Kashti 1988
Kashti 1988
                                 Comparative Education
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To cite this article: Yitzhak Kashti (1988) Boarding Schools and Changes in Society and Culture:
perspectives derived from a comparative case study research, Comparative Education, 24:3,
351-364, DOI: 10.1080/0305006880240307
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                                                                                     Comparative Education      Volume 24 No. 3 1988                                               351
YITZHAK KASHTI
                                                                                     Boarding schools tend to appear as selective, conservative and elitist educational organisa-
                                                                                     tions, striving to stabilise current social conventions. In this essay, I shall attempt to present
                                                                                     an additional aspect of these schools, namely that they could sometimes appear as education-
                                                                                     ally integrative, innovative in cultural fields and as unravelling the patterns of social
                                                                                     structure, mainly by accelerating the processes of mobility and change in society. Boarding
                                                                                     schools' chances of acting as accelerators of change in society and culture increase when they
                                                                                     themselves operate in an environment of change. In these circumstances, the changes
                                                                                     produced in the schools tend to appear in restructured patterns of role and status of the
                                                                                     schools' graduates, and in innovative spreading and strengthening of the principles of faith
                                                                                     or ideologies.
                                                                                           In a historical perspective, boarding schools in Europe were, first and foremost, a
                                                                                     Christian phenomenon. At the end of the Middle Ages, their attention was still given to
                                                                                     recruiting students who would, when the time came, serve as community priests (Finaczy,
                                                                                     1914; Rodgers, 1938). These schools focused their attention on students' acquiring an
                                                                                     education in Latin and theology, while increasingly co-opting the students within the school
                                                                                     system (Bekefi, 1910; Cook, 1917).
                                                                                           From the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries onwards, boarding schools became wide-
                                                                                     spread in most parts of Europe, and constituted an important element in education systems.
                                                                                     During the Reformation, the number of these schools increased, and they became an integral
                                                                                     part of the effort to spread Protestantism, or to renew the strength and hold of the old
                                                                                     religion (Aries, 1965; Bajko, 1984).
                                                                                           In each country boarding schools had different names. In England they were known as
                                                                                     'public schools', and were originally intended for children of the poor (Gathorne-Hardy,
                                                                                     1977). In Hungary—before and after the Reformation—the Kollegium came into being. It
                                                                                     was initially open to all classes of society and, by means of scholarships and arrangements in
                                                                                     the school and the community, encouraged the education of the children of tenant farmers
                                                                                     and the bourgeoisie together with those of the nobility [1].
                                                                                           Eventually, in continental Western Europe and in England the poor students in the
                                                                                     boarding schools were replaced by paying students. In the eighteenth century, the majority
                                                                                     of boarding schools were intended for such students, who came from bourgeois and upper
                                                                                     class families (Aries, 1965; Pinchbeck & Hewitt, 1969). The final crystallisation of these
                                                                                     schools in the nineteenth century as places for training children of the upper class, the
                                                                                     gentry and the upper-middle class marked them with the stamp of traditionalism, conserva-
                                                                                     352   Y. Kashti
                                                                                     tism and class interest (Hiding, 1901; Bamford, 1967). This characterisation fits the pattern
                                                                                     of change in the schools of mainland Western Europe and England, but it is impossible to
                                                                                     determine whether these trends were consistent, or characteristic of all boarding schools.
                                                                                           Another development in the field of institutional arrangements, which emerged in
                                                                                     parallel with the boarding school pattern described above, was the rise and spread of
                                                                                     institutions intended for the lower classes (Carlebach, 1970). These shelter institutions were
                                                                                     originally established for orphans, or lost or abandoned children; they had existed in Europe
                                                                                     in limited numbers for hundreds of years (Tugener, 1969). Their spread as institutions of
                                                                                     shelter, treatment or re-education began mainly in the nineteenth century, when the
                                                                                     relationship between the two types of boarding arrangements—the school on the one hand
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                                                                                     and the shelter institution on the other—crystallised finally in the form of mutual separation
                                                                                     (Pinchbeck & Hewitt, 1969).
                                                                                           This process stabilised the representation of the boarding school as being rooted in
                                                                                     preserving the interests of the upper classes on the economic and political plane, while the
                                                                                     school's activities in the cultural field were characterised as fostering and reinforcing
                                                                                     exclusive status symbols (Millham et al., 1987). Similarity, the image of the different types
                                                                                     of shelter institutions crystallised as appropriate to and compatible with the supervision,
                                                                                     shelter and care requirements of the lower classes (Carlebach, 1970). The polarisation of
                                                                                     boarding arrangements assisted in fixing the phenomenon on the front of social preservation.
