
that the privilege of the upper and middle classes is
being perpetuated through the system.3
The most discernible manifestation of this class
bias is in the allocation of pupils to either secondary
or vocational schools resulting in considerable career
consequences for those involved.
The majority of
secondary schools are state financed, and yet they
retain complete autonomy in their enrolment procedures.
In many cases these schools have become increasingly
selective, giving preference to pupils from their
associated junior sections.
Vocational schools, on
287
296
the other hand, are almost exclusively working-class and
their technical education is predominantly male.
Generally these schools have to deal with more than
their fair share of pupils who have suffered educational
disadvantage in primary school.
Since entry into professional occupations is largely
mediated through secondary education and in particular
through the Leaving Certificate, occupational opportunities
for working class pupils and those from a small farm
background have become considerably restricted.
In a
period when educational requixements for job opportunities
have escalated rapidly, children from low income households
face a greater likelihood of unemployment because they lack
the necessary qualifications.
Many factors account for
the alienation of such pupils from the more prestigious
post-primary schools and from third level institutions.
Among the more significant factors accounting for this
class bias is the considerable income disparity between
different groups which results in low income households
being unable to subsidise their children's continuing in
education.
It might be argued that the educational system is
designed to provide differential opportunities appropriate
to one's state in life, and there was something systematic
about failure and success.
The recent analysis of
participation rates in third level education reveals
the extent of the gap between social groups. 4
Thus
three-quarter: of children from higher professional, half
from lower professional, eight per cent from manual
workers and five per cent from unskilled manual and
agricultural labourer backgrounds had attained third
level.
While the university was characterised by the
highest degree of disparity between social groups, the
Regional Technical Colleges showed some improvement
regarding mobility.
Yet these institutions were being
288
297
availed of predominantly by middle and upper class
students, mainly from secondary schools.
Statistical
analysis of our educational system, therefore, gives a
rather hollow ring to the government guarantee that
any pupil, no matter what his ability or social background sho,.:Id have the right of entry to any post-primary
school sudported by State funds.5
As a city evolves, a variety of neighbourhood types
emerge, differentiated in terms of socio-economic status.
The clearest medium of such differentiation is housing
tenure, and the most radical divide lies between the
public housing of corporation estates and the privately
owned areas of middle and upper income grouns.
Geographic
variation in the quality of schools tends to be closely
related to the spatial differentiation of residential
areas on class lines.
An important consequence of this
is that schools tend to be homogeneous in the social
composition of their intake.
In considering the
factors influencing school choice and the formation of
school catchments in Galway, therefore, the extent of
segregation within the post-primary system will be
considered.
The Qalwav context
To delineate the ,loundary of the Galway city postprimary catchment aren, the address :.(sts of pupils in
the ten city post-primary bchools were obtained and
analysed.
The catchment boundary wr, marked by a number
of villages in the rural hinterland:
the western
extent was Spiddal, in the north were Oughterard and
Headford, on eith side of Lough Corrib, and in the
southeast was Clarinbridge.
Within this composite
catchment area there were 2,622 households with 4,530
289
298
t
--, N '
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VOCATIONAL SCHOOLS
V1 MONEENAGEISHA
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299
1.
Post - Primary
I
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001.5 0
Fig.
1101.440ARY
/
and
Third
Level
/
/
/
Instutions
in
Galwsy
pupils, attending the ten post - primary schools in the
schoolyear1982-1983.
With ten post-primary schools in the city, four
secondary schools for girls, four for boys and two
vocational schools, the catchment area was apparently
adequately catered for.
The schools varied in size
from less than 300 to more than 600 pupils.
The location
of the ten schools is shown in Fig. 1 and it is clear
that there is an imbalanced distribution between the
east and west sides of the city.
Prior to the 1960s,
the post-primary population of the city was weighted
towards the area west of the Corrib river which divides
the city in two, and to some extent this accounts for
the uneven distribution of schools.
Since the 1960s,
however, the city catchment area has been evenly
balanced between the two sections of the city.
Apart
from the establishment of a community college on the
east side of the city, there has been no other response
to the changing pattern of the post-primary population.
In addition to the western section of the ety
being more favoured regarding accessibility to postprimary schools, the most prestigious of the secondaries,
particularly in the case of girls' secondaries, were
located in the most westerly part or the city, thus
creating considerable frictional distance for pupils
residing east of the Corrib.
