Trends in School Design
Dec. 9th, 2011 05:45 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I read Trends in School Design entirely because it was written by my grandfather. It is a fairly slim volume published by Macmillan in 1972 as part of The Anglo-American Primary School Project. Small abuse the University of Liverpool's online access to JSTOR netted me Malcolm Seaborne's review* of A `Golden Age' of School Building? by Stuart Maclure which at least let me place Trends in School Design in some context.
My grandfather had worked in the Architects Branch of the Ministry of Education in the 1950s and 1960s. This coincided with an explosion in demand for primary school places and the resulting pressure to build new schools for modest cost. Following innovations in Hertfordshire a style of school building was championed (by, I get the impression, my grandfather among others) which relied on pre-fabrication and had an emphasis on informal interiors, with flexible use of space and a `domestic' atmosphere.
Generalising horribly this meant that primary schools stopped looking externally like this:

Tentatively identified as the primary school my grandfather (or at least his younger brother) attended
And began to look instead like this:

Finmere school, one of the case studies in Trends in School Design
And stopped looking internally like this:

And started looking like this:

Trends in School Design is primariy a collection of case studies. The designs for the building (or retrofitting) of seven schools are described in some detail complete with architectural drawings (of which the chief thing that leaped out at me was the description of toilets as `lavs' where I suspect, today, they would be labelled `WCs'). As such, its primary interest to me, forty years after it was written and not being an educator, architect or historian of either subject was the Introduction. My grandfather writes in a style which makes me think of the clipped enthusiasm and optimism of documentaries from that period, spoken in bracing tones with impeccable RP english. The formality possibly hiding the the liberalism (and in some cases management speak) being set out, for instance:
"A primary school is now seen as a market place of educational opportunities for the children, the variety of which is only matched by the variety of life which will be open to the present generation of schoolchildren. It is no longer a matter of designing classes of a given size, each occupying a separate room and following a clearly defined programme. Such an approach immediately limits the choices available to the separate classes, except at enormous cost. Architects should be designing for an ever increasing variety of interconnected activities, readily available to groups of children and their teachers for the exploration of the problems they set themselves."
Some of it expresses a vision which I suspect has long vanished under the national curriculum to whit.
"In Britain the children are exposed naturally to learning experiences, pursue work of their own choice, and are given help when they need it."
(It should be noted my grandfather wrote this before my sister decided that Mathematics was dull and successfully contrived to spend six months doing no mathematics at all in her primary school until my mother and the headmistress stepped in and intervened firmly in her "free choice" of study topics)
Seabourne notes that the Hertfordshire system was not carried forwards into the 1970s with much success, following further tightening of budgets and that `drabness' was not always absent from these buildings. However given the horrors of much post-war mass-produced building the fact that, as I understand it, the majority of these schools are still in use and serving communities today must mark them out as a success. The incredible optimism of a new dawn of education, in which children are free-ranging seekers of knowledge gently guided by their teachers in classrooms built to engage and inspire obviously became somewhat tarnished by its encounter with reality. That said, the primary school world my grandfather described seems far closer to primary education today (as I experience it through G) than it does to the rigid formality that went before, national curriculum notwithstanding.
*Malcolm Seaborne. A `Golden Age' of School Building? Oxford Review of Education, Vol 11, No. 1, 1985, pp. 97-103.
My grandfather had worked in the Architects Branch of the Ministry of Education in the 1950s and 1960s. This coincided with an explosion in demand for primary school places and the resulting pressure to build new schools for modest cost. Following innovations in Hertfordshire a style of school building was championed (by, I get the impression, my grandfather among others) which relied on pre-fabrication and had an emphasis on informal interiors, with flexible use of space and a `domestic' atmosphere.
Generalising horribly this meant that primary schools stopped looking externally like this:
Tentatively identified as the primary school my grandfather (or at least his younger brother) attended
And began to look instead like this:

Finmere school, one of the case studies in Trends in School Design
And stopped looking internally like this:

And started looking like this:
Trends in School Design is primariy a collection of case studies. The designs for the building (or retrofitting) of seven schools are described in some detail complete with architectural drawings (of which the chief thing that leaped out at me was the description of toilets as `lavs' where I suspect, today, they would be labelled `WCs'). As such, its primary interest to me, forty years after it was written and not being an educator, architect or historian of either subject was the Introduction. My grandfather writes in a style which makes me think of the clipped enthusiasm and optimism of documentaries from that period, spoken in bracing tones with impeccable RP english. The formality possibly hiding the the liberalism (and in some cases management speak) being set out, for instance:
"A primary school is now seen as a market place of educational opportunities for the children, the variety of which is only matched by the variety of life which will be open to the present generation of schoolchildren. It is no longer a matter of designing classes of a given size, each occupying a separate room and following a clearly defined programme. Such an approach immediately limits the choices available to the separate classes, except at enormous cost. Architects should be designing for an ever increasing variety of interconnected activities, readily available to groups of children and their teachers for the exploration of the problems they set themselves."
Some of it expresses a vision which I suspect has long vanished under the national curriculum to whit.
"In Britain the children are exposed naturally to learning experiences, pursue work of their own choice, and are given help when they need it."
(It should be noted my grandfather wrote this before my sister decided that Mathematics was dull and successfully contrived to spend six months doing no mathematics at all in her primary school until my mother and the headmistress stepped in and intervened firmly in her "free choice" of study topics)
Seabourne notes that the Hertfordshire system was not carried forwards into the 1970s with much success, following further tightening of budgets and that `drabness' was not always absent from these buildings. However given the horrors of much post-war mass-produced building the fact that, as I understand it, the majority of these schools are still in use and serving communities today must mark them out as a success. The incredible optimism of a new dawn of education, in which children are free-ranging seekers of knowledge gently guided by their teachers in classrooms built to engage and inspire obviously became somewhat tarnished by its encounter with reality. That said, the primary school world my grandfather described seems far closer to primary education today (as I experience it through G) than it does to the rigid formality that went before, national curriculum notwithstanding.
*Malcolm Seaborne. A `Golden Age' of School Building? Oxford Review of Education, Vol 11, No. 1, 1985, pp. 97-103.