Sunday, January 04, 2009



LOL: A school in Britain has banned the word "school" because it thinks that the word may have negative connotations

We read:
"
When is a school not a school? When it is "a place for learning". Watercliffe Meadow Primary in Sheffield has adopted the new phraseology because it thinks that the word school may have negative connotations for pupils and parents. Linda Kingdon, the head teacher, said that the change would bring the school (or place of learning) closer to real life. But critics condemned it as laughable political correctness.

Watercliffe Meadow is among scores of schools that are dropping the "S-word" from their titles to reflect their changing uses and trends in education. Ms Kingdon said that Watercliffe Meadow, which was formed from the merger of three schools, decided from an early stage not to use the word "school".

"This is Watercliffe Meadow, a place for learning. One reason was many of the parents of the children here had very negative connotations of school. Instead, we want this to a be a place for family learning, where anyone can come. We were able to start from scratch and create a new type of learning experience. There are no whistles or bells or locked doors. We wanted to deinstitutionalise the place and bring the school closer to real life," she said.

Richard Caborn, the local MP, is unimpressed. "I'm always open to new ideas, but the reality is education is about preparing young people to live in the real world," he said. "I just don't think the case has been made to drop the word school to a place of learning. I don't know why they have done it."

A spokeswoman for the Campaign for Plain English said that it was laughable. "This is the whole political correctness agenda. Using unfamiliar words instead of a simple one like `school', will get in the way of children's ability to learn," she said.

Andrew Sangar, Sheffield City Council's Cabinet member for children's services and lifelong learning, said that as far as he was concerned Watercliffe Meadow was a school and that was how the council would continue to refer to it....

Professor Alan Smithers, from the University of Buckingham, said that dropping the word school was symptomatic of a reluctance to face up to hard truths. "Frankly, calling something a learning centre is likely to confuse parents and it rather diminishes the institution," he said.

Source

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Her students kept spelling it 'skool' and something had to be done....

Anonymous said...

yes, let's not confuse school for an establishment of education. that might be too confusing

Anonymous said...

"We wanted to deinstitutionalise the place and bring the school closer to real life," she said."

Uh-oh, She used the word school.

Mobius

Anonymous said...

Instead of improving the school so parents and pupils do not have "negative connotations" of "school", they merely change the name! What are they going to do when youngsters have the same feeling about a "Place of Learning"? What nonsense

Anonymous said...

Why don't they just close the "learning centers" and be done with it. There obviously is going to be little educating going on there that the pupils will find of use in later life.

Anonymous said...

I bet if they called it مدرسة (Arabic for school) there would be NO question at all.

Anonymous said...

Gee, that looks awfully similar to the definition of school, so what the hell is the difference? I guess I (actully, they) need to stop living because "Life" is too difficult and offensive.