The people in one’s first work setting make a distinct impression and in all likelihood have quite an influence. In the early eighties the two people who took an interest and provided most support at Deal Secondary School were Brian Redfern, a French teacher with a pastoral responsibility and, later, Deputy Head, and Malcolm Birt who was my boss as Head of Social Studies. Both remained at Deal and are now retired. I remember the Friday evening badminton club, followed by refreshment by a few pints of mild at The Jolly Gardener, which served as both cathartic exercise and an opportunity to put the world right.
Photo above, a teachers’ pay demonstration in Maidstone, 1985, left to right: John Young, xx, Alan Hodges, Malcolm Birt, Chris Hardy, Mary Fowl, John Yates, Roger Darby (behind) and Graham Millar.
We had a mini-snooker table in the staffroom – and note the dartboard. Here is Graham Millar, fellow geography teacher and senior year head.
When asked if I missed teaching, I would answer that it was the spirit and humour of the staff room that I missed most. Later jobs had their own pressures, but in teaching, surrounded by critics as it is, professional colleagues are a very important strength.
We did miss living by the sea in Deal and Walmer after moving to Ashford. The characteristics of the place to live and work was an important factor for the early working experience, too. It was undergoing change as the main employment of the coal-mines disappeared and the Dover port activities were transformed. Combined with the mobile nature of the marines, since gone, and other features of sea-side town life made for a challenging social mix. The beguiling charm of the place could not conceal the problems.
This photograph shows a number of other staff making up a hockey team to play against a school team or, perhaps, another school. I don’t remember the result of the match. This group includes a number of people who started working there at about the same time as me.
Back: Tony Hollow, Ian Pettitt, Angus Willson, Ron Canwell, Alan Hodges
Middle: Elaine Smallwood, Malcolm Perry, Graham Millar, Roger Darby
Front: Sue Alcock, Sue Greenhalgh
So much has happened in schools, and beyond, in the intervening years it is like looking back at a more distant era. I have met up with Chris Hardy a number of times since and he always manages to remind of enough, with an alternative perspective, to avoiding viewing those formative times through rose-tinted spectacles.
I left Deal on a secondment to the local authority not knowing that I wouldn’t return. It was what I now regard as part one of a four-phase working life. I had learned the importance of having an interest in the people around you. We had a reunion in the summer of 2023 and it was a delight to meet up with so many former colleagues after such a long time.
This post also appears at
http://pannage.blogspot.com/2011/01/colleagues-at-work-1978-1987.html [opens in a new window]
First written January 2011
Addition June 2016, November 2023
School-based CPD
I have been throwing out some papers from the loft, long over-due. There was a whole box from work I did with Computers in the Curriculum which I have have written about here >
However, what came to light was the presentation I made in an INSET Week in July 1985. It was a series of one-day active workshops which included all the teaching staff. It was detailed in aims and content – and the whole week was evaluated by questionnaire. Naturally, I emphasised the learning rather than the technology and concluded:
“where an area of the curriculum relies heavily on information skills there is a wide range of sources. The requirement is usually the choice of the most appropriate media, using a variety of sources and presenting it in a variety of ways. Ian Shepherd has written “the computer will have become so normal a part of everyday teaching that it will be as gratuitous to speak of computer assistance as it is to speak now of “library assisted” or “teacher assisted” learning.”
There was a copy of a formal ‘thank you’ note from Keith Hargrave, Deputy Head, that had been posted on the staff noticeboard. A further two-sided sheet reminded me of how contentious this CPD week had been in certain quarters. I wasn’t the sole target of his ire, but Clive Dunn, a bitter mathematics teacher and hobbyist computer-buff, had written “I venture to say that I would have learned more by teaching my first year class than attending the computer course.”
There was also an article by Ted Wragg from The Times Educational Supplement (1 June 1984) referring to the staffroom “Early Palaeolithic Obstructionist… the seasoned stopper, the practised doom merchant, the block artist.” We had our fair share of those.