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Eton College

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发表于 7-11-2023 15:47:15 | 只看该作者 回帖奖励 |倒序浏览 |阅读模式
Emma Bubola, At Eton, Balancing Tradition, Mystique and a Hint of Evolution; Famed boarding school strives to stay ahead in the 21st century. New York Times, July 11, 2023, at page A4.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/ ... ollege-changes.html

Note:
(a)
(i) Eton College
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eton_College
(a public school [to be explained in (c)(ii)] in Eton, Berkshire, England; boarding-only; The school is the largest boarding school in England; section 1 History: "Eton College was founded [in 1440] by King Henry VI as a charity school to provide free education to 70 poor boys who would then go on to King's College, Cambridge, founded by the same King in 1441"/ section 2 Coat of arms)
(ii) Henry VI of England
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_VI_of_England
(1421 – 1471; king of England 1422-1461 AND 1470-1471; "The only child of Henry V, he succeeded to the English throne at the age of nine months upon his father's death")
belonged to House of Plantagenet.
(iii) Berkshire
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berkshire
("It is bordered by  * * * Greater London to the east [view map in this Wiki page]"/ section 1 History: name (box trees are not found in US) )

(b) "students wear tailcoats and white [bow] ties to classes. * * * 'Eton is not immune from the broader society in which we sit,' said Mr Henderson, wearing the school's trademark white bow tie and cuff links with its coat of arms, in a recent interview in his office."

tailcoat
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tailcoat
(knee-length; "In colloquial language without further specification, 'tailcoat' typically designates the former [dress coat]"/ section 2 Dress coat: "A dress coat is waist length in the front and sides, and has two long tails reaching to the knees in back")

(c) Felix Kirkby

The English surname Kirby or Kirkby is from place names of the same either spelling in England, from "Old Norse kirkja 'church' + bȳ 'farmstead village.' "

(d) "with its campus in the shadow of Windsor Castle [also in Berkshire] * * * just last month, he [Eton headmaster Simon Henderson] announced an expansion of his previous initiative to partner with state schools in poorer areas of the north.
(i) state-funded schools (England)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State-funded_schools_(England)
("commonly known as state schools"/ section 8 Funding)

section 3 School years: " In most cases progression from one year group to another is based purely on chronological age, although it is possible in some circumstances for a student to repeat or skip a year. * * * State-funded nursery education is available from the age of 3, and may be full-time or part-time, though this is not compulsory. If registered with a state school, attendance is compulsory beginning with the term following the child's fifth birthday [year 1 at sixth birthday; Reception is at fifth birthday; view chart]. Children can be enrolled in the reception year in September of that school year, thus beginning school at age 4 or 4.5. Unless the student chooses to stay within the education system, compulsory school attendance ends on the last Friday in June during the academic year in which a student attains the age of 16. * * * Years 12 [17th birthday] and 13 [18th birthday] are often referred to as 'lower sixth form' and 'upper sixth form' respectively, reflecting their distinct, voluntary nature * * * Some independent schools still refer to Years 7 to 11 as 'first form' to 'fifth form,' reflecting earlier usage

You see, the chart says "year," not "grade." Now you understand why the correction at the bottom stated, "It [Eton College] teaches boys aged 13 to 18, not grades 7 to 12." The "grade" is a term found in US, not in UK.
(ii) Education in England
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_in_England
("England also has a tradition of private schools (some of which call themselves public schools) and home education: legally, parents may choose to educate their children by any permitted means")
(iii) England does not have the term of "school district." How do English parents choose schools for their kids?

Anne West, School Choice (And Diversity) in the UK since 1944: Continuity, Change, Divergence and School Selectivity. Journal of School Choice, 17: 15, 24-25 (2023)
https://eprints.lse.ac.uk/117678/5/School_Choice_And_Diversity_in
("Parents (or carers) must be allowed to express at least three 'preferences' for state-funded secondary schools for their child (Department for Education (DfE), 2021). They submit a single application form to their local authority with their preferred state-funded schools (inside or outside the local authority). Each school is then considered under an 'equal preference system,' with preferences being considered without reference to the order listed by the parents (London Councils, 2019). Each child is considered separately for each school and the published admissions criteria are used to decide whether a child can be offered a place; the admission authority decides if the admissions criteria have been met. If more than one school is able to offer a place, the local authority will allocate the highest (i.e., the most preferred school) of those listed by parents to the student." (footnote omitted).

