Questions galore are raised in this book which demand a debate to be heard loudly above the squeak of chalk and the banging of the classroom door. Dorset Evening Echo;

This book takes the reader into the school classroom and shows the conditions of schools and teaching methods as they really are. This was a controversial book about the author’s experiences of teaching in London. Still relevant today, it is an exciting read that was serialised in the Daily Mail. The system is supposed to turn out every child with a working knowledge of the three R’s. However, far too many primary school leavers are illiterate or have difficulty in reading. This book concentrates on the experiences of pupils in their school before the school bell rings for the last time and they go out to the adult world. It describes the effects of radical educational reforms on the day-to-day lives of teacher and scholars and looks at teaching methods in a variety of primary, secondary and comprehensive schools in Britain’s industrial cities.
Read more
It's early 1970's, comprehensive schools are being introduced, discipline is collapsing, standards are slipping, violence is emerging. This is a disturbing book that takes the reader right into the classroom. Based on real life experience this book is as topical today as it was when it was written and controversially serialised in the Daily Mail.
Read more

Product details

ISBN
9781999326920
Published
2018-11-30
Edition
2. edition
Publisher
Rowan Books; Rowan Books
Age
G, 01
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Biographical note

Jean Cantlie Stewart was born in Edinburgh in 1927, the daughter of the equally feisty Admiral Sir Colin Cantlie who ran Rosyth naval dockyard during the war.  Jean was also the granddaughter of Sir James Cantlie who was a pioneer of first aid and influential in the study of tropical diseases. Some say she was expelled from her school after squirting a tray-carrying chamber maid with a water pistol. This was a charge she always denied but perhaps so as not to encourage her son into rebellious ways.  Bright and passionately focused, she matriculated into St Andrews aged only 16.  Her early career was in teaching and in the Red Cross.  She married a retired Army officer in 1952 but shortly after the birth of their son, Hugh, they divorced. Being a single, divorced mother was not easy in the early fifties.  Jean buckled down to earn a living as a freelance journalist in gentlemanly magazines while living in a remote and primitive cottage in the Highlands without electricity. Determined to improve her lot, she moved to Oxford to read for a diploma in teaching.  Jean was a traditional, one-nation Conservative.  She decided to study law, as much as a way to enter politics, and qualified as a barrister.  Jean then stood for the Conservatives in Kirkcaldy (it later became Gordon Brown’s seat).  Though she failed to win the seat, she did increase the Conservative vote substantially.  She then devoted herself to writing full time.