- A. S. Neill
-
Alexander Sutherland Neill
Neill on his birthdayBorn 17 October 1883
Forfar, ScotlandDied 23 September 1973 (aged 89)
Aldeburgh, Suffolk, EnglandOccupation Educator, author Known for founding Summerhill School, advocacy of personal freedom for children, progressive education Alexander Sutherland Neill (17 October 1883 - 23 September 1973) was a Scottish progressive educator, author and founder of Summerhill school, which remains open and continues to follow his educational philosophy to this day. He is best known as an advocate of personal freedom for children.
Contents
Life and personal background
Neill was born in Forfar in the Scottish Lowlands, one of thirteen children. Both parents were schoolteachers. After acting as a pupil-teacher for his father, he studied at the University of Edinburgh and obtained an M.A. degree in 1912. In 1914 he became headmaster of the Gretna Green School in Scotland. During this period, his growing discontent could be traced in notes which he later published. In these notes, he described himself as "just enough of a Nietzschian to protest against teaching children to be meek and lowly"[1] and wrote (in A Dominie's Log) that he was "trying to form minds that will question and destroy and rebuild".
Neill worked with Homer Lane, a US educator then living in England and founder of the Little Commonwealth school in Dorset, and later at King Alfred School in Hampstead, a school founded by a group and parents in 1898 and led by John Russell from 1901 to 1920.
Maria Montessori was also an influence, and so were Sigmund Freud and Wilhelm Reich.
In 1921 Neill left England for the Continent. In Hellerau near Dresden he visited Lilian Neustätter, whom he had met at King Alfred School and who later became his wife. In Hellerau, Neill, Lilian Neustätter and Christine Bear, who had studied with Émile Jaques-Dalcroze, founded the International School. Jacques-Dalcroze, a Swiss composer and music educator, had founded a school in Hellerau in 1910 that closed in 1914 with the outbreak of World War I. The International School in Hellerau gave Neill the first opportunity to lead a school based on his own principles.
Summerhill School arose out of the International School in Hellerau. It later moved to Sonntagberg in Austria, and in 1923 to Lyme Regis in England, where it acquired the name Summerhill. In 1927 it moved to its present site in Leiston, Suffolk. After Neill's death in 1973, the school was run by his wife Ena until 1985, then by his daughter Zoë Neill Readhead.
Educational philosophy
Neill believed that the happiness of the child should be the paramount consideration in decisions about the child's upbringing, and that this happiness grew from a sense of personal freedom. He felt that deprivation of this sense of freedom during childhood, and the consequent unhappiness experienced by the repressed child, was responsible for many of the psychological disorders of adulthood. Neill's ideas, which tried to help children achieve self-determination and encouraged critical thinking rather than blind obedience, were seen as backward, radical, or at best, controversial.
Many of Neill's ideas are widely accepted today, although there are still many more "traditional" thinkers within the educational establishment who regard Neill's ideas as threatening the existing social order, and are therefore controversial.
In 1921 Neill founded Summerhill School to demonstrate his educational theories in practice. These included a belief that children learn better when they are not compelled to attend lessons. The school is also managed democratically, with regular meetings to determine school rules. Pupils have equal voting rights with school staff.
Neill's Summerhill School experience demonstrated that, free from the coercion of traditional schools, students tended to respond by developing self-motivation, rather than self-indulgence. Externally imposed discipline, Neill felt, prevented internal, self-discipline from developing. He therefore considered that children who attended Summerhill were likely to emerge with better-developed critical thinking skills and greater self-discipline than children educated in compulsion-based schools.
These tendencies were perhaps all the more remarkable considering that the children accepted by Summerhill were often from problematic backgrounds, where parental conflict or neglect had resulted in children arriving in a particularly unhappy state of mind. The therapeutic value of Summerhill's environment was demonstrated by the improvement of many children who had been rejected by conventional schools, yet flourished at Summerhill.
Strongly influenced by the contemporary work of Sigmund Freud and Wilhelm Reich, Neill was opposed to sexual repression and the imposition of the strict Victorian values of his childhood era. He stated clearly that to be anti-sex was to be anti-life. Naturally, these views made him unpopular with many establishment figures of the time.
Life at Summerhill
As headmaster of Summerhill, Neill taught classes in Algebra, Geometry and Metalworking. He often said that he admired those who were skilled craftsmen more than those whose skills were purely intellectual. Neill held that because attendance was optional, the classes themselves could be more rigorous. Students learned more quickly, and more deeply, because they were learning by choice, not compulsion.
Neill also had special "private lessons" with pupils, which included discussions of personal issues and amounted to a form of psychotherapy. He later abandoned these "PLs", finding that children who did not have PLs were still cured of delinquent behaviour; he therefore concluded that freedom was the cure, not psychotherapy.
During his teaching career he wrote dozens of books, including the "Dominie" (Scottish word for teacher) series, beginning with A Dominie's Log (1916). His most influential book was Summerhill: A Radical Approach to Child Rearing (1960) which created a storm in U.S. educational circles. His last work was his autobiography, Neill, Neill, Orange Peel! (1973) He also wrote humorous books for children, like The Last Man Alive (1939).
A. S. Neill was married twice. His first wife Lillian Richardson was an Australian, the sister of the novelist Henry Handel Richardson; his second wife Ena Wood Neill administered Summerhill school with him for many decades until their daughter, Zoe Redhead, took over the school as headmistress.
Influences on Neill's thought
Neill's biggest mentor in education was Homer Lane, US-born but British based. Neill was also an admirer and close friend of psychoanalytical innovator Wilhelm Reich and a student of Freudian psychoanalysis, though in his autobiography he wrote that "Much of what I thought I had learned from the psychoanalysts has disappeared with time".[2]
Another major contributor to the field of Libertarian Education was Bertrand Russell whose own self-founded Beacon Hill School (England) (one of several schools bearing this name) is often compared with Summerhill. Russell was a correspondent of Neill and offered his support.