Private schools in England can take students anywhere.
(iv) Bachelor's degree
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bachelor%27s_degree
("In England, Wales and Northern Ireland, bachelor's degrees usually take three years of study to complete, although courses may take four years where they include a year abroad or a placement year")

(e) Caius Folkerts and his mother Maie Folkerts
(i) Caius
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caius
(ii) Maia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maia
("also spelled Maie * * * is the daughter of Atlas")








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 楼主| 发表于 7-12-2023 10:53:30 | 只看该作者
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At Eton College — the boarding school in the British countryside that has educated princes and 20 prime ministers — students wear tailcoats and white ties to classes. But some have worn waistcoats with the symbol of Black History Month underneath.

The students still sleep in ivy-covered stone dormitory buildings, some dating to the 18th century. Some of them have rainbow pride flags fluttering from them.

It’s an all boys school, but there also is a feminism society and a celebration of International Women’s Day.

“They’re on the right track,” said Alasdair Campbell, a 19-year-old recent graduate.

“Horrible,” said Felix Kirkby, 21, another of its alumni. “It’s destroying its reputation.”

Eton, which was founded in 1440 and teaches boys ages 13 to 18, has long been a symbol of British tradition and continuity, with its campus in the shadow of Windsor Castle, its elitist quirks and its expensive tuition.

But in a Britain that is more racially diverse, more open to questions about gender identity and economic inequality, and increasingly rejecting the aristocratic legacy of a white-dominated empire, Eton, too, is changing. Many students and alumni have welcomed its evolution. Some have not. Others argue that Eton needs an even more profound overhaul to remain relevant in present-day Britain.

Navigating the tightrope between past and present is Simon Henderson, who eight years ago became, at 39, the youngest headmaster in the school’s history.

Mr. Henderson, an Oxford graduate who taught history at Eton, has broadened access to scholarships — tuition is about 45,000 pounds, or $57,000, a year — and just last month, he announced an expansion of his previous initiative to partner with state schools in poorer areas of the north.

He has promoted discussions about masculinity, sexism and gender identity; celebrated Black and L.G.B.T.Q.+ history months; and appointed a “director of inclusion education” to address issues around race and sexuality. He sacked a professor who refused to take down a video he had posted on YouTube in which he had argued that patriarchy was partly caused by women’s choices because it benefits them.

Some of these moves have brought Mr. Henderson a nickname as “Trendy Hendy,” and criticism as a “woke" activist, while his firing of the professor ignited a debate over free speech on campus.

Mr. Henderson sees himself as a cautious modernizer, trying to both uphold Eton’s heritage and promote change.

“Eton is not immune from the broader society in which we sit,” said Mr. Henderson, wearing the school’s trademark white bow tie and cuff links with its coat of arms, in a recent interview in his office.

“There are moments in an institution’s path where it needs to step forward a bit more firmly,” he said. “And this is one of those moments.”

He dismissed accusations that he wants to dismantle the school’s traditions as a “myth,” but admitted, “I know some people might feel the pace of change has been quick.”

Henry VI founded Eton as a school for children of the poor, but over time it became a bastion for the offspring of Britain’s rich and powerful, almost by birthright.

The Prince of Wales and his brother, Prince Harry, are alumni. George Orwell was a graduate, as was John Maynard Keynes; Percy Bysshe Shelley; and the adventurer Bear Grylls. The former prime minister Boris Johnson graduated from Eton as well; at age 16, he wrote in the school’s magazine that all parents should send a son to Eton because it will imbue him with “the most important thing, a sense of his own importance.”

Political leaders who followed an Eton College-Oxford University pipeline into Parliament have been accused of carrying into politics the entitlement and nonchalance they learned there, and for being out of touch with Britain’s reality.

