What does a school library look like in the digital age?


The concept of a school library in a digital age is challenging. With the capacity to download books onto a range of digital devices there is every possibility the library could look superfluous to youngsters growing up today. Why would you want to visit a room which is essentially about storage and distribution?
We are in the middle of redesigning our school library. So, this question has exercised the mind of my school because senior school students are already equipped with iPads. We had to consider what for many teachers is the unthinkable – is the library an anachronism? A resource to be discarded as no longer fit for purpose?
If we view the library as purely a function of lending books this is indeed the case. However, we felt very strongly that the library is more than a facilitating process – it has cultural significance which matters. The library can inspire. It is with good reason that the great Library of Alexandria is remembered today as a fulcrum of intellectual curiosity and invention. It was here that Archimedes invented the screw-shaped water pump; Eratosthenes measured the diameter of the Earth, and Euclid discovered the rules of geometry.
The Renaissance witnessed the exponential growth in libraries with the invention of printing. What interests me is not just the explosion of the printed word but the inspirational library spaces created to curate them. The Vatican Library is illustrative of the artistry of the Renaissance and the sense that this is not just a repository for books but an iconic crucible for learning. This grand purpose underpins the modern British Library which offers the visitor a unique experience.
So what does this mean for a school? It means a great deal. It is my belief that the library has the capacity to enjoy its own renaissance. Because of the digital revolution it is no longer just about the printed book. As a space, it is about inspiring young people.
The design brief for the libraries in our junior and senior schools is premised on inspiration. In the junior school the task was to create a space all about the power of the story. The story courtyard complements a room which is configured to invite children to engage and explore. It invites them into a world all about the imagination. In both spaces there will be cultural signifiers – the lamp post in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe or a disappearing White Rabbit. Signifiers referencing children's literature which are integral to the power of the story.
The senior school library continues the journey. Here we aim to combine the power of the story with a concept premised on the Cabinet of Curiosities. Curiosity in its purest sense where a student's learning is entirely unrelated to examination specifications and is encouraging learning for its own sake. The first cabinet being mooted relates to an evening next term where the films of Charlie Chaplin will provide both entertainment and a cultural reference point. Our Curator of the Cabinet of Curiosities is tasked with supporting this with the curation of a range of objects which will stimulate interest and encourage inquiry. Our approach is unashamedly about inspiring a love of learning.
The digital age therefore, far from sounding the death knell of school libraries, offers schools an opportunity to create their own distinctive library space. Libraries have a history of offering inspiration – they also have a future.
Tricia Kelleher is principal of The Stephen Perse Foundation. This blog was originally posted on the Stephen Perse blog. Follow Tricia on Twitter: @StephenPerse.

Why part-time study has a great future


There is an increasing groundswell growing right now in favour of part-time education. There are references in social media, in university magazines and wherever people gather to talk about students and their chances in life. I know about this because as newly appointed president of Birkbeck, University of London, I have been spearheading a campaign called Part-Time Matters. Let me spell out exactly why it is such a good thing, and why its time has come.

In the 1950s when I was a student, studying came for free. I never paid a penny to spend three years at Cambridge and end up with a decent degree. Golden days. They didn't last. But that experience gave loads of grammar school types like me the chance to get up and get on, to take on decent jobs that lead to decent careers. It isn't so straightforward these days.

Student fees and the struggle today's graduates have to find a job have changed the way education works. But I still believe in it, and I believe in it for far more people than are currently studying at university. So how are we to get round the problems that exist and maintain the thrill of deep, serious study that can transform anyone's life? I think part-time study that leads to a full university degree holds the key to the answer. In fact, I know it does. Since I began tweeting about it, numerous people have responded to say how wonderful it was to be able to study, while holding down a job, and then get a new qualification that upped their career chances and enriched their lives.

Birkbeck is dedicated to such students. They come in their droves, rushing through the doors often after 5 o'clock in the afternoon once their day-job is over to hear lectures and seminars by some of the finest academics. You can tell these students care by the sense of bustle and enthusiasm in the air. There's a reason for this: these are people who have thought hard about how to accommodate their study into their lives.

Many of them have partners, children, mortgages. They know it won't be simple, but with loans now available, they are discovering how rewarding it can be. The Open University too offers the same sort of part-time study towards a degree. I have friends among the elderly who are turning their retirement into a fulfilling use of time by taking an OU degree. Some 700,000 students currently study this way, one third of all higher education students.

There's something timely about this campaign on the broader national scale. Student numbers are falling in the face of rising fees and loans. Young people who might once have seen university as their natural destination are rethinking what it means in hard money terms to spend three years without earning. The department for education and the department for business, innovation and skills both back the idea of part-time study. So too do MPs: Frank Dobson has tabled an early day motion signed by more than 30 MPs urging the government to heed the conclusions of the review by Universities UK which will be published in the autumn. This urges them to take seriously the many benefits of part-time and later education.

