Search this site:
BOARDING SCHOOL NOT LIKELY!
– but now a real success story – Melvyn Roffe, Principal of Wymondham College explains why
To some people’s way of thinking it is
amazing that the British boarding
school still exists. After all, it flourished in
the era of Empire, of a rigid class system and
harsh discipline. In an era when children
were rarely seen and never heard, what better
way of bringing up one’s children than to
send them to boarding school?
But in the first decade of the twenty-first
century, with the Empire long dispersed, the
class system eroded, with parents desperate
to understand their children not to beat
them; surely the fact that 60,000 children are
still educated in British boarding schools is
an anachronism.
Well, it would be if boarding schools
were still as they were. But they are not. Like
every other aspect of society, boarding
schools have changed – and very much for
the better.
For one thing, children are no longer
‘sent’ to boarding school. These days the
decision to choose boarding – and to choose a
particular boarding school – is as likely to be
that of the child him or herself as that of his
or her parents. And it is right that it should
be. Boarding school is a way of life. It is an
incredibly enriching way of spending your
formative years – but it is not for everyone
and not all boarding schools are right for all
students. Most boarding schools spend a lot
of time and no small amount of money in
explaining to prospective pupils what it is
that they offer.
And the need to appeal to pupils
themselves can also be seen in the way that
boarding houses look and the way that they
operate. Long gone are enormous
impersonal dormitories with stark decor and
minimal heating. Now most boarding
houses boast small well furnished study
bedrooms shared by a few pupils. Light, airy
accommodation is the order of the day in a
modern boarding house, with a plasma TV
in the common room and internet
connectivity at least in the IT room, if not
throughout the house via Wi Fi.
And the school likely to boast some fairly
impressive facilities in other areas, too, so
that whatever a pupil’s strong suit may prove
to be, the facilities are there to develop that
skill or interest to the greatest possible
extent. Boarding schools have some of the
finest facilities for sport, music and drama in
the country.
But in the end, it is not the bricks and
mortar that make a good boarding school; it
is by their strong relationships that most
schools would wish to be judged. Again, here
much has changed in the last century.
Parents are welcomed in and kept in touch
with their children’s progress and welfare.
Dedicated and well-trained staff support
pupils, creating an environment in which
young people can learn to live together in a
real community. This overused word is
nevertheless by far the best to describe a
boarding school where young people live
together, work together and play together. In
contrast to the isolation and alienation that
characterises so much of modern life,
boarding schools are places where children share their interests
and enthusiasms, celebrate their successes
and endure their failures, growing up to
respect each other and their diverse talents
and idiosyncrasies.
With all this going on, it is small wonder
that boarding schools feature so strongly in
the lists of the most successful schools in the
country. Academic progress is never taken
for granted at boarding schools, but rather is
seen as the key strand in a web of success,
each strand of which supports the others.
They specialise in finding the special thing
that excites the enthusiasm of the individual
pupil and then they harness that enthusiasm
to create across the board achievement.
Underpinning this success are the core
values of any good boarding school.
Boarding schools engender respect and
loyalty in their pupils, they encourage them
to care for others, to get involved, be active
and have their own opinion, to be innovative
and thoughtful and to strive to be the very
best they can be. Unsurprisingly, these are
also the values that universities and
employers’ organisations cite, along with
good qualifications, as being the key to
success in higher education and
employment. Boarding school pupils leave
school already understanding the importance
of these values because they have already had
the opportunity of seeing what they mean in
practice.
The Boarding Schools’ Association
www.boarding.org.uk represents over 500
state and independent boarding schools in
the United Kingdom and some British style
boarding schools overseas. Many of those
schools are used to educating children from
Service families and some have special
arrangements or bursaries for Service
children. The Ministry of Defence maintains
two boarding schools (Duke of York’s Royal
Military School, Dover and Queen Victoria
College, Dunblane) specifically for the
children of Service personnel and most of the
state boarding schools (www.sbsa.org) give
priority to Service children in the admissions
arrangements.
Even in these days of global financial
uncertainty, British boarding schools are
confident about the future – and with good
reason. A recent survey revealed that
boarding numbers in independent schools
are on the increase and government funding
has provided several hundred more places in
state schools, too. And even where parents
are paying the full fee, the overwhelming
majority state that boarding represents good
value for money.
Boarding schools have shed the harsh
image of a previous age. It may seem
unlikely, but they are proving one of the
success stories of twenty-first century
education.
Melvyn Roffe has
been Principal of Wymondham College, a large state boarding school in Norfolk, since September 2007, after six years as Headmaster of Old Swinford Hospital, another state boarding school. Initially, he
taught at Oundle School before becoming
Head of English and then Director of Studies
at Monmouth School. He has been an
inspector with the Independent Schools
Inspectorate, and was Chairman of the State
Boarding Schools Association (formerly
STABIS) in 2004 and 2005. He is Chairman
of the Boarding Schools’ Association.



Requesting content...




