civics, citizenship and patriotism – the experience of the london county council, 1918-1939

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Civics, citizenship and patriotism – the experience of the London County Council, 1918- 1939 Jenny Keating, History in Education Project, Institute of Historical Research, University of London

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Civics, citizenship and patriotism – the experience of the London County Council, 1918-1939. Jenny Keating, History in Education Project, Institute of Historical Research, University of London. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Civics, citizenship and patriotism – the experience of the London County Council, 1918-1939

Civics, citizenship and patriotism – the experience of the London

County Council, 1918-1939

Jenny Keating, History in Education Project, Institute of Historical Research, University of London

Page 2: Civics, citizenship and patriotism – the experience of the London County Council, 1918-1939

“Among countries of the first rank, indeed, England seems to be the

only one which has not yet realised the importance of regulating,

from the very first, the noble, but dangerous, passion of patriotism.

We leave it to grow up in a haphazard and unenlightened manner, to

be the sport of Jingo newspapers and of frantic mob-orators, to be

divorced from all knowledge of the true nature of England’s greatness,

and to be associated with a blind contempt for other nations”.

EE Kellett, ‘The Teaching of Patriotism’, The Journal of Education, March 1900, pp181-2.

Page 3: Civics, citizenship and patriotism – the experience of the London County Council, 1918-1939

“Comparisons between the present and the past will frequently suggest

themselves, and it is by this method of comparison rather than by set

lessons or direct instruction that the foundations of intelligent citizenship

can best be laid. Any attempt to deal elaborately with such matters as the

parts of the British constitution, the local government of the country, or the

administration of justice, is wearisome, and must be largely unintelligible to

children..”

Board of Education, ‘Suggestions for the Consideration of Teachers and others concerned in the

work of the Public Elementary Schools’, (London, HMSO 1918), p95

Page 4: Civics, citizenship and patriotism – the experience of the London County Council, 1918-1939

“The reason why Germany has fought this magnificent fight,

the reason why she has kept together as she has done is not

because of her training and knowledge but because the

children have been taught from the earliest infancy to

subordinate themselves to something which is greater than

themselves – to the ideals of the nation”. He went on, “Of

course we cannot do that. We do not want to do it in the

sense which Germany has done it. Democracy does not want

to do it, but I venture to say that if a democracy is not

permeated by ideals that democracy will be no more

successful than any other form of government”.

LMA – LCC/EO/PS/02/003 ‘Citizenship and Civics’ – Reference Paper by Dr TB

Napier, ‘Civic and national responsibility and ideals, 22/2/1918

Page 5: Civics, citizenship and patriotism – the experience of the London County Council, 1918-1939

The “difficult and delicate issues – ideals”. The big questions of: “on the one hand what society in its corporate capacity should do for its citizens and on the other what should be the corresponding return of the citizen for his share in the common weal”. Which, as he warned, “approach the forbidden ground of party politics and religious opinion”.

“apparently we need a second law-giver who will formulate a second set of Commandments. So broad and so simply expressed as to secure common consent...Until his advent, teaching of ideals had better be incidental. There are many disadvantages; but in a multitude of counsellors there is wisdom, and possibly safely”.

LMA – LCC/EO/PS/02/003 ‘Citizenship and Civics’ – ‘Civic and national responsibility and ideals – Supplementary Report by the Education Officer, Sir Robert Blair, 12/11/1918

Page 6: Civics, citizenship and patriotism – the experience of the London County Council, 1918-1939

“..I should say first that the problem is so to present the history of

Britain as to attract and win the sympathy and rouse the sense

of duty of the child, without at the same time giving him the

notion that England has always been right, and is by nature

evidently superior in all things to all other nations. We must

make him understand that he ought to love his country and try to

serve her simply because God has put him here, but we must at

the same time show him that his country and heroes are worthy

to be loved”.

LMA – LCC/EO/PS/02/003 ‘Citizenship and Civics’ – ‘Civic and national

responsibility and ideals – Memorandum by Dr TB Napier, 31/1/1919, p2.

Page 7: Civics, citizenship and patriotism – the experience of the London County Council, 1918-1939

Its field of enquiry was to look at Civics :

“1) in the sense of some rudimentary knowledge of the structure and

functions of our Government, national and local and

2) to the promotion of a healthy and reasonable patriotism whether by

direct teaching or through the medium of subjects already universally

taught”

LMA – LCC/EO/PS/02/003 ‘Citizenship and Civics’ – Report of Committee on Civics,

29/7/1925, p1.

Page 8: Civics, citizenship and patriotism – the experience of the London County Council, 1918-1939

“Employers…sometimes complain… that boys cannot do long tots, or compound practice, or cannot spell. They do not complain that children know too little about De Montfort’s Parliament or the achievements of Sir George Grey”.

“..it has generally failed, and failed chiefly because of its dullness....In general it is sufficient to remark that school time may be better spent than in endeavouring to teach girls and boys under fourteen the constitution and functions of the Board of Trade. And it is into this sort of thing that the teaching of Civics as a separate subject too frequently degenerates”.

LMA – LCC/EO/PS/02/003 ‘Citizenship and Civics’ – Report of Committee on Civics, 29/7/1925, pp1-2.

Page 9: Civics, citizenship and patriotism – the experience of the London County Council, 1918-1939

“There are talks at morning assemblies…Current events are used by very

many teachers to call children’s attention to the conduct of public affairs.

Educational visits are paid very commonly to places of national and local

interest. The League of Nations has a part of one kind or another in the life of

most schools. ‘Mock’ elections are held. The prefect system, club

organisations, committees and other devices for introducing into the school

some form of self-government or government by consent, in varying degrees

of completeness and of scope, are used to accustom the children to the task

of government and to interest them in it…School debates are used, and

occasional talks by the head or other teachers are devoted to topics

connected with government”.

LMA – LCC/EO/PS/02/003 ‘Citizenship and Civics’. Report by the chief inspector, 24/10/1933, ‘The Teaching of Citizenship’,p1.

Page 10: Civics, citizenship and patriotism – the experience of the London County Council, 1918-1939

Courtesy of Enid Deeble, born 1929. Empire Day 1938

Page 11: Civics, citizenship and patriotism – the experience of the London County Council, 1918-1939

“an attempt to arouse in children a right sense of their heritage as

inhabitants of a politically free and democratic country, and a sense of

decent patriotism or pride, or, at least, interest in their local

environment”.

“an attempt to instruct children in the constitution and the powers of

the central and the local government under which they live”

LMA – LCC/EO/PS/02/003 ‘Citizenship and Civics’. LCC: Memorandum by the Chief

Inspector on the Teaching of Citizenship, 14/12/1933.

Page 12: Civics, citizenship and patriotism – the experience of the London County Council, 1918-1939

“When I saw that question I smiled because that’s a question for a

modern school boy. It has got no relevance at all to a school boy

in the 1930s. We were proud. Everyone was patriotic. It’s only –

we were aware of our nationality. Today it’s different, and that

question is relevant, but it wasn’t relevant in 1935, the thought

never occurred to us.”

History in Education Project, KK/P23/HiE8, Kenneth Kelsey, interviewed 24/3/2010.