Progressive Retreat
In 1926, Leonard and Dorothy Elmhirst founded Dartington Hall School. Next to Summerhill it was the most influential and important independent school in England when this book was published in 1977. As such it represents a rich vein of alternative education sponsored by middle-class liberal intellectuals in an attempt to escape the orthodoxy of state educational provision. Yet, little evidence existed as to whether these experimental ventures actually worked or even how they might be evaluated. This book represents a fresh attempt to apply explicitly sociological methods to these questions. Maurice Punch critically scrutinises progressive education's avowed aims to revolutionise the school, to save society from its own destruction, and to produce a renewed type of man and woman.
Product details
April 2010Paperback
9780521134842
196 pages
229 × 152 × 11 mm
0.3kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction on behalf of Dartington Hall trustees
- 1. Introduction: the children of the new era
- Part I. Looking Back at the School
- 2. An historical sketch of the school 1926–1957
- 3. The parents
- 4. The children
- 5. Social control
- 6. The children's world
- 7. The academic system and the staff
- Part II. Life After School
- 8. Leaving school
- 9. Work
- 10. Marriage and children
- 11. The progressive life-style
- 12. Conclusion: Dartington, the progressives, and the anti-institution
- Bibliography
- Index.