                                                                                     Sociologists tend to explain this, inter alia, by the stabilisation and crystallisation imposed on
                                                                                     the original status of graduates because of lengthy exposure in boarding school to the
                                                                                     symbols and norm systems unique to a certain class (Polsky, 1962; Weinberg, 1967).
                                                                                           The situation described tends to be reflected in theories of the sociology of education:
                                                                                     that is to say, the different kinds of schools are nothing but the reflection of the social
                                                                                     structure, as Durkheim argued (1956); or one of the functional parts of society, as conceived
                                                                                     by Parsons (1959); or the result of social intervention, as in Archer's description (1984) of
                                                                                     the rise of educational systems. Even authors outlining the image of society as a complex of
                                                                                     conflicting relationships of domination and dependency among the different classes also view
                                                                                     the school as a tool of the dominant class, which by this means arranges the production and
                                                                                     use of cultural capital to reproduce the existing class structure (Bourdieu, 1971, 1973;
                                                                                     Willis, 1981).
                                                                                           Generally, it seems that boarding schools do not deviate from these generalisations.
                                                                                     Moreover, when they are viewed from the aspect of their stated and covert aims, and when
                                                                                     their activities are examined on the level of social mobility or the stability of their graduates'
                                                                                     status, they not only do not appear as exceptions to the rule but sometimes seem to be its
                                                                                     outstanding implementers (Cookson & Persell, 1985; Millham et al, 1987; Kashti, 1986).
                                                                                           Boarding schools usually focus on objectives and means similar to those of day schools,
                                                                                     but operate in different dimensions of time and space. These dimensions tend to create a
                                                                                     more intensive environment of socialisation, reflected in increased involvement of partici-
                                                                                     pants in the organisation and construction of an insulated framework which tends to limit
                                                                                     the conflicts characteristic of relatively open educational organisations (Kashti & Arieli,
                                                                                     1976). From this standpoint, boarding schools appear to offer educational, social and
                                                                                     cultural options different from those of day schools, in the same way as they tend to
                                                                                     constitute a separate category from institutions for shelter and remedial treatment (Kashti,
                                                                                     1979).
                                                                                           In the following discussion I demonstrate and substantiate the argument that the view
                                                                                     of boarding schools as agencies stabilising or conserving social status and cultural traditions
                                                                                     is not necessarily valid. I indicate three historical instances where, in my estimate, boarding
                                                                                     schools' orientation was mainly one of change. I do not argue that these schools were
                                                                                                                                                            Boarding Schools 353
                                                                                     independent foci of change or innovation; however, they can be viewed as accelerators and
                                                                                     formulators of processes of change in culture and social structure. The activities of the
                                                                                     schools under examination in this regard are expressed in the legitimisation of new roles, in
                                                                                     social recruitment and the mobility of their students, and in the mediation and dissemination
                                                                                     of culture.
                                                                                          These modalities of involvement in change refer to the Kollegium schools in Transyl-
                                                                                     vania and Eastern Hungary in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the English Public
                                                                                     Schools in the second half of the nineteenth century, and the Israeli youth villages during the
                                                                                     British Mandate and in the first decade after the establishment of the State of Israel,
                                                                                     especially between the 1920s and 1950s.
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                                                                                          The methodology of my work is based on three social-historical case studies, with the
                                                                                     majority of the data emanating from secondary sources. The data of each case study were
                                                                                     examined separately, compared with those of the others, and finally analysed in light of
                                                                                     sociological conceptualisations and generalisations (Crossley & Vulliamy, 1984).
                                                                                     ism. This situation brought change in land ownership, and created pressure for social
                                                                                     mobility. The newly-rich, arising out of the middle class, attempted to integrate with the
                                                                                     upper class. One of the central ways of attaining this aim was to send their children to the
                                                                                     traditional boarding schools of the aristocracy, the Public Schools. These tendencies brought
                                                                                     about the establishment of new schools and expansion of the existing ones [8].