It is important to note
that the urban primary schools feeding these post-primaries
also had an imbalanced locational pattern.
Only three
of the 14 primary schools were located in the east.
Two of these were among the largest primaries in the city,
reflecting the more recent development of these suburbs,
and the tendency to construct larger primary schools than
heretofore.
A significant aspect of the western concentration
of primary schools was the fa.ct that junior sections of
291
1
ISALLYRANI
COMB
PARK
RINIPORI
Vs
%N
\%
CLADOAGH
`
.
3
NIGH
II
PS
WOOL(
li
\ \ ..;
Fig. 2
Proportion
of
Pat - Primary
/
/
IBOUNDARY
1 WU
/
Households
1
STATUS
/
LOW
IMUNCIPAL
N...
301
I
PI. ST
SALINAS
I
NISGTIOURH000
with
Children
at
a
/
/
/
Vocational
School
the prestigious secondary schools were also located
in this area, thereby restricting access to such
secondary schools for households in the east.
Despite
the poor accessibility of eastern households there was
an interesting contrast, in pupil flows, between the
predominantly working-clt.
corporation estate of Mervue
and the mainly middle-class private housing area of Renmore.
The pattern for working-class pupils was for the majority
of boys and some of the girls to attend the nearby
vocational school.
Many of the girls from Mervue,
however, attended the nearest secondary school.
In the
private housing areas, on the other hand, there was a
strong tendency for girls to attend the prestigious
secondary schools in the western part of the city.
The
connecting bus route between Renmore and Taylors Hill
facilitated the desire in this area to benefit from these
western located schools.
Whatever about distinctions between catchment areas
of the different post-primary schools, the most significant
aspect was the propensity of households in different areas
to send pupils to a vocational school.
Fig. 2 illustrates
this pattern which coincides very closely with the socio-
economic status of Galway neighbourhoods and their
associated housing classes.
The proportion of vocational
households in low income corporation estates ranged between
40 and almost 60 per cent, while in high status areas
the proportion varied between one and three per cent.
The catchment areas of the two Galway city vocational
schools - which displayed little overlap across the
Corrib -
were predominantly composed of urban working-
class pupils together with considerable numbers from small
farm households in the hinterland.
293
302
Methodology
To ascertain some of the causes underlying such
a segregated post-primary system, a random sample of
300 post-primary households was interviewed during 1983.
The sample was restricted to six major urban areas
representing the social classes, together wig., two rural
areas representing the east and west sections of the
Mervue and Corrib Park represented working
hinterland.
class areas, Renmore and Ballybaan middle class, and
Newcastle and Salthill upper class areas.
Claregalway
District Electoral Division represented the east side
and Barna District Electroal Division represented the
west side of the rural hinterland.
The variables examined in the study included
household status, educational background of postprimary members, and the factors influencing school
choice.
Crosstabulation of these variables was carried
out with the SPSS Computer programme, and the discussion
is restricted to associations with a significance level
of 0.05 or less.
Background Characteristics
Before turning to interrelationships between these
factors the characteristics of sample households will
be considered.
Three dimensions of household socio-
economic status - occupational category, educational
level and household income - were examined.
These
characteristics displayed considerable differences between
the social areas in the sample.
Newcastle, Salthill
and Barna, areas of high socio-economic status,
consisted mainly of higher professional and salaried
workers.
More than 70 per cent of parents in these areas
had an educational level of Leaving Certificate or higher,
294
333
and the majority of households had an income in excess
of £10, 000.
At the other extreme of the socio-economic status
spectrum were Corrib Park and Mervue, where workers were
mainly skilled or semi-skilled.
Educational background
was low, with 40 per cent of parents in both areas and in
rural Claregalway having only a Primary Certificate.
In fact, half of the Mervue fathers, and 60 per cent of
Claregalway fathers were at this educational level.
Household incomes in these areas were generally well
below £10,000.
As many as 42 per cent of the sample
households were in the £5,000 to £10,000 income range.
The intermediate areas between these two extremes were
middle class Renmore and Ballybaan, consisting mainly
of skilled or salaried workers.
An interesting aspect which reflects both the role
of migratiln in the recent expansion of Galway city, and
also the significant status variations between the city
neighbourhoods, is the birthplace of parents.
