Britain – Waldorf Exposed https://waldorfexposed.com Sat, 03 Feb 2024 13:14:43 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://waldorfexposed.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/waldorf-icon-100x100.png Britain – Waldorf Exposed https://waldorfexposed.com 32 32 We Don’t Need No Steiner Education https://waldorfexposed.com/2023/12/16/we-dont-need-no-steiner-education/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=we-dont-need-no-steiner-education https://waldorfexposed.com/2023/12/16/we-dont-need-no-steiner-education/#respond Sat, 16 Dec 2023 13:46:20 +0000 https://waldorfexposed.com/?p=858 WHEN David Gilmour, leader of the rock band Pink Floyd, turned to the education page of The Daily Telegraph last Wednesday, he was dismayed to read that the Steiner Waldorf School Fellowship is hoping to secure state support.

“When I think of the horrific experience I had, struggling with my children’s school, I felt I had to say something,” he declared.

His four children from his first marriage attended Michael Hall in East Sussex, one of 26 Steiner schools in Britain. “I wanted them to have a less pressurised education than I had,” he says. But he became disillusioned by the Steiner approach; two years ago, he sent his children to conventional schools.

Gilmour is not an outspoken man. But his children’s education, he feels, went so badly wrong that he wanted to make his views public. He understands the irony of his situation. In 1979, Pink Floyd had a hit with Another Brick in the Wall, from the album The Wall, which featured the ringing line “We don’t need no education”. That song, which inspired rebellion in a generation of exam-weary teenagers, accorded with his feelings about his own schooling.

Gilmour was brought up in Cambridge, where his father was a senior lecturer in zoology. He was sent to the the Perse – “It was a very disciplined school which I didn’t enjoy” – then left to take A-levels at a local college, but abandoned his exams for his guitar. “I knew that if I got the A-levels, I would be expected to go to university and I wanted to be a musician,” he says.

He wanted his own children to have a more enjoyable experience, so when he and his wife separated, he fell in with her wishes and sent his children to Michael Hall. “But it soon became apparent that my children were neither happy nor learning.”

Several aspects of the Steiner system alarmed him. “Steiner believes that six to seven is the age at which to start teaching reading and writing. My son, Matthew, was frustrated by not being able to write his name at seven. When he left, aged nine, he could only just read.”

Another central plank of the philosophy is that, between the ages of eight and 14, children should remain with the same teacher for the main lesson every morning. This is designed to promote continuity and works well if child and teacher get on. If not, Gilmour says, “it can be torture”.

“The school had its good aspects, but overall, the system seemed slack. I found the children’s knowledge was very patchy, and their school reports, which consisted only of praise, gave me little idea of how they were really doing.” Since the system is non-hierarchical, with no head teacher, Gilmour felt there was no one with sufficient authority to resolve his anxieties.

So concerned did he become that he took his children to be assessed by educational psychologists. The results shocked him. Matthew, when first examined in 1994, was judged to have an average IQ of 101 but was considered to be “seriously disabled in terms of literacy acquisition, with his reading and spelling lying a full three years below his chronological age”.

Less than two years later, Matthew was retested. The educational psychologist found him to have “flourished” outside the Steiner system; his retested IQ was now 124. (Confidence can make a difference to a child’s scores on intelligence tests.)

Now 11, Matthew reads and writes fluently; more importantly, says his father, his demeanour has changed. “He often used to communicate in grunts and screeches, but now he is more outgoing.”

His three daughters, too, had fallen behind. Sarah, the youngest, was 14 when she was transferred to a conventional school. Her IQ is high, but she had to be put in a class of girls a year younger than she was, and still struggled. She has now caught up with her classmates, and, according to Gilmour, “has far more understanding of what is going on in the world, and seems much happier”.

Clare, 18, who has dyslexia, now attends a specialist college, while Alice, 21, left Michael Hall with one A-level in art. Unqualified for a British university, she is about to start college in America.

Martyn Rawson, spokesman for the Steiner Waldorf Schools Fellowship, defends the Steiner approach, pointing out that pupils regularly achieve above average results in their GCSE and A-level exams. “More than half of our pupils go on to higher education,” he says. “With the ones that don’t, it’s often a conscious choice rather than a lack of the necessary qualifications.”

“With a very self-motivated child or one who needs intensive nurturing, Steiner can do a good job,” says Peter Gilchrist, one of the psychologists Gilmour consulted. “There is great emphasis on feeling and sensitivity, and on first-hand experience of nature.”

However, he feels that the rigidity of Rudolph Steiner’s 75-year-old philosophy can be problematic. “The system believes that children should take steps only when they are ready. Steiner teachers tend to assume any problems will all come right in the end and can be reluctant to acknowledge modern solutions. I once recommended that a child who had problems with motor skills should use a keyboard, but I was told that the writing had to come from within.”

Most children, he feels, thrive in a system that exerts more pressure on them.

“They need fixed boundaries. Few children are so naturally hard-working that they beg to be given more maths problems.”

Gilmour’s children from his second marriage will go to mainstream state schools. They won’t be as tough as the one that sent him into revolt – but they will teach the three Rs from the age of five.

1997 © Telegraph Group Limited
CASSANDRA JARDINE, Education: `We don’t need no Steiner education’ Pink Floyd sparked a classroom revolt but, Cassandra Jardine finds, its leader now believes firmly in the three Rs. , The Daily Telegraph, 10-08-1997, pp 22.