                                                                                          The Public Schools traditionally guided their students towards isolation and withdrawal
                                                                                     from cities. They preferred country life for the sake of moral education (distance and
                                                                                     isolation supposedly making the educational process easier). In the schools, the students
                                                                                     were constantly exposed to teachers, religious leaders and prefects. They were under
                                                                                     continual pressure to attain achievements dictated by the classical curriculum and to behave
                                                                                     in an exemplary manner in public (Weinberg, 1967).
                                                                                          However, in spite of the schools' tendency to strictness and moral education, they also
                                                                                     tended towards organisational and administrative irregularities. Students' dissatisfaction with
                                                                                     the physical conditions, the lack of teachers and the lessening of educational activities
                                                                                     resulted in repeated riots. These disturbances continued for almost 100 years, until Arnold's
                                                                                     reforms in 1828 [9].
                                                                                          Arnold brought a string of reforms to the Public Schools, first implemented in Rugby,
                                                                                     where he was active, and from there they extended to other schools. Following the reforms,
                                                                                     both students and teachers calmed down, and the Public Schools continued to spread. The
                                                                                     schools now accepted as students—in growing numbers—the children of the new middle
                                                                                     class as well as the gentry and the upper class (Mingay, 1967).
                                                                                          The pedagogic and organisational principles which crystallised in the Public Schools,
                                                                                     and assisted in mediating cultural codes and upper-class norms for all students, were as
                                                                                     follows.
                                                                                           (1) A view of the student, the future graduate, as a Christian gentleman. A gentleman
                                                                                           was envisaged as a person of blameless character, of reliable judgement and consistent
                                                                                           behaviour. Such a person could be trusted with government and the determination of
                                                                                           policy (Weinberg, 1967).
                                                                                           (2) Cultivation of a strong bond between the church and the school. The principals
                                                                                           viewed the church as the central source of their influence. There was no conflict
                                                                                           between the message brought by the church and the values which the school desired to
                                                                                           teach. Educational ideals of moral obligation, public service, reliability, fair play and
                                                                                           faith found their roots in religion (Musgrave, 1979; Chandos, 1984).
                                                                                           (3) Informal education. An informal student system was re-instituted, mainly by Arnold
                                                                                           at Rugby. Arnold aimed, successfully, at earning the students' loyalty, while changing
                                                                                           their status in school and re-defining their roles. The prefects, students in the senior
                                                                                           classes, were required to advise and supervise their "house" peers. Actually, in previous
                                                                                           years older students had also been responsible for order and discipline during school
                                                                                                                                                            Boarding Schools 355
                                                                                           hours, but they themselves were not really under any supervision at that time. The
                                                                                           prefects now served as a bridge between formal activities conducted for the school's
                                                                                           aims and the students' own informal system (Gathorne-Hardy, 1977).
                                                                                           (4) The curriculum. Disputes about the character of the Public School curriculum
                                                                                           lasted about 400 years—between parents, teachers, principals and church leaders. Since
                                                                                           boarding school education was distinct from that in ordinary schools, the idea of
                                                                                           'institutional independence' was formulated in determining the curriculum. The central
                                                                                           dispute in the nineteenth century focussed on the question of the preferability of
                                                                                           classical studies over a progressive education. Classical education was based on studies
                                                                                           of Latin, Greek and religion. The study of Latin was especially valuable because it
                                                                                           constituted a unifying cultural factor for the children of the elite. In addition, a
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                                                                                     modern systems, and in legitimisation and institutionalisation of these modalities. When this
                                                                                     learning-training process takes place together with the absorption of social newcomers into a
                                                                                     social class having a lengthy tradition of domination (yet based on the expansion of the range
                                                                                     of culturally acceptable roles for this class itself), this is proof that these schools are
                                                                                     involved in the process of change taking place in society and culture [11].
                                                                                     influenced in its development by the changing European boarding schools of the beginning of the
                                                                                     twentieth century. At the edges of European boarding schools systems towards the end of the
                                                                                     nineteenth century, the expectation of developing new models of schools based on pedagogic,
                                                                                     psychological and social principles different from those characterising nineteenth century
                                                                                     boarding schools was formulated, especially in England (Skidelsky, 1969).
                                                                                          The boarding schools of the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the
                                                                                     twentieth century, such as that of Reddie in Abbotsholm in England, or Lietz's village
                                                                                     boarding schools in Germany, tried to express resistance and protest. Reddie's Abbotsholm
                                                                                     (Ward, 1934) was opposed to the type of education customary in British Public Schools.