As recently as 2011, an Eton admission test asked prospective students to imagine they were prime minister and to write a speech arguing that employing the army against violent protesters, and killing many of them, was “both necessary and moral.”

In recent years, Eton has admitted more sons of international money — fewer viscounts and more investment bankers — as well as more children from less affluent families, with the number of scholarships growing every year. Still, at least 75 percent of the students still pay the full fee.

The school has also become more academically selective and demanding, but in a more competitive educational environment, fewer Eton students are being admitted to Oxford or Cambridge than in past years. Mr. Henderson said some were now getting into Ivy League colleges in the United States instead.

Mr. Campbell, the recent graduate, said he supported Mr. Henderson’s efforts. He said that, for him, the conferences on issues of race, gender and privilege were eye-opening. It was time for the school’s elitist allure to go, he said.

“The closer Eton becomes to a normal school in terms of traditions the better light it’s going to have in the public’s eye,” Mr. Campbell said.

Yet even small, temporary decisions have created controversy.

Since 1857, Eton has kept a pack of beagles to use in hunting hares. But in 2004, hare hunting became illegal in Britain. The school kept the sport alive on campus by having the students train the beagles to follow an artificial animal scent, and then enter competitions.

Last spring, the keeper for the pack retired and the school did not find an immediate replacement. The dogs were temporarily moved off campus.

Hundreds of boys protested on campus, inspiring extensive coverage in the British press. The British conservative newspaper The Telegraph wrote that parents feared Eton’s hunting society “is being quietly axed through the backdoor by Eton’s ‘woke’ leadership.” Some parents, the newspaper wrote, even offered “to keep the pack together on their personal land estates.”

Mr. Kirkby, the 21-year-old alumnus and a child of academics who went to Eton on a scholarship, said the school should retain its quirky, aristocratic activities, like the requirement to wear tailcoats and some of its sports.

“It’s a powerful symbol of acceptance,” he said, as he sat at a cafe in Oxford, where he now studies. “For someone who grew up in a disadvantaged background to be able to hunt and shoot and fish.”

In his view, the approach Mr. Henderson is taking suggests an opposition to the very idea of Eton as an elite private school.

“Hendy,” he added, “is preparing the grounds for the school’s destruction.”

In 2020, the school erupted when Mr. Henderson fired Will Knowland, the teacher who had posted the video about patriarchy.

Some students defended the teacher, arguing that his firing would hurt Eton’s reputation as an institution where debate can be held freely. A letter asking for his reinstatement gathered thousands of signatures online; the students wrote that “the school is seeking to protect its new image as politically progressive at the expense of one of its own.”

The school said that it did not intend to shut down debate but that the sacking was a disciplinary matter since the teacher refused to take down the video after he was asked to. Mr. Knowland did not respond to requests for an interview but told British newspapers that free speech was critical to education.

Although many students said they appreciated the new sensibility Mr. Henderson has brought to the school, some say he hasn’t gone far enough, expressing a hope that the school would broaden scholarships more, as well as hire more nonwhite teachers, admit girls, and scrap the tailcoat altogether.

But Mr. Henderson said there were “no plans” to admit girls or get rid of the tailcoats. And the beagles are back on campus. Some of Eton’s traditions, he said, are “a physical, tangible connection to our past” and are “very, very valuable.”

At the end of the term last month at Eton, new students were in the town trying on cashmere uniform overcoats and shopping for color-coded socks for croquet, fencing or squash.

Caius Folkerts, 12, was enthusiastically doing his first fitting of an Eton tailcoat.

“They are not walking around in denim,” said his mother, Maie Folkerts, as she photographed her son in a tailcoat. “And hopefully they won’t ever.”

A correction was made on July 6, 2023: An earlier version of this article referred imprecisely to the student body at Eton College. It teaches boys aged 13 to 18, not grades 7 to 12. A picture caption in this article also misstated the name of a place that provides uniforms for Eton. It is Billings & Edmonds, not Billings and Edwards.
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