Summerhill School

Summerhill School
Author: Alexander Sutherland Neill
Publisher: St Martins Press
Total Pages: 269
Release: 1993-01-01
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9780312088606

A guide to experimental education, originally published in 1960 and expanded for the 1990s, features a discussion of how American education lags behind the rest of the world and what people can do to change that.

Summerhill

Summerhill
Author: Alexander Sutherland Neill
Publisher:
Total Pages: 336
Release: 1990
Genre: Child psychology
ISBN: 9780140135596

Neill of Summerhill (Routledge Revivals)

Neill of Summerhill (Routledge Revivals)
Author: Jonathan Croall
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 531
Release: 2013-09-13
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1135047308

A. S. Neill was arguably the most famous child educator of the twentieth century. He was certainly the most controversial. All over the world, countless parents and teachers have been shocked, delighted or inspired by his subversive ideas about education, or by a visit to ‘that dreadful school’ which continues to this day – Summerhill. First published in 1983, this sympathetic but critical exploration of his iconoclastic ideas and personality is the result of interviews with two hundred ex-pupils, parents and teachers about life at Summerhill, and of the practicality of Neill’s philosophy about child freedom. Jonathan Croall has also drawn on many unpublished letters and documents, which help to illuminate Neill’s personal struggles, and his analysis and friendship with Homer Lane, Wilhelm Stekel and Wilhelm Reich. The result is a fascinating and revealing portrait of a remarkable man who, in his absolute determination to be ‘on the side of the child’, remained in permanent opposition to the adult world.

A Conversation About Happiness

A Conversation About Happiness
Author: Mikey Cuddihy
Publisher: Atlantic Books
Total Pages: 251
Release: 2014-09-01
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1782393153

Orphaned at the age of nine, Mikey Cuddihy left the U.S. to board at an experimental British school. A vivid and intense memoir of coming of age amidst the unraveling social experiment of the late 1960s. When Mikey Cuddihy was orphaned at the age of nine, her life exploded. She and her siblings were sent from New York to board at experimental Summerhill School, in England, and abandoned there. The setting was idyllic, lessons were optional, pupils made the rules. Joan Baez visited and taught Mikey guitar. The late sixties were in full swing, but with total freedom came danger. Mikey navigated this strange world of permissiveness and neglect, forging an identity almost in defiance of it.

The Last Man Alive

The Last Man Alive
Author: Alexander Sutherland Neill
Publisher: Hart Associates
Total Pages: 268
Release: 1969
Genre: Juvenile Fiction
ISBN:

The adventures of a group who survived a poisonous cloud that turned everyone else into stone.

Sit Down and Shut Up

Sit Down and Shut Up
Author: Cinque Henderson
Publisher: Macmillan + ORM
Total Pages: 233
Release: 2018-09-18
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1250101891

On his very first day of school as a substitute teacher, Cinque Henderson was cursed at and openly threatened by one of his students. Not wanting trouble or any broken bones, Henderson called the hall monitor, who escorted the student to the office. But five minutes later the office sent him back with a note that read, “Ok to return to class.” That was it: no suspension, no detention, no phone call home, nothing. Sit Down and Shut Up: How Discipline Can Set Students Free is a passionate and personal analysis of Henderson's year as substitute teacher in some of America’s toughest schools. Students disrespected, yelled at, and threatened teachers, abetted by a school system and political culture that turned a willfully blind eye to the economic and social decline that created the problem. Henderson concludes that the failures of our worst schools are the result of a population in crisis: classrooms are microcosms of all our nation’s most vexing issues of race and class. The legacy and stain of race—the price of generational trauma, the cost of fatherlessness, the failures of capitalism, the false promise of meritocracy—played itself out in every single interaction Henderson had with an aggressive student, an unengaged parent, or a failed administrator. In response to the chaos he found in the classroom, Henderson proposes a recommitment to the notion that discipline—wisely and properly understood, patiently and justly administered—is the only proper route to freedom and opportunity for generations of poor youth. With applications far beyond the classroom, Henderson’s experiences offer novel insights into the pressing racial, social, and economic issues that have shaped America’s cultural landscape. Sure to ignite discussion and controversy, Sit Down and Shut Up provides a frank evaluation of the broken classrooms of America and offers a bold strategy for fixing them.