                                                                                     Lietz's ambition was even more far-reaching: he aimed at re-instituting Rousseau's ideas of a
                                                                                     return to nature and the small community. He repudiated the city and its culture, and
                                                                                     viewed them as undermining the fundamentals of German education and nationalism (Lietz,
                                                                                     1909).
                                                                                           Gustav Wyneken taught in one of the 14 boarding schools established or initiated by
                                                                                     Lietz in Germany; but, after a dispute with Lietz, he established a boarding school in
                                                                                     Wickersdorf with his friends (Wyneken, 1922). From Wickersdorf came Geheeb, who
                                                                                     established and for many years directed his progressive institution—Odenwaldschule (Rhee,
                                                                                     1960). These two persons, Wyneken and Geheeb, paved the way in new education for their
                                                                                     boarding schools and their successors in Europe, the USA and Israel. The boarding schools
                                                                                     established by them, or in the spirit of their educational ideology, tended to loosen the close
                                                                                     historic connection between the boarding school arrangement and class interests [12].
                                                                                          Other boarding schools at the beginning of the century which operated in a similar
                                                                                     spirit, and influenced the development of boarding school education in Israel, were
                                                                                     Makarenko's settlements in the USSR of the 1920s and the first agricultural schools
                                                                                     established in Israel during Ottoman and British rule (Makarenko, 1949; Shapira, 1966).
                                                                                          The majority of the founders of the new boarding schools, in Israel and elsewhere,
                                                                                     carried with them a certain social or educational vision, and the boarding school served as an
                                                                                     experimental workshop. During the first stages of their existence, the orientation of these
                                                                                     boarding schools was more cooperative than competitive, democratic rather than authori-
                                                                                     tarian; it focussed more on the group than on the individual. As Utopian experiments, the
                                                                                     new boarding schools developed an active stance towards culture and took part in its
                                                                                     creation (Lehman, 1962).
                                                                                          The ideology that accompanied the crystallisation of the pioneering Zionist Movement
                                                                                     at the turn of the century gave clear social approbation to education outside the family. The
                                                                                     socialisation necessary for the new roles of young children born in Israel, and particularly
                                                                                     new immigrants, developed within the boarding school framework. In these institutions,
                                                                                     members of various ethnic groups and social classes were brought together (Arieli, Kashti &
                                                                                     Shlasky, 1983).
                                                                                          A 1928 document, written as the final report of the Jewish-American Committee for the
                                                                                                                                                            Boarding Schools 357
                                                                                     Affairs of Orphans in Palestine (Berger, 1928), illuminates the perspective of the future: "It
                                                                                     is an almost accepted axiom that, in great measure, the success or failure of the experiment
                                                                                     in Palestine will depend on the Jewish population's success in agriculture. Any effort in the
                                                                                     direction of this objective is, therefore, a direct step towards the rebuilding of a Jewish
                                                                                     Palestine. There is, therefore, a great need for an educational system which operates through
                                                                                     the medium of children's villages, a framework which not only creates for the child the
                                                                                     possibility of achieving basic technical skills, but is also a place where the child's mind can
                                                                                     be influenced and formed with the help of an agricultural atmosphere".
                                                                                           At the end of the 1920s, boarding schools in Israel were characterised by internal
                                                                                     cohesion and a structure tending towards 'closedness' and the development of close
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                                                                                     relationships between the students, who were organised in age groups. Training aimed at a
                                                                                     new social status (the 'pioneer') was preferred to training for a defined role—for instance, a
                                                                                     profession. It is not surprising, therefore, that the boarding schools became the route for pre-
                                                                                     socialization of elite groups (Reinhold, 1953).
                                                                                           During the 1940s, and at the beginning of the 1950s, the various boarding schools
                                                                                     became the central means of absorbing and educating young immigrants into Israel,
                                                                                     particularly survivors of the European holocaust (Kol, 1957; Pincus, 1970). The encounter
                                                                                     between immigrant youth and the arrangements prevailing in Israel at the time raised many
                                                                                     difficulties and conflicts. Their acceptance as 'young pioneers' and rejection as 'holocaust
                                                                                     survivors' was one of them. At the same time the young immigrants' struggle over their
                                                                                     identity, while being absorbed into youth villages and Kibbutz youth groups, helped them to
                                                                                     integrate and to become a component of the emerging Israeli identity (Eisenstadt, 1967).
