Saltus Grammar School - Yearbook (Hamilton, Bermuda)

 - Class of 1938

Page 14 of 48

 

Saltus Grammar School - Yearbook (Hamilton, Bermuda) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 14 of 48
Page 14 of 48



Saltus Grammar School - Yearbook (Hamilton, Bermuda) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 13
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Page 14 text:

9 THAT — N. Williams, who trained our representatives, is In no small way responsible for this success. THAT — reading the lesson in the Hall has proved to be a unique initiating ceremony for our newly appointed prefects. THAT — the Editor is to be congratulated on producing this fir t issue of the Saltus Year Book. THAT — .thanks are also due to the advertisers for helping to make it a financial success. WHY A BOARDING SCHOOL? No one who has been closely associated with a day school and a boarding school can have any doubt which benefitsi a child the most. No article on such a subject would be of any interest in England, for it would be proclaiming the obvious. There day schools are for those whose parents cannot afford a boarding school. No one with an in- come of six hundred pounds would consider himself unable to send a child away. But this side of the Atlantic a preparatory school for boys between the ages of nine and fourteen is a new thing and seems to require justification, or, at any rate, an explanation. Nine has been found to be the critical age for absorbing the ideas and ideals that the preparatory school endeavours to instil in young boys. An older boy arrives with other ideas already formed, most of them wrong, and isi a different proposition. At nine a child has left the nurstery routine and yet is not of an age to fit into the adult life of parents or others at home. It would only be parents with great wisdom and, above all, time and patience, who could create a routine at home which would continue and not counteract the benefits of the day school discipline; and correct discipline is beneficial although the word has a harsh meaning to the uninitiated. Parents whose lives are normal have not the time to supervise con- sistently a routine which will at this formative age establish habits of study, tidiness, punctuality and good table manners. There is not a mother who is not distressed daily by feeling a boy is being neglect- ed in one of these respects ' . Small boys conform without any resis- tence to reasonable rulesi which are being obeyed by their contem- poraries. They grouse if older, b ' ut the nine or ten year old will ac- cept the interdict of a master and the inevitable parental argument is not in the picture. It is so diffcult to write of the disadvantages of living at home without seeming to put the affection and intelligence of parents sadly

Page 13 text:

8 L. Vorley, now at Harvard University, has won a place in the Freshmen ' s soccer team, is a member of the Harvard Glee Club and kept wicket for the Harvard University Dramatic Club in a cricket match against the cast of ' Victoria Regina ' . Mr. Profit, a former member of the S. G. S, Staff, organised the match and also took part in it. Graham Gibbons is now Head Prefect of Ridley College and captain of the football team. He will be going to Pennsylvania Uni- versity in the autumn. E. J. Moniz has been playing football for the B. A. A. first XI. Ewing Tucker, at Sherborne School, is to take the School Certifi- cate this July. We wish him luck. We hear that he gives promisie of being a very good rugger player. Lyall Mayor, at Cheltenham College, has passed a gym. test usually taken by boys of eighteen. He has also played football for his House in Cup matches. Glyn Gilbert, at Eastbourne College, has been awarded his ' Stag — firsit XV rugger colours — and has played in every match this sea- son. He is the youngest player ever to have attained this distinction. Letters have been received also from the following: — W. C. H. Hallett, H. Masters, H. W. Murphie, H. North and Tony Anderson. They are all doing well in work and games and, one and all, they con- tinue to display a lively interest nn the affairs of Saltus. THEY SAY THAT ' — the Headmaster and the Staff certainly deserve a long holiday this summer. THAT — much of (their spare time has been taken up in teaching three boys who have been studying for the Cambridge Higher Certificate. THAT — the Board of Education should take note that the Saltus. has nine forms and exactly nine teachers, including the Headmaster! THAT — on the cheerful side we can, in this school year, take pride in our accomplishments, both scholastic and athletic. THAT — a hundred per cent pass in examinations and outstand- ing performances in athletics do not often go hand in hand. THAT — we did even better in the Inter-School Sports this year than in 1937.



Page 15 text:

10 at fault and to emphasize the unpleasant aspects of home life. But there are the discussions and nervous reactions between adults, the clashing of temperaments between brothers, which may impair a child ' s health and thus effect his aptitude for work or games a mani- festation of mental upset far removed from the cause. The attractions of living at home are numerous and obvious; more comforts, spasmodic affection from someone, freedom to choose one ' s playmates. But these can and will be enjoyed more fully in the holidays when parents can be more indulgent having turned over the disciplinary training to experts. Parents relieved of this responsi- bility will have a pleasanter relationship with their children. At school a boy is punished impersonally by a master. When the ordeal is past, the boy returns to the other boys and plays in a normal man- ner. It is a les ' son learned and over. Punishment meted out by a mother or father, in order to seem consistent, has to be followed by a period of disapproval when neither child nor parent is happy and the results are far from satisfactory. It is a subject vast and important but one is limited for space. It is reminiscent of an English boy of five who once demanded of a leading citizen in Bermuda, Hartley Watlington, Sir, tell me all you know about boats . The English system of education, of which the preparatory school is an integral part, is the outcome of years of educational experience. The best type of school has been a model for schools the world over. The Saltus Boarding School endeavours to be a preparatory school, but adapted to local needs. Because of small numbers, due to limited accommodation, it can only make a start in the right direction, but it is trying to instil in the boys the proper attitude to their environment. It is trying to teach good habits, and, by s et times for all things, en- able them to distinguish at an early age the difference between work and play, and to realize that work comes first. With the full time boarders the effort expended, which is just as great as if there were thirty boys, has been amply rewarded in the form of gratification expressed by parents. Who are the boarders? Bermudian children whose parents are doing what they think right regardless of their persional desires to have the constant companionship of their own children. It is sad but true that the wrench of separation at an early age is felt more by a mother and father than their son. There are sons of English boys here whose parents living in America wish to have them educated in a British Colony near at hand. And there are American boys whose

Suggestions in the Saltus Grammar School - Yearbook (Hamilton, Bermuda) collection:

Saltus Grammar School - Yearbook (Hamilton, Bermuda) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

Saltus Grammar School - Yearbook (Hamilton, Bermuda) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Saltus Grammar School - Yearbook (Hamilton, Bermuda) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Saltus Grammar School - Yearbook (Hamilton, Bermuda) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Saltus Grammar School - Yearbook (Hamilton, Bermuda) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Saltus Grammar School - Yearbook (Hamilton, Bermuda) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

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