Criticisms of Neill
Many within the educational establishment felt threatened by Neill's work, and criticism of Neill was correspondingly harsh. Many published ad hominem attacks accusing Neill of various failings including naivety and unrealistic idealism, or even downright moral indifference. Neill was similarly criticized for bringing notions of Freudian repression into an educational setting.
Neill's educational legacy
Neill's notions of freedom and education, considered controversial in their time, influenced many of the progressive educators who came after him.
Modern advocates, such as John Taylor Gatto, John Holt and many others in the unschooling, democratic education and homeschooling movements, have taken Neill's ideas further and updated them, providing energetic and radical critiques of the compulsion-based schooling which is still prevalent in most countries. There are now many schools all over the world based the ideas of democratic education (see list); many take part in the annual International Democratic Education Conference whose initial meeting was held in Israel in 1993.
Summerhill School, which Neill founded, was in 2007 accepted by OFSTED as providing a good quality of academic education for children. Summerhill has also been recognised by the United Nations for its exceptionally good treatment of children.
"The convention of the Rights of the Child makes particular reference to children's rights to participate in decisions affecting them and Summerhill, through its very approach to education, embodies this right in a way that surpasses expectation." - Paulo David, Secretary, UN Committee on the Rights of the Child
Works
- A Dominie’s Log (1916)
- A Dominie Dismissed (1916)
- Booming of Bunkie (1919)
- Carroty Broon (1920)
- A Dominie in Doubt (1920)
- A Dominie Abroad (1922)
- A Dominie’s Five (1924)
- The Problem Child (1926)
- The Problem Parent (1932)
- Is Scotland Educated? (1936)
- That Dreadful School (1937)
- The Last Man Alive (1938)
- The Problem Teacher (1939)
- Hearts Not Heads in the School (1945)
- The Problem Family (1949)
- The Free Child (1953)
- Summerhill: A Radical Approach to Child Rearing (Preface by Erich Fromm) (1960)
- Freedom, Not License! (1966)
- Talking of Summerhill (1967)
- Children's Rights: Toward the Liberation of the Child (with Leila Berg, Paul Adams, Nan Berger, Michael Duane, and Robert Ollendorff) (1971)
- Neill, Neill, Orange Peel! (1972)
Published Correspondence
- Record of a friendship: the correspondence between Wilhelm Reich and A. S. Neill, 1936-1957 (1982)
- All the Best, Neill: Letters from Summerhill (1984)
Portrait bust of A.S. Neill
A.S. Neill sat for sculptor Alan Thornhill for a portrait[3] in clay. The correspondence file relating to the A.S. Neill portrait sculpture is held in the archive[4] of the Henry Moore Foundation's Henry Moore Institute in Leeds and the terracotta remains in the collection of the artist. Bronzes are in the public collections of The College of Orgonomy,[5] New York and the Scottish National Portrait Gallery, Edinburgh (collection reference PG2204).
References
- ^ Neill, A.S. (1915). A Dominie's Log. READ BOOKS, 2007 Page 66. ISBN 1406763535, 9781406763539
- ^ Neill, A.S. (1973). Neill! Neill! Orange Peel!. Weidenfeld and Nicolson. pp. 163. ISBN 0-297-76554X.
- ^ portrait head of A.S.Neill image of sculpture
- ^ http://www.henry-moore-fdn.co.uk/matrix_engine/content.php?page_id=584 HMI Archive
- ^ The American College of Orgonomy
- Gagliano Giuseppe,La pedagogia del dissenso tra ottocento e novecento, Editrice Uniservice,2010 ISBN 9788861786226
- Neill, Alexander S.: Summerhill School - A New View of Childhood. New York: St. Martin's Griffin, 1996 ISBN 0-312-14137-8.
- Croall, Jonathan: Neill of Summerhill - The Permanent Rebel. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1983 ISBN 0-7100-9300-4
- Croall, Jonathan (ed): All the Best, Neill. Letters from Summerhill. London: André Deutsch, 1983 ISBN 0-233-97594-2 (A collection of letters by Neill to people like H.G. Wells, Bertrand Russell, Henry Miller, Wilhelm Reich, Paul Goodman, Homer Lane, and others)
- Walmsley, John. Neill & Summerhill: A pictorial study. Baltimore: Penguin, 1969 ISBN 0-14-080134-0
- Sims, Hylda: Inspecting the island. Ipswich (UK): Seven Ply Yarns, 2000 ISBN 0-9538797-0-4 (A novel by an ex-Summerhill pupil)
- Vaughan, Mark (ed) with contributions from A. S. Neill, Zoe Neill Readhead, Tim Brighouse and Ian Stronach: "Summerhill and A. S. Neill". Maidenhead: Open University Press, McGraw-Hill Education, 2004 ISBN 0-335-21913-6.
- The New Summerhill - A. S. Neill, edited by Albert Lamb & Zoe Readhead, London 1992,Penguin Books, ISBN 0-14-016783-8
External links
- Summerhill School
- Page of Summerhill and A. S. Neill (German)
- A.S. Neill on Project Gutenberg
- ALEXANDER SUTHERLAND NEILL (1883–1973) (PDF), by Jean-François Saffange, originally published in vol. XXIV, no. 1/2, 1994 of UNESCO's Prospects:the quarterly review of comparative education
Categories:- Democratic education
- Alternative education
- Alumni of the University of Edinburgh
- Scottish educationists
- 1883 births
- 1973 deaths
- Youth empowerment individuals
- People from Forfar
- Philosophy of education
- School principals and headteachers
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