Kilquhanity School

Coordinates: 55°00′47″N 3°55′41″W / 55.013°N 3.928°W / 55.013; -3.928
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

55°00′47″N 3°55′41″W / 55.013°N 3.928°W / 55.013; -3.928

Kilquhanity House

Kilquhanity School was one of several free schools to have been established in the United Kingdom in the twentieth century. Others include Sands School in Devon, Summerhill in Suffolk, Sherwood School[1] in Epsom and Kirkdale School in London.

The school was founded by John Aitkenhead (1910-1998) [2][3] and his wife Morag in 1940. It was closed in 1997. It was located in a classical mansion house designed by the architect Walter Newall near the town of Kirkpatrick Durham in the historical county of Kirkcudbrightshire in Galloway. The school was reopened under head teacher and former pupil Andrew Pyle, with the support of a Japanese educational organisation Kinokuni Children's Village Schools (headed by Shinichiro Hori) which now owns the premises. The first intake of 12 pupils was expected in 2013. A previous attempt to reopen in 2009 failed to attract a financially viable number of pupils.

The school was visited in 1941 by the refugee Polish Jewish artist Jankel Adler who had been evacuated to Glasgow. The poet W S Graham, who had earlier helped him translate an article on Paul Klee in Glasgow was working here at the time. He spent New Year 1942 here, Christopher Murray Grieve (Hugh MacDiarmid) whose son Michael was a pupil here, was also present.[4][5]

Philosophy

The philosophy of Kilquhanity was heavily influenced by the writing and ideas of A. S. Neill, who founded Summerhill School, where Aitkenhead had worked;[2] essentially that children learn best with freedom from coercion ("free-range").

Further reading

  • The Education Revolution #32 Spring/Summer 2001 (the magazine of the Alternative Education Resource Organization).
  • Various authors. Summerhill: For and Against, a collection of essays, arguing both in favour and against Summerhill's (and Kilquhanity's) approach.
  • A.S. Neill. Summerhill. A book about the school and its philosophy, by the school's founder.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Home". Sherwood School. Retrieved 22 November 2020.
  2. ^ a b "Obituary: John Aitkenhead". The Independent. 21 August 1998. Retrieved 22 August 2008. [dead link]
  3. ^ "John Aitkenhead". Braehead News. Retrieved 22 August 2008.
  4. ^ "Jankel Adler | Kirkcudbright Galleries | Dumfries and Galloway | Artists | Gallery". Kirkcudbright Galleries. Retrieved 23 August 2019.
  5. ^ "SCAN Catalogue - catalogue record". catalogue.nrscotland.gov.uk. Retrieved 23 August 2019.

External links