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TES Platform: Tragedies deflect us from our core aims
 Fri 4th Aug  11:59
Does the annual toll of children killed or severely injured on school trips not call into question the very continuance of such trips?
Platform: Tragedies deflect us
from our core aims
Anthony Seldon Published: 04 August 2006 TES
4-8-06
News of the
tragic death of a 17-year-old boy while on a school trip
to Ecuador and of the serious injury suffered by a girl,
also 17, in a parachute jump organised by her school, is
disturbing. One’s heart goes out to the families
concerned, to their fellow school- children on the trips,
and to the teachers, who will be going through their own
agonies.
Does the annual toll of children killed or severely
injured on school trips not call into question the very
continuance of such trips? Can any possible value derived
from such outings possibly balance the human tragedies
involved of lost children, brothers and sisters?
This is an emotional time to be asking such questions,
and it is impossible to know how one’s thinking
would be changed if it were children from one’s own
school who had suffered, or even one’s own
daughters or sons.
The response of increasing numbers of teachers is that
they will not take children out on trips. A tragedy,
perhaps through no fault of their own, could, in a
litigious world, result in them being sued and perhaps
the loss of their jobs. The psychological damage could
prove overwhelming. Some teachers involved in the
experience of a tragedy on a school trip have been unable
to face the classroom again.
Nevertheless, I believe that school trips, including
difficult and even dangerous pursuits, should continue
and, indeed, significantly increase in number – in
line with legal safeguards for teachers. Education over
the past 25 years has become narrowed down far too much
to the classroom. Academic lessons are obviously the core
activity for any school, but schools should be about far
more than teaching children from books and computers
about mathematics, French or English.
Intellectual understanding of many subjects is boosted
immeasurably by school visits. Geography, history, modern
languages and art would be far narrower subjects were it
not for trips to inspect the landscape, visit museums and
battlefields, travel and speak abroad and visit art
galleries. Such experiences penetrate deep into the minds
of the young, even those whose behaviour is the most
awkward. Many adults would cite their trips out as the
most memorable part of their entire school experience.
These trips should be increased for all children in the
future.
Academic learning, however, is only a part of what
schools should be doing. As important is the development
of the whole personality. Children should be afforded
opportunities while at school to be challenged and to
learn about themselves in testing environments, thereby
learning how to manage risk and conquer fear. How will
our young people be able to cope with the crises and
difficulties they will inevitably face in life if they
have never been put on the spot?
Of course, there are risks involved. But proper risk
assessments and accredited organisations should ensure
such risks are minimised (though they can never be wholly
eliminated).
All our schoolchildren should also have an entitlement to
spend a certain number of days in the open countryside,
in Britain or abroad. The Duke of Edinburgh’s
award, scouts and guides, youth clubs and other groups
provide such opportunities. But they do not affect more
than 10 per cent of children at school age. Going on long
hikes through the countryside, sleeping under canvas and
cooking and eating in the fresh air are profoundly
life-enhancing experiences. So too are rock-climbing and
abseiling, canoeing and sailing. If children do not
participate in these activities while at school, when
will they?
The answer is that they won’t. Learning about the
countryside and the open air, far away from the built
environment, is an utter necessity for every single child
brought up in Britain. Yes, these plans will result in
greater risks to children, though, properly managed, such
risks should be minimised. But they will also lead to far
more rounded and, I believe, contented young people, who
will be far more capable of managing themselves, and
taking sensible decisions for themselves and
others.
The whole area of school trips is ripe for radical
rethinking. Such a rethink must address the whole
question as a balance between time spent in the classroom
and out of school. To my mind, 10 per cent of the school
year should be spent on trips out of school, including at
least three nights away for each year 7 to 11. Using the
army to supervise these enrichment experiences for the
young – not just to provide structure in the lives
of young offenders, as Home Secretary John Reid suggested
last week – would be a good start.
Anthony Seldon is the master of Wellington
college, Berkshire
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