Galway
city-born fathers were most numerous in working-c1ass
Mervue and Corrib Purk, where they constituted 54 per
cent of the total.
Elsewhere in middle and upper income
areas the proportion of Galway city-born fathers varied
between 15 and 25 per cent.
Between 70 and 80 per cent
of fathers in high status areas, therefore, were from
outside the city. often being migrants from elsewhere in
the country.
Both in the urban areas and in the rural
hinterland, the dichotomy between the native population
and blow-ins' from elsewhere reflected a significant status
difference, with the in-migrant population being predominantly
middle or upper class.
395
304
School choice
In contrast to the suggestion by Kellaghan and
Greaney that social status is unlikely to be casually
related to the type of school a child attends, this
study found that all three dimensions of household
socio-economic status had a profound impact on school
choice.6
Vocational schools were much more likely to
be chosen by households where the father had a Primary
Certificate than by those where he had a Leaving
Certificate or higher standard of education.
The bias
towards vocational schools were strong among those in
the unskilled and intermediate occupational categories.
Involvement in contact networks associated with traderelated occupations would influence the perception of
these parents regarding employment opportunities to be
gained from vocational education.
There was evidence,
however, of a growing interest among middle-class families
also in apprenticeship opportunities in recent years.
While the myth of free education may mask various
direct and indirect costs to parents,
the role of
household income in influencing school choice was clear.
Vocational schools were the preferred choice of the
less well-off.
Not only was there a definite
distinction of school type according to income, there
was also a clear pattern between income level and the
ten different schools.
The eastern located vocational
school was the most popular choice of households with
less than £10,000, while the most frequently chosen girls'
secondary by such households was the school located
closest to the eastern part of the city.
Households
with £10,000 or more, on the other hand, opted for the
prestigious secondary schools in the west.
In choosing one of the post-primaries a household
is unlikely to consider the whole range of schools that is
available.
Also many households had children attending
296
35
a number of different post-primaries and this presents
problems for summarising the overall pattern.
possible, however,
it is
to examine the extent to which alternative
schools, other than the chosen ones, were considered.
For girls a narrow range of choice was general, with
alternative schools being considered in only one quarter
of cases.
There was, however, a significant difference
between the secondaries, with only 10 per cent considering
an alternative in the case of one of the prestigious
schools, compared with 42 per cent in the most easterly
located girls' secondary.
An excess demand for places
in the prestigious schools was evIdent, with numerous
applicants being disappointed.
Such a narrow range of choice did not characterise
the boys' schools, where in 42 per cent of cases alternatives
were considered.
A clear trend emerged for many households. particularly in the east side of the city, to send
a boy to a vocational school and a girl to a secondary
school.
Interviewees were questioned regarding who made
the choice of school, and it was found that 73 per cent
of parents - occasionally in conjunction with their
children - decided which school they should attend.
Parents were most influential regarding school choice
in high status Newcastle, where 80 per cent made the
decision, and this contrasted with rural Claregalway
where only 49 per cent chose the school.
The
prestigious schools stood out with about 90 per cent
of parents choosing the school, but the main distinction
was between vocational and secondary school pupils.
Vocational pupils chose their own school in 38 per cent
of cases, which was twice the proportion of secondary
pupils.
A manifestation of the gre,Ater degree of discernment
297
306
of well-informed parents was their tendency to by-pass
the local primary school in favour of a junior section
of a prestigious post-primary.
Greater physical
mobility allowed them to ensure placement of their
children in their preferred secondary.
While overall,
only 16 per cent of sample pupils did not attend their
local primary, as many as 39 per cent of Newcastle pupils
and 32 per cent of Barna pupils by-passed the local school.
As many as one-quarter of pupils at the prestigious
schools for girls did not attend their local primary.
and the proportion for non-attendance in one of the
prestigious boys' secondaries was 46 per cent.
Only five per cent of the sample failed to obtain
a place in their most preferred school, and most of these
were girls who were not admitted to either of the two
prestigious schools.
In addition to the excess demand
for places, such failure often resulted from not having
booked a place for a sufficiently long period in advance.
While advance booking was unnecessary in most schools,
45 per cent of pupils in one of the prestigious schools
for girls had booked a place for a year or more in advance.
A consequence of school choice is the difference
between the school and the pupil's home, and this in turn
affects the likelihood of having lunch at home as
In Salthill, with a high
opposed to in the school.
degree of accessibility to post-primary schools, 92 per
cent of pupils went home for lunch, compared with only 37
per cent in Renmore and Ballybaan.
