‘School phobia’ is a dreadful label for some children's
perfectly understandable response to being
compelled to go to school against their will. They are not phobic, any
more than a conscientious objector is a coward; they are refusing
– and in most cases very nobly. Over the years, I have spoken to many
worried parents of school-refusing children. The outrages these children
have been subjected to in the name of ‘education’ disgust me.
They have been saddled with a pseudo-medical label that has deliberate
connotations of ‘mental illness’ – with all the stigma
and the implied (and not-so-implied) menace that goes with that. Their
perfectly reasonable dissent, and their desperately courageous resistance
to being hurt and harmed has been cynically redefined as
‘overdependence,’ ‘psychological instability,’ and
‘immaturity.’ They have been psychologically tortured under the
guise of psychiatric or psychological ‘treatment’ for a
non-existent ailment. Their parents – also demeaned by labels such as
‘overprotective’ – have been threatened with court action
unless they physically force their terrified, traumatised children into
school every day. Many such parents who have sought my advice have
themselves been in a terrible state of stress and trauma. Why don't they
just comply? Because they know that forcing their child to go so school is
immoral, psychologically harmful, and inimical to their child's education.
Or do they know that? Parents often do not seem to know it consciously. Or
if they do, they also ‘know’ the contradictory idea that it is
right and important for children to be schooled, because the law, the
psychiatric, psychological, and educational professions all say so. They
may be nice people in many respects, but as a result of their own
parents' coercion, they are simply unable to see how damaging and
wrong it is to force a child to go to school.
Ask parents what they would think of a system which not only imprisons
innocent people (some of whom are terrified and suffer lifelong trauma as a
result) for many years but then forces them to obey every whim of the
warders, takes up their time with mind-numbing makework, leaving them
almost no time for their own pursuits, and in some cases even force-feeds
inmates, and so on. Thinking of vicious tyrants like Saddam Hussein, most
will be incensed. They will rail against the brutality and immorality of
such a system. Until you tell them that you were referring to our own dear
school system. Then they will think that you are guilty of hyperbole, and
that anyway, schoolchildren get nights and weekends out, unlike
‘real’ prisoners. Oh, well that's all right then! They
are only imprisoned for five days out of seven. Super. And I suppose that
the knowledge that they are to be locked up for five days a week for eleven
years does not remotely affect them on the days when they are
‘free’? False. The psychological effects of school hang like a
pall over children's lives, twisting their thinking and stunting their
intellectual and psychological growth, whether it is a school day or not.
How would you feel if you were told today that you must go to school
for the next eleven years, that you must attend all the classes I
have deemed necessary for you, that you must submit to humiliating
procedures and that you will probably be in fear for your physical
safety much of the time. But worse, that you will have to put your
own life on hold for eleven years in order to jump through the hoops
that will be set up for you?
Even this comparison fails to capture some of the more destructive effects
of compulsory schooling on children. Childhood is both the most important
and the most vulnerable period of life. Children are at the beginning of
their lives and do not have the inner resources that you might use to
palliate an eleven-year imprisonment. Furthermore you are not in the
position of having an overwhelming need to please your parents. As adults,
most of us have to a significant extent escaped the need not to disappoint
our parents or invoke their wrath. But children cannot throw off the need
for their parents' love and approval without terrible emotional cost.
Even given that I am free from parental coercion, being forced to go to
school would ruin my life. I should have to give up doing and thinking
about what I want to do and think about, when and where I want to. Life is
all too short and precious to waste doing things we don't want to do.
In spending seven hours a day, five days a week, doing lessons that are at
best only accidentally related to things I am interested in, I should be
enacting someone else's notion of what I should do and of who I am. I
should have no mental energy left to spend another seven hours at home
thinking about the things I really want to think about. This would be very
debilitating, and would adversely affect me at weekends too, because all
the time, I should have in mind that on Monday morning, I must be back at
school. The knowledge that there is a time limit – that on Monday
morning I must be back at school – would make it very difficult to
start any major project or train of thought during weekends and short
holidays. (And that is assuming that there is no homework. I once spent
virtually an entire six-week summer holiday solving 590 sets of
simultaneous equations, only to return to school to find that the teacher,
having had second thoughts about the drudgery of marking the work he had
ordered, exercised his right to choose and claimed to have been joking. I
wasn't laughing.) I used to feel an increasing sense of dread as the
weekend or school holiday wore on. I used to feel physically sick every
Sunday night.
Was I labelled ‘school phobic’? No. My mother thought I loved
school, because I did quite well and didn't make a fuss about going.
She was very surprised when, some years ago, I told her that I had loathed
school. As William Blake wrote,
Children whose parents would neither dream of forcing them to go to
school nor of preventing them from going, and who support their
children in anything they want to do, and who do not allow
themselves to be drawn by the school system into a conspiracy
against their children, have a very different experience of school
if they do choose to go. Not having to worry about their parents'
approval (for they will have it anyway), they are free to take their
teachers just as seriously as they deserve. They are free to do what
they think right instead of deferring to authority. They are free to
leave.
Sadly, there are very few such children, for most parents cannot bring
themselves to cede this elementary aspect of self-determination: they
wouldn't dream of allowing their children to leave school just
because they want to, or indeed to attend just because they want to. Some
of the children become deeply miserable as a result; some rebel; some
really do go mad in the end. Is this surprising? I have, if anything, more
hope for children who kick and scream when their parents drag them into
school than for children who respond only inwardly, as I did, for the
kickers and screamers are still fighting; they still have a sense of self;
they have not been successfully crushed and moulded by the system. They are
like the character played by Jack Nicholson in the very important film One
Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. And teachers and parents who calmly
conspire in this despicable treatment of fellow human beings (yes, children
are human beings too) are like the serenely evil psychiatric nurse in that
film.
So I, as an adult and a psychologist, want to say to any children out there
who hate school: you are not alone. Most people hate it too, but usually
they don't feel entitled to say so, and many can't bear to
think about it so they hardly even know how they feel. You are not mad
– you don't have a Deep Psychological Problem (though you might
develop one if you stay in school against your will!); and you are not bad
for wanting to live your life the way you choose, doing what you think
right – that is what everyone should be doing. You are not the
problem: coercion is the problem. Being forced to go to school is the
problem.
_____________
Who wouldn't be ‘school
phobic’?
Sarah Fitz-Claridge
And because I am happy, & dance & sing.
They think they have done me no injury...
Contrary to popular belief, school is not compulsory in most Western countries.
Criticism welcome! If you would like to comment, email me at sarah
fitz-claridge.com.
Index of other articles of interest to home educators
What's Wrong With Home Visits? On providing evidence of home education to state officials. Published by Education Otherwise.
My Libertarian International Fall Convention 2002 paper, given in London, England, The Semblance of Consent. Published in the The Laissez Faire Electronic Times Vol 1, No 40, November 18, 2002.
Nefarious character or gullible fool? A brief comment on a current conspiracy theory.
To the transcript of my US Libertarian Party National Convention 2002 speech, Is that a burqa on the bedroom floor?
The Burqa Incident, an article about how I was expelled from the Libertarian Party National Convention room and (allegedly) narrowly escaped spending the night in jail being interrogated by the FBI. Published in the The Laissez Faire Electronic Times, Vol 1, No 23, July 22, 2002.
To the transcript of my Youth 4 Liberty Summer Camp 2002 speech, War, Free Trade and Liberty – Strange Bedfellows?
Copyright © 1998, 2003 Sarah Fitz-Claridge
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