                                                                                           For about 30 years, from the 1920s until the 1950s, there was very little selection of
                                                                                     students, or none at all, in Israeli youth villages. This situation, together with the schools'
                                                                                     tendency to be involved in the ideologies then prevalent in Israeli society, turned the
                                                                                     boarding schools into organisations typically promoting social mobility.
                                                                                           The educational process and the expected 'social product' explain the features pres-
                                                                                     erved in Israeli boarding schools: structural 'closedness' and a kind of 'autarchy' of
                                                                                     educational and other services, together with cultural openness—even accepting and inter-
                                                                                     nalising whole ideologies or 'platforms'. The structural 'closedness' was aimed at supporting
                                                                                     the complex educational process taking place against a background of non-selection of
                                                                                     students with varied earlier experiences, while openness to different ideologies ensured the
                                                                                     boarding school and its graduates an appropriate place in society (Horovitz, 1942; Nadad &
                                                                                     Hiram, 1962).
                                                                                           During the late 1950s, profound changes appeared in the youth villages and in some
                                                                                     agricultural schools. The changes were both structural—because of adjustment to organisa-
                                                                                     tional patterns formulated in the State education system after Independence—and of
                                                                                     content. That is to say, the ideological 'pioneer' message tended to be replaced by a practical
                                                                                     one, considered 'appropriate' to a student population which was also changing: from students
                                                                                     born in Europe to immigrants from Islamic countries (Kashti, 1971).
                                                                                           The juxtaposition of these complex changes directed the development of many of the
                                                                                     boarding schools to the channel of re-socialisation in a way never known before. The student
                                                                                     population was conceived more and more as needing to internalise 'new' cultural symbols,
                                                                                     together with behavioural norms described as unknown to the children. Opportunities for
                                                                                     new groups of students to advance up the social ladder were viewed as of secondary
                                                                                     importance to the task of conscripting them as novice members of society. This viewpoint in
                                                                                     boarding schools—as in other educational organisations—was sometimes expressed in diag-
                                                                                     nostic terms referring to individuals or groups as: 'backward', 'socially retarded', or
                                                                                     358   Y. Kashti
                                                                                     'requiring special care'. In other words, the education of the new groups of students tended
                                                                                     to be expressed in terms of treatment or rehabilitation (Feuerstein, 1971).
                                                                                          In conclusion, from the 1920s onwards, boarding schools in Israel contributed to social
                                                                                     integration, to training individuals and groups for the roles of a 'serving elite' and to the
                                                                                     crystallisation of ideologies. The boarding schools' participation in these aims—while Israeli
                                                                                     society itself was experiencing the processes of nation-building and creating new cultural
                                                                                     systems—converted them into accelerators of the processes of change.
                                                                                          The success or failure of these overt and covert aims was clarified in three great waves
                                                                                     of immigration: in the 1930s, with the immigration of youth from Germany and other
                                                                                     countries; in the late 1940s, when the boarding schools served—in growing numbers—chil-
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                                                                                     dren and youthful survivors of World War II; and in the 1950s, when they were absorbing
                                                                                     children and youth immigrating to Israel from Islamic countries. .
                                                                                          The youth village's characteristic activity crystallised while absorbing the first wave of
                                                                                     immigrants; it attained the majority of its goals mainly during the second wave; while, in
                                                                                     absorbing Oriental youth changes appeared in the boarding schools' cultural, educational and
                                                                                     social orientation, marking the decline of their historical roles in the fields of social
                                                                                     integration and mobility [13].
                                                                                     Concluding Remarks
                                                                                     The three cases which have been discussed here seem to indicate that boarding schools have
                                                                                     considerable power of survival. This power is realised in the conservation or production of
                                                                                     cultural assets, usually placed at the service of privileged-status groups or classes, but
                                                                                     sometimes promoting social integration and mobility, or cultural unification, or processes of
                                                                                     change in culture and society, as I have tried to show.
                                                                                           These processes always developed through the use of the boarding schools' structure,
                                                                                     which tended to 'closedness'. In addition to its organisation features, this structure includes
                                                                                     unceasing negotiations with and among students, while the boundary or split separating the
                                                                                     formal structure from the informal (Goffman, 1961) is often crossed both by the staff and
                                                                                     the students. As a result, roles, patterns of control and local codes tend to be created in
                                                                                     interactive frameworks, and to form a multi-dimensional educational environment. Indeed,
                                                                                     residence in the schools described above has even been represented by their students as an
                                                                                     exclusive experience of their discovery of culture, while personal experience and social
                                                                                     contacts have often been described as harmonic and symmetrical or cohesive.