The contrast between
these middle class areas in the east where pupils had
inconvenienced themselves to attend prestigious postprimaries, and the working class area of Mervue where 61
per cent of pupils had lunch at home, was significant.
Many of the latter pupils, as was pointed out previously,
attended the nearby vocational school.
298
307
Parents were questioned regarding their assessment
of schools in terms of academic performance and discipline.
The assessment took the form of a rating between one and
three, and since an uncritical approach to schools was
widespread, particularly among the less well educated
parents, the results should be treated with caution.
The most critical assessment came from households in
Salthill and Newcastle, where most pupils attended the
prestigious secondary schools.
In one of the boys'
secondaries, for example, only half the parents awarded
it the highest rating for academic performance.
Only
60 per cent of parents gave a similar rating to one of
the prestigious schools for girls.
Both of these above
menionted schools received low ratings for discipline,
with only 36 per cent of parents awarding a high rating
to the girls' school.
The high level of expectation
of parents sending children to these schools partly
explains the critical assessment which they received.
One factor which was likely to affect parental
rating of schools was the extent of contact which parents
had with teachers.
An EEC survey in 1983 revealed
very low levels of parentteacher contact in Trelandr
this is partly a consequence of the ban placed by teachers
on holding meetings outside school hours.
7
Such contact in the Galway schools cut across
class lines, although Newcastle, with 75 per cent, had
the highest proportion of parents who had contact with
teachers during the previous year.
The eastern suburb
of Renmore, on the other hand, has the much lower proportion
of 46 per cent.
Generally working class areas and
vocational schools scored well in this regard, and the
lowest level of contact at 34 per cent characterised the
same girls' secondary mentioned above which received the
most critical parental assessment.
299
308
School choices was also closely rotated to the
future aspirations held by pupils.
Overall only nine
per cent of the sample planned to leave school early.
In one of the vocational schools, however, as many as
19 per cent of pupils planned to leave after reaching
15 years of age.
Half of the children whose fathers had only a
primary education Planned to seek employment upon finishing
school, compared with only 13 per cent of those whose
fathers' education was Leaving Certificate or higher.
The corollary of this was that 72 per cent of pupils
from high status homes hoped to pursue third level
education, and this was twice the proportion of pupils
from primary educated households.
While only 12 per
cent of vocational pupils considered any form of third
level education, and this was twice the proportion of
pupils from primary educated households.
While only
12 per cent of vocational pupils considered any form of
third level education, 40 per cent of secondary pupils
hoped to attend university.
Educational outcomes
Some of the causes of the highly segregated pattern
of school choice have been considered:
look at some of the consequences.
it now remains to
Two brief follow-up
surveys of Galway city post-primary school leavers were
One dealt with applications for apprentice-
conducted.
ships and the second with entrants to the two third-level
colleges in the city.
Table 1 shows that while applicants for apprenticeships from working class areas outnumbered those from
middle and upper income areas in 1981, this was not the
case in 1982.
Working class applicants were reasonably
300
3r'9
successful as they proceeded through the various 1.0.
tests which formed the basis for selection.
The
majority of these applicants came from a vocational
school.
An interesting trend, in the data was the strong
competition for apprenticeships from one of the boys'
secondary schools.
The academic orientation of the
selection process apparently gives an advantage to
secondary pupils and it has resulted in raising the
level of basic requirements to obtain an apprenticeship.
In a study of apprentice performance it was found
that the more successful apprentice, tended to be more
intelligent, more verbally gifted, more numerate, and
to be more likely to have completed the Leaving Certificate
than his less successful peer.
8
Third level students
Table 2 shows the number of entrants from the city
post-primary schools to University College Galway between
1977 and 1982, and to the Regional Technical College
between 1980 and 1982, according to their residential
areas.
Almost three-quarters of city-based students
et University College Galway came from the high status
areas of Salthill and Newcastle, while only 5.5 per cent
came from working-class neighbourhoods.
This high level
of imbalance in neighbourhood participation rates in
Galway reflects the national trend according to socioeconomic status as revealed by Clancy's study.
The
high degree of disparity at third level must be related
back to the imbalanced participation rates of different
neighbourhoods in vocational education.
