ABSTRACT

In 2001, The Guardian launched a competition called The School I'd Like, in which young people were asked to imagine their ideal school. This vibrant, groundbreaking book presents material drawn from that competition, offering a unique snapshot of perceptions of today's schools by those who matter most - the pupils.

The book is wonderfully illuminated by children's essays, stories, poems, pictures and plans. Placing their views in the centre of the debate, it provides an evaluation of the democratic processes involved in teaching and learning by:

  • identifying consistencies in children's expressions of how they wish to learn
  • highlighting particular sites of 'disease' in the education system today
  • illustrating how the built environment is experienced by today's children
  • posing questions about the reconstruction of teaching and learning for the twenty-first century.

This book offers a powerful new perspective on school reform and is essential reading for all those involved in education and childhood studies, including teachers, advisors, policy-makers, academics, and anyone who believes that children's voices should not be ignored.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

Neglected voices

chapter |3 pages

Further reading

part |2 pages

Part 1 Forgotten spaces

chapter 1|14 pages

School buildings

‘A safe haven, not a prison . . .’

chapter 2|14 pages

Canteens and lunchrooms

The edible landscape of school

chapter 3|10 pages

School yards and playgrounds

‘It’s very big but there’s nothing in it . . .’

part |2 pages

Part 2 Learning and knowing

chapter 4|10 pages

Knowledge and the curriculum

‘The notion of writing prize-winning essays on tropical rainforests without taking some action would be seen as strange’

chapter 5|5 pages

Learning

‘Let us out . . . !’

chapter |1 pages

Further reading

chapter |6 pages

Learning

chapter 6|12 pages

Teachers and special people

‘Nobody forgets a good teacher . . .’

part |2 pages

Part 3 Staying power

chapter 7|14 pages

Identities and equalities

‘I resented being told what to wear, what to think, what to believe, what to say and when to say it’

chapter 8|5 pages

Survival

‘Schools may be getting good academic results but they are not helping the pupils as individuals’

chapter |1 pages

Further reading

chapter |6 pages

Survival

part |2 pages

Part 4 Flexible contexts

chapter |14 pages

A sense of time

‘I would like the school to be clever,

chapter |6 pages

Tools

‘Pupils don’t want state of the art blackboards or expensive televisions, they want comfortable chairs’

chapter |1 pages

Further reading

chapter |7 pages

Tools

chapter |12 pages

Final words

Whole school visions

chapter |2 pages

Afterword

Writer, the Guardian newspaper