ChatterBank1 min ago
Schools That 'never Close'
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I'm not having a go at teachers or H&S but why do some schools 'never close'?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.My school never used to close - ever. No matter how bad the weather was they wouldn't close. I think it made it a good school, there was never any H&S issue either.
I'm not a parent but I can see how it benefited my parents by the school not closing.
Even at secondary school, it never closed (same school different site). It was also the first (or at least one of the first schools) in England to bring in 'Records of Achievement'.
I'm not a parent but I can see how it benefited my parents by the school not closing.
Even at secondary school, it never closed (same school different site). It was also the first (or at least one of the first schools) in England to bring in 'Records of Achievement'.
Our school was once open when there was only 20 members of staff on site during a snow blizzard. You either had the choice of going home, using the library or sitting through 3 hour lecture on something not very interesting. I snuck off into the workshop and my teacher was there doing paperwork but was more than happy for me to work on my woodwork. There wasn't anyone else there and he knew I'd be safe with the machinery.
You have to look at the geography of the local areas. Where I taught was nestled in the North Kent Downs - all routes in involved up and down hills impassable in snow. I always defend teachers when this comes up, it's not the teacher's decision to close schools it's the head's and that's usually because many parents would kick off if their child slipped on the path or their bus ended up in the hedge.
I think the other big change is in communication. When i was at school, and dinosaurs stalked the land, the school either had to decide to close at opening time when the children arrived, and even then it might be too late to let some working parents know, or it had to stay open to look after the children who had arrived. I can remember the school keeping a record of whose parents were out at work all day and whose parents would be likely to be at home if the school closed early, also informal arrangements among friends as to who could safely be left at a friend's house because their own parents wouldn't be there.
More than snow, because we lived in London where heavy snow was unusual, I can remember the walking crocs to get kids home when school closed early because of fog which, in the 50's was much heavier than we see nowadays. heavy fog in daylight is bad enough, but heavy fog in winter, after dark with the streetlighting we had then was very unpleasant. There also seemed to be one or two "chesty children" in each class who were not allowed out of the house on foggy days which you don't hear of now. The good old days? tell me about it!
More than snow, because we lived in London where heavy snow was unusual, I can remember the walking crocs to get kids home when school closed early because of fog which, in the 50's was much heavier than we see nowadays. heavy fog in daylight is bad enough, but heavy fog in winter, after dark with the streetlighting we had then was very unpleasant. There also seemed to be one or two "chesty children" in each class who were not allowed out of the house on foggy days which you don't hear of now. The good old days? tell me about it!
This thread got me reminiscing about my schooldays.My school never ever closed no matter how deep the snow was, but that was back in the thirties,forties .All the primary school teachers except one lived or lodged in the town and all the children struggled to school.I remember well the smell of socks and stockings drying on the hot water pipes in the classroom! We had fun during the interval building snowmen , having snowball fights and making slides (ronies in the Doric) - no H&S then lol