Table 2 also reveals that the highest proportion
301
TABLE 1
Applicants for AnCO apprenticeships 1981 and
1982 from Galway city post-primary schools
Area
Total No. of
applicants
(N)
Vocational Applicants Successful
School
submitted applicants
applicants to AnC0
from Voc.
school
(N)
%
(N)
%
(N)
%
1981
Social Status
Low
52
37
p6.i.
30
53.5
19
63.3
Middle
27
16
59.2
9
33.3
7
77.7
High
17
2
11.7
7
41.1
0
0.0
Rural East
18
14
77.7
10
55.5
6
60.0
Rural West
19
10
52.6
7
36.8
5
71.4
Low
61
43
70.5
25
40.9
13
52.0
Middle
34
16
47 J
12
35.3
3
25.0
High
34
9
26.4
8
23.5
2
25.0
Rural East
34
29
85.3
5
14.7
2
40.0
Rural West
24
16
66.6
13
54.1
9
,69.2
1982
Social Status
302
311
TABLE 2
Third Level Education in Galway City
University College Galway
1977-1982
Urban Areas
Social Status
Low
Middle
High
No. of
Entrants
%
Y.
Urban
Total
33
5.5
127
452
20.5
73.8
4.7
18.2
64.7
Rural Hinterland
Rural East
Rural West
29
57
4.1
8.2
Regional Technical College Galway
1980-1982
Low
49
Middle
High
82
20.5
34.3
45.2
108
16.2
27.1
35.7
Rural Hinterland
Rural East
Rural West
25
8.3
38
12.6
303
312
.
of entrants to the Regional Technical College Galway came
from the high status areas. but in this case the
proportion was only 35.7 per cent.
All other parts of
the catchment area, therefore, were much more evenly
balanced in their participation rates.
This data
indicates, therefore, that the Regional Technical College
had considerable impact in raising access of low income
households to third level education.
It should be noted,
however, that 94 per cent of these students came from
secondary rather than vocational schools.
Conclusion
Post-primary education in Galway city is highly
segregated, with the main dividing line lying between
vocational and secondary schools.
Studies at the
national level indicate the relatively advantaged position
of Galway educationally and yet there is a serious level
of uneven access.
High status neighbourhoods almost
completely shun whatever vocational schools have to offer,
while more than half the working class households send
A consequence of
at least one child to these schools.
this uneven participation pattern was that threequarters of Galway city students entering University
College Galway came from the high status neighbourhoods
of Salthill and Newcastle, while only five per cent were
derived from corporation estates.
Such a pattern raises fundamental questions about
the basis of vocational education.
Even its traditional
role of preparing early leavers for apprenticeships is
gradually being taken over by the secondary school.
The vocational school, therefore, is being left the task
of caring for the educationally disadvantaged, many of
whom will face long-term unemployment.
334
313
The location
these schools next door to corporation estates has resulted
in homogeneous catchment areas of low income households.
The proposal to build a new post-primary school on
the east side of the city could improve considerably the
access of households to a choice of post-primary education
in that part of the city.
An urgent need exists to
modify existing flow patterns.
As greater numbers face
the prospect of long-term unemployment, a more serious
effort is required to remove the present level of
determinism from the educational system.
305
314
REFERENCES
1
B. T. Robson, Urban Analysis
A Study of City
Structure with special reference to Sunderland
(Cambridge : Cambridge Universith Press, 1969).
2
R. C. Geary and F. S. O'Muircheartaigh,
"Equalization of Opportunity in Ireland :
Statistical Aspects", (Dublin : The Economic
and Social Research Institute, 1974).
3
D. Rottmann, Irish Times, Feb. 24, 1983.
4
P. Clancy, Participation in Higher Education,
(Dublin, The Higher Education Authority, 1982).
5
R. C. Geary and F. S. "Equalization of Opportunities
in Ireland : Statistical Aspects" (Dublin :
The Economic and Social Research Institute, 1974).
6
T. Kellaghan and V. Greaney, "Factors related to
choice of past- primary school in Ireland" The iris
Journal of Education, Vol. 4, No. 2, (1970),
pp. 69-83.
7
E.E.C. Report on Education - Pre Publication Summary
in Irish Independent March 25, 1983.
8
A. Moran, 'The Psychology of Apprentice Performance',
(Department of Psychology, University College Galway,
:
1981) .
315
306
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