It was Oscar Wilde who said "youth is wasted on the young." The idea was taken up by his fellow Irishman GB Shaw who developed it into "education is wasted on the young". Both were pithy quips concealing a nugget of truth. It is certainly the case that as we mature we learn to evaluate and judge our lives and the world around us in a more focused way. And it might be that we come to study and understand more profoundly than when we were young.

I'm not holding this to be an absolute. But it is surely true for many. That's why part-time study has a great future.

Joan Bakewell is president of Birkbeck, University of London – follow her on Twitter @JDBakewell

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Summerhill school: these days surprisingly strict

Even in these bewildering times, it can safely be said that Zoe Readhead is the only school principal to have featured naked on a magazine cover. She was aged just two at the time and the magazine was Picture Post – long defunct, but then selling more than a million copies weekly. Readhead, "bright-eyed, strong-limbed and unafraid of people", was billed as "The Child Who Never Gets Slapped". Her father was AS Neill, founder and principal of Summerhill free school, which fascinated and appalled the press because it didn't make children go to lessons and (reportedly) let them run around without clothes. Her development as Neill's only child, hailed by him as "the beginnings of a new civilisation", was of consuming public interest.
Today, Summerhill, run by Readhead, who took over from her mother (Neill's widow) in 1985, is almost forgotten. It briefly attracted attention at the turn of the century when David Blunkett, then education secretary, tried to close it – complaining, among other things, that it had no separate toilets for boys, girls or staff – only to beat an ignominious retreat when challenged before a tribunal. It continues in Leiston, Suffolk, where it has been since 1927, after first opening in Germany six years earlier. The children can still skip as many lessons as they like. And all decisions about the school's internal running are still made democratically in communal meetings – Summerhillians speak reverently of "The Meeting" rather as Christians do of the Eucharist – where a five-year-old's vote counts as much as the principal's.
As Jonathan Croall recalls in his recently reissued biography (Neill of Summerhill: The Permanent Rebel), Neill argued that, while the future of Summerhill itself was of little consequence, the idea behind it was "of the greatest importance to humanity" because "new generations must be given the chance to grow in freedom". Yet, though the school has imitators overseas and Neill's books became international bestsellers, its influence on mainstream education has been slight. "Free schools" mushroomed in the UK in the 1970s, but few survive. State school heads who tried to implement Neill's ideas – notably at Risinghill in London –were smartly removed. Half Summerhill's 68 pupils are from overseas, many from east Asian countries where some parents find the schooling too rigid. With boarding fees of £3,000-£5,000 a term, depending on age, and no bursaries, it is beyond the means of most parents.
So shouldn't it apply to the education secretary, Michael Gove, to become one of the new government-funded free schools? "I wouldn't associate myself with any government that's already tried to close my school down," replies Readhead with a shudder. But it's a different government, I point out. "I don't care what their politics are, I wouldn't trust them. As soon as I had government funds, they might want to make decisions about my toilets and things." Does she like Gove's idea of free schools? "It's unfortunate. They stole our name. In any case, we and schools like this tend to call ourselves 'democratic' now because 'free school' sounds as if it could be complete anarchy."
Though Readhead has a more open manner than almost anybody I've met (as an infant, according to Croall, she would talk in local shops about how she came out of Mummy's fanny), there is a sense of an established family firm jealously protecting its brand. I talk to her in her office, which looks like a garden shed and is lined with pictures of her father and copies of his books. "He was a lovely, lovely man," she says. "A sweety-pie." Did she feel pressure from attending his school and being the test of his child-rearing philosophy? "No, he let me get on with my life. He wouldn't come and ask if I would like to do this or that. We lived our lives in parallel. He gave that to all children at Summerhill: he was there, but never intruded."
According to Croall, Neill, who was 63 when Readhead was born in 1946, sometimes found his daughter too lively. Her mother told Croall that, at 12, her daughter became involved with a group of troublemakers at Summerhill, who were "never going to a lesson, smoking, swearing … breaking bedtime laws, pinching". She was sent to a school in Switzerland, which Neill imagined to be "progressive" in the Summerhill sense, but in fact required children to rise at 6.30 for a cold shower, take long mountain walks and go to bed at 8.30. She hated it, threatening "sueside" in a letter home and persuading Neill to take her away in her second term.
Readhead's recollections are less dramatic. "I wasn't a difficult child," she insists. She acknowledges that her father would have liked her to go to university and hoped she would take over the school, armed with a degree and teaching certificate to keep the authorities at bay. But he never said a word of this to her and was entirely relaxed about her being interested mainly in art and animals. She didn't do what were then O-levels – "what did I want those for?" – but went briefly to art college. "They'd just started a new style of teaching to get us to think outside the box. I suppose they thought, because I'd been to Summerhill, I'd be really keen. But I just wanted to hone my skills on watercolours and things." She went instead as a working pupil to a riding school, "a very strict, straitlaced environment, no larking about, no swearing". She then opened her own riding school on the edge of Summerhill, but gave it up when she married a neighbouring farmer at 26 "because I wanted to have children and we didn't do working mothers in the 1970s".