                                                                                           Engagement in culture has been reported as studious and creative reading of religious
                                                                                     and secular literature, as the production of literary and dramatic works, or as scientific
                                                                                     experiments such as became customary, for instance, with students and teachers in the
                                                                                     Kollegium institutions in Hungary from the sixteenth century onwards. The activities of
                                                                                     many of the English Public Schools bear a similar aspect, revealed in innovating sports
                                                                                     activities in accordance with certain rules and codes, or beliefs and attitudes in the fields of
                                                                                     morality and science; and such has been the activity of the Israeli youth village, which
                                                                                     structured and deepened systems of values—or ideology—for the interpretative, evaluative
                                                                                     and constructive use of its students.
                                                                                           Indeed, it seems to me that one of the characteristic features of boarding schools which
                                                                                     has become part of the processes of change in society and culture is their relatively
                                                                                     autonomous engagement in the interpretation and development of culture. The daily
                                                                                     realisation of this, together with other attitudes and motivations, deepens the consolidation
                                                                                     and alternation of perspectives of participants in the formal and informal structure of the
                                                                                                                                                                           Boarding Schools 359
                                                                                     boarding school, and thus intensifies the students' involvement in the symbols mediated or
                                                                                     produced by the boarding school.
                                                                                          The mutuality developing between the formal structure of the staff and the informal
                                                                                     structure of the peers, by means of continuous negotiation in expressive and instrumental
                                                                                     fields, tends to expose boarding school students to the joint consciousness and normative
                                                                                     supervision of both these structures; and when these structures are compatible, complemen-
                                                                                     tary or supportive—as appears from the case studies we have presented—they promote
                                                                                     boarding schools' activity in the direction of change.
                                                                                           Boarding schools tend to constitute a relatively closed educational environment. They
                                                                                     isolate their students for long periods from their family contacts, their original social
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                                                                                     environment and usually also from the environment in which the school is located. These
                                                                                     structural features create an infrastructure moulding the boarding school as an educationally
                                                                                     powerful environment.
                                                                                          When to these features are added intensive occupation in culture or ideology, while the
                                                                                     formal structure of the staff and the informal one of the students interact mutually or
                                                                                     alternately for the attainment of common expressive and instrumental objectives, the options
                                                                                     for change and development of the students increase.
                                                                                          A boarding school which intensifies its autonomous occupation with culture and the
                                                                                     application of the other features described evidently increases its students' chances to
                                                                                     participate in activities bearing a fresh normative and symbolic meaning, or in building social
                                                                                     structure. This building of social structure, as it occurs continuously in the small world of
                                                                                     the boarding school, tends to be revealed in historical perspective as parallel to (in the
                                                                                     Kollegium), as nourishing (in the Public School) or as nourished by (in the Youth
                                                                                     Village)—but always accelerating—events and processes of change developing outside the
                                                                                     boundaries of the boarding school.
                                                                                     Acknowledgements
                                                                                     My thanks are extended to Yehudit Harel, Semadar Bar-Nir and Anat Sha'shua for their
                                                                                     great assistance in collecting data.
                                                                                     NOTES
                                                                                     [1] This trend has a number of sources: the tradition of the church schools in Hungary, which were open to all
                                                                                         classes even before the Reformation; Protestant educational ideology; social and economic needs, which
                                                                                         motivated the political leadership to support the opening of schools for the lower classes in the feudal
                                                                                         hierarchy—from tenant farmers through the bourgeoisie to the upper-middle classes who lacked the titles of
                                                                                         nobility enabling them to take up positions of political power. In the Kollegium boarding schools, procedures
                                                                                         were instituted to finance and maintain the children of the poor in boarding school with the help of
                                                                                         scholarships from town councils, the nobility and the central government. Needy students also paid for their
                                                                                         studies and living expenses in the boarding schools with services rendered to other students and to the boarding
                                                                                         school itself. The ruler of Transylvania between 1613 and 1629 granted 40 residential scholarships to children
                                                                                         of tenant farmers, and the law forbade estate owners to prevent these children from going to school (Nagy,
                                                                                         1940; Ravasz, 1966: 69-74; Bernath, 1971; Fekete, 1971: 14-16).