 

Source: http://www.waldorfcritics.org/articles/TelegraphGilmour.html

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Top Steiner School Ordered To Close By Government Over Child Safety Fears https://waldorfexposed.com/2023/12/07/top-steiner-school-ordered-to-close-by-government-over-child-safety-fears/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=top-steiner-school-ordered-to-close-by-government-over-child-safety-fears https://waldorfexposed.com/2023/12/07/top-steiner-school-ordered-to-close-by-government-over-child-safety-fears/#respond Thu, 07 Dec 2023 10:47:14 +0000 https://waldorfexposed.com/?p=824 Britain’s flagship Steiner school has been ordered to close amid fears over child safety, The Sunday Telegraph has learned.

The Rudolf Steiner School Kings Langley had already been banned by the Department for Education (DfE) from admitting any new pupils, following a series of damning Ofsted inspections which uncovered a raft of safeguarding failings.

It comes after Denis McCarthy, a senior staff member who was also a leading figure in the UK’s Steiner school movement, was sacked from the school for gross misconduct.

“He was a senior figure in anthroposophy,” a source close to the school told The Sunday Telegraph. “He was the most powerful person in the school, he had a large following.

“The school did everything that they could to protect him: minimizing or dismissing concerns, and deleting safeguarding emails.”

The development raises questions about the 34 other Steiner schools in the UK and Ireland, which includes four state funded Steiner academies.

Steiner schools, which are favoured by liberally-minded middle-class parents, base their curriculum on the spiritual philosophy of Rudolf Steiner, called anthroposophy.

A Steiner education emphasises child creativity and the importance of rearing “free thinking individuals”. Actor Mark Rylance sent his daughter Nataasha van Kampen, the filmaker who died in 2012, to a Steiner school in Crouch End, London.

Friends star Jennifer Aniston told Vogue magazine how the Steiner school she attended in America did not allow her to watch television, but she was allowed to go to the theatre.

The Rudolf Steiner School Kings Langley charges up to £9,570-a-year in fees and is set on ten acres of grounds on the site of a 13th-century Plantagenet royal palace in Hertfordshire.

The school has issued a public apology to children and their families for “real and serious failings going back several years”, acknowledging that it failed to act on “repeated concerns raised by parents” over safeguarding.

The school was notified in July of the Secretary of State for Education’s intention to remove it from the independent schools’ register, a decision which the school is now appealing.

The drastic move, which is only used as a last resort by ministers, follows a spate of highly critical inspections over the past 18 months.

Parental concerns about pupil welfare triggered an an emergency inspection last March by the School Inspectorate Service (SIS), which inspect private schools, after which the DfE ordered Ofsted  to take over.

Following the inspection, a school newsletter described school inspectors as “aliens” and told parents that there was much “shuffling of feet” when inspectors asked to speak to the school’s head.

Steiner schools do not typically have a headteacher, but rather are run by a committee or group of teachers. In November Ofsted inspectors found “serious weaknesses in the school’s management of safeguarding”.

They added that “several” of the 39 formal complaints received from parents from the previous school year alone related to safeguarding.

Inspectors said that “serious allegations of a child protection nature” were already being investigated by other authorities.

In December Ofsted said the school must “urgently” addresses weaknesses in its management of safeguarding issue.

An inspection earlier this year found a series of underlying flaws. “Leaders have failed to identify that the culture of close relationships at the school puts pupils at risk,” inspectors said.

“Leaders have underplayed and misrepresented the school’s safeguarding failings to parents”. The school confirmed that one teacher, Mr McCarthy, had been dismissed in January for gross misconduct “following a series of concerns about safeguarding and SEND [special education needs and disability] provision, reluctance to follow management guidance and a breakdown of trust and confidence”.

Mr McCarthy had taught at the school for 35 years and was in charge of training teachers. He rose to the role of  “Chair of the College of Staff”, meaning he was accountable to the chair of trustees on behalf of staff, and was responsible for ensuring that the school was run in accordance with the educational principles inspired by Rudolf Steiner.

He was also a senior figure in the Steiner school movement, and had served as a  director of the Steiner Waldorf Schools Fellowship, which runs all 35 Steiner schools in the UK and Ireland.

Now he advertises his services online for “Waldorf inspired home schooling”.

Richy Thompson, director of public Affairs and policy at Humanists UK, said that  child welfare issues at other Steiner schools must  be examined.

“For years now we have been aware of concerns about inadequate safeguarding at Steiner schools, including at Kings Langley,” he said.

“We are glad that these concerns are now being taken seriously and hope that other schools similarly come under closer scrutiny.”

Georgina Halford-Hall, chief executive of Whistleblowers UK, said: “The regulators and statutory bodies involved in this matter have missed many opportunities to protect children.

“We have supported whistleblowers at this school.

“They have been confronted with the determination of an organization to put the protection of its reputation above its safeguarding responsibilities. We welcome the long over due apology issued by the school to them.”

The school’s newly appointed Principal, Tim Byford, said in a statement on the school’s website: “The School and leadership wishes to fully and publicly apologize to those children, and their families, to whom the school failed to provide a safe and supportive learning environment.”

He added: “The new leadership of the School is putting into effect a strategy to address all of the issues identified by Ofsted and others, working closely with parents, staff and all stakeholders.”

A DfE spokesperson said: “All independent schools must meet the Independent School Standards and those that fail to do so must improve or face closure.”

Source: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/09/02/exclusive-top-steiner-school-ordered-close-government-child/

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