She was perfectly happy as a full-time housewife and mother of four, she says, and would do the same again. In this and other respects, she can be surprisingly old-fashioned. She has no time for labels such as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). "Children have lots of conditions these days they wouldn't have had 20 years ago. I couldn't tell you if any of our children have ADHD. My interest is in whether the child will fit into this community. If a child talks out of turn at the school meeting, he's got to go out whether he's ADHD or not." Nor does she have much truck with "trendy" teaching methods. "Summerhill children are very conservative about how they are taught. You can dish up information on a cold plate. Since children are not captive in the classroom, when they go, they want to learn. So teachers don't need to put jam on it." And Readhead, like any other independent school head, talks about how fee-paying parents save thousands for the state and what a pity there isn't some kind of voucher or tax credit to help them out.
In other ways, Summerhill isn't quite what people expect. It may be called "free", but it has between 150 and 230 rules depending on what The Meeting has decided. Indeed, Readhead says, "Summerhill often now finds itself in a disciplinarian role because many children today don't have boundaries set in their homes." It's a far cry from the days when, as she puts it, "my father was breaking windows with them to show adults weren't to be feared". In other respects, too, Summerhill has changed. "It was really a school for problem children at first," says Croall. "It was only in the 1930s that parents started sending their children for libertarian or political reasons." Readhead admits that, though there's no academic selection, she sifts out children who would be "too disruptive in the community" and expels (though she prefers a gentler description) those who prove too much of a handful. If they have behavioural problems, she points out, the people dealing with them will be mostly other children. "It's a matter of balance. Our groups are small. We may take an 11-year-old who is a bit of a bully one year, but not the next because we've already got two of that sort of that age." She doesn't interview children before they are admitted. "They visit and we're very watchful of how they interact and experienced at detecting what won't work. But it's quite difficult for parents to understand what we are doing."
Readhead has never compromised on her father's fundamental principle: that children should not be compelled or pressured to learn or expected to meet "standards" of any sort. "No one," Neill wrote, "is wise enough or good enough to mould the character of any child." When Ofsted demanded she "ensure that all pupils regularly engage in learning", she said she would rather close the school, a defiance that led to the clash with Blunkett. Did she at least encourage them to aspire, I asked. "No. Aspire to what? People ask if our pupils are 'successful', Ofsted about reaching their 'full potential'. I don't like those words." The children take GCSEs at 16 (A-levels are not offered) and, according to official figures, 46% get five or more at A*-C including English and maths, against 58.6% nationally. On its latest visit in October 2011, Ofsted – chaperoned by a Summerhill-appointed expert, as agreed when the court case was settled in 2000 – was more than satisfied. It praised "outstanding pupils' spiritual, moral, social and cultural development", teaching that was "never less than good with some outstanding features" and "learning … closely tailored to match pupils' individual needs".
The inspectors also praised "outstanding behaviour" and "positive relationships". But one is bound to wonder if the Summerhill "community" – a word that Readhead uses repeatedly – puts as much pressure on some children as the top-down regimes of conventional schools. Formal rules and informal expectations may be no less oppressive because they are set by other children rather than by adults.
One wonders also how truly democratic "the community" can be when it is dominated by one family. Readhead says that, when she steps down, Summerhill will be carried on by her son, who is already assistant head. Another son teaches music at Summerhill, while her husband looks after the finances and the physical fabric, while continuing to run a neighbouring farm on which their other two children work. All the children attended Summerhill, as do her two grandchildren now.
What if any had wanted to go to mainstream schools? "Well, it would have been fine," says Readhead, "but I can tell you they wouldn't have wanted to. I know my own children." Despite his opposition to "moulding", Neill surely moulded Readhead, I suggest, and she in turn moulded her children. Her denials would be more convincing if just one family member had become a hedge fund manager or nuclear physicist.
Thanks largely to Readhead's courage and determination, Summerhill for now seems safe, though a new legal wrangle is possible following Ofsted's announcement that, since it now "understands" the school, it doesn't want to be accompanied by "experts" on future inspections.
Whether Neill's "message of freedom" can spread more widely is another matter. I wasn't there long enough to be sure, but I suspect Summerhill has become rather inward-looking, even a little complacent. "We keep ourselves to ourselves," Readhead admitted. "I do feel I ought to spread the word, but I have a responsibility to the school, too. I suppose I should be writing to the newspapers and things, but I haven't the energy." Could the Summerhill brand be franchised? "I'd be really interested in something like that. But you need to understand Summerhill. There are so many intricate areas of who you are and how you relate to other people. Adults need to live here for two years before they're getting a handle on the whole picture. If somebody wanted to do that, I'd be very interested."
It was she, not I, who made the obvious analogy. "It's hard to talk about Summerhill," she said, "without making it sound like a religion."

Source : guardian.co.uk