                                                                                     [2] Following the Turkish conquest of central Hungary (1538-1541), and annexation of the Kingdom's north-
                                                                                         western regions to the Habsburg Empire, Transylvania and a number of regions in Eastern Hungary became
                                                                                         the focus of the cultural and political autonomy of Hungary for over 150 years. The Transylvanian Principality
                                                                                         was ruled by Governors whose responsibility it was to manoeuvre, using their political judgement and
                                                                                         sometimes daring gambles, between the two political and military powers of the period (Barta, 1984: 8-113;
                                                                                         Ujvary, 1984).
                                                                                     [3] 'Subsidiary' schools in remote country towns and villages were affiliated to Kollegium institutions. Each
                                                                                         Kollegium constituted a 'mother institution', having subsidiary institutions operated by teachers sent on a
                                                                                         yearly basis by the 'mother institutions'. The best and most outstanding students from the subsidiaries
                                                                                     360 Y. Kashti
                                                                                         discovered by their teachers were sent for further study in the 'mother institution'. In addition, emissaries were
                                                                                         sent by the Kollegium to remote places, even within the regions under Ottoman rule, to advertise the
                                                                                         Kollegium and to raise funds and recruit new students. Some of the important centers which began developing
                                                                                         in the sixteenth century were: Debrecen, Sarospatak, Kesmark, Kecskemet, Sopron, Papa, Pozsony, Gyulafeh-
                                                                                         ervar, Marosvasarhely, Kolozsvar, Nagyenyed (Bajko, 1976: 188-191; Nagy, 1940; Meszaros, 1981: 311-331).
                                                                                     [4] The principle of autonomy was expressed in Coetus, the society of students and teachers. At the head of the
                                                                                         student society stood the Senior, an outstanding student from the older age group, and other students were
                                                                                         elected to assist him in various responsibilities: the Oeconomus who was responsible for the students' presence
                                                                                         at formal and informal activities; the Contrascriba, who was the Senior assistant and deputy; the Kantor, who
                                                                                         was responsible for the students' singing in church and at events. There were responsibilities in other
                                                                                         areas—security, dining room, etc. Older students taught groups and individuals both inside the institution and
                                                                                         outside it in remote schools. All students participated in the tasks which were important for the school's
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                                                                                         existence. They took agricultural jobs in exchange for food, and gave various services to the community
                                                                                         supporting the school: they sang in the church choir, at weddings and funerals; the Debrecen Kollegium even
                                                                                         established a firemen's unit which served the city (Meszaros, 1981: 311-331; Bekefi, 1899; Ravasz, 1966:
                                                                                         102-108; Bajko, 1976: 233-251; Nagy, 1940; Beraath, 1971: 86-87).
                                                                                     [5] In the remnants of Hungary after the fall of Mohacs (1526), the message of Protestantism challenging the
                                                                                         extravagant and immoral way of life of the nobility and church leaders was well received, among other reasons
                                                                                         because the Protestant preachers gave this as the cause of the national and governmental breakdown.
                                                                                         Moreover, the fact that most of the population, including the nobility, in the semi-autonomous areas of
                                                                                         Transylvania and Eastern Hungary had converted to the new religion sharpened opposition to the Catholic
                                                                                         Habsburg Emperors, while validating ethnic differences and Hungarian nationalist awareness (Barta, 1984:
                                                                                         141-150; 170-174; Ujvdry, 1984).
                                                                                     [6] This varied, intensive and complex activity was in great measure a direct result of the status of the
                                                                                         Transylvanian Principality as an apparently neutral link between the Ottomans and the Habsburgs, but no
                                                                                         less—and perhaps even more so—of the pressing needs of survival in view of the threat of conquest emanating
                                                                                         from these powers. The need to manoeuvre between the two political and military giants and withstand the
                                                                                         pressures motivated the Transylvanian rulers to try and bolster the Principality's economic foundations, while
                                                                                         developing national sources of income: international trade routes were opened up, the church's property was
                                                                                         brought under supervision as was that of Catholic nobles who had fled, a national mechanism of supervision
                                                                                         was established for the collection of taxes and customs duties, and steps were taken to develop artisans' trades
                                                                                         (Ujvdry 1984: 192-273).
                                                                                     [7] In order to man the new positions created in the bureaucratic organisation, the central government needed a
                                                                                         growing number of educated professionals. The majority of the Principality's rulers supported the establish-
                                                                                         ment of schools and saw to the flow of funds to them from sources at their disposal, while forcing the nobility
                                                                                         to support educational institutions in exchange for properites which had fallen into their hands when they had
                                                                                         taken control of the assets of the Catholic Church. Beyond that, Gabor Bethlen (1613-1629) and Rakoczi I
                                                                                         (1629-1648) aimed at creating a power base outside the mainline system of the feudal hierarchy. To this end,
                                                                                         these rulers pressed to open schools for the children of land tenants and the bourgeoisie. They viewed the new
                                                                                         generation of intellectuals who were not of the nobility as a support and source of strength to bolster the
                                                                                         central government, which had traditionally stood at a conflict of interests with the feudal nobility (Meszaros,
                                                                                         1981: 211-217; Fekete, 1971; Ujvary, 1984: 192-273).
                                                                                     [8] From the middle of the nineteenth century a change occurred in the class structure of Public Schools students
                                                                                         as compared with the 1820s. The new bourgeoisie wished to present itself as the heirs of the ancient nobility,
                                                                                         and aimed at putting its sons into the established schools at Eton, Westminster, Harrow, Winchester. In
                                                                                         parallel, new schools were opened which were run along the same lines as the old public schools. For example,
                                                                                         in 1841, a boarding school for boys was opened in Cheltenham, and a year later Marlborough College was
                                                                                         opened. By 1900 another 40 boarding schools had been opened (Armstrong, 1981).
                                                                                     [9] A situation of uneasiness, agitation and uprising characterised the activities of students in the English boarding
                                                                                         schools from the middle of the eighteenth century until the first quarter of the nineteenth. The riots occurred
                                                                                         on a background of dissatisfaction with physical conditions: food was limited, and fuel for lighting and heating
                                                                                         was scarce. In addition, many of the teachers lacked suitable qualifications, and were heavy-handed with the
                                                                                         students. Among the principals of the Public Schools acts of financial corruption were revealed, which had
                                                                                         resulted in lack of attention to the varied needs of the students. All these caused the students to demand a
                                                                                         share in decision-making in the schools. This demand was sometimes especially violent, so that the Public
                                                                                         Schools caved in under the pressure of the riots. This period saw a marked decline in the number of students,
                                                                                         as indicated in the figures for four of the main schools:
                                                                                                                                                                             Boarding Schools 361
                                                                                                                                                           Change in number
                                                                                                                 School                    Period             of students
                                                                                          It was Arnold of Rugby who responded to the demands of the period and established new student regulations
                                                                                          which brought settlement and calm (Mack, 1938; Rodgers, 1938; Gathorne-Hardy, 1977).
                                                                                     [10] During the nineteenth century the aristocracy's property diminished, mainly through loss of land. This
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                                                                                          damaged their prestige and some of them avoided sending their children to boarding school. This situation
                                                                                          resulted in a change in the balance of forces in the Public Schools, raising the children of the middle class to
                                                                                          positions of control therein. At Eton, for instance, which was considered a fortress of the aristocracy, the new
                                                                                          class became the majority. However, the demands for service all over the Empire resulted in the schools'
                                                                                          expansion and strengthened their position, while increasing the demand for educated and skilled graduates
                                                                                          (Mack, 1941).
                                                                                     [11] The British Public Schools encouraged all their students to adopt and internalise the cultural codes of the
                                                                                          upper class, and to acquire the control and skills required for leadership and administrative roles. These
                                                                                          processes deepened the legitimisation of social mobility via the schools, and contributed to it considerably
                                                                                          (Gathorne-Hardy, 1977). The graduates' massive participation in the higher levels of the social hierarchy was
                                                                                          outstanding beyond what was usual in other school systems. The graduates were especially noticeable in
                                                                                          government, the armed forces, the church, industry and science, education5 culture and social reform. Thus,
                                                                                          for instance, from 1834 to 1868, the positions of Prime Minister, Chancellor of the Exchequer (Finance
                                                                                          Minister) and Foreign Minister were filled 53 times by Public School graduates. In 1883, at the peak of
                                                                                          Britain's Imperial rule, Eton supplied 127 members of Parliament, and between 1880 and 1905 every Prime
                                                                                          Minister was an Eton graduate. For about 30 years from 1870, some boarding schools established volunteer
                                                                                          units. Public School graduates were a prime source of officers who filled senior Army positions in that period.
                                                                                          Their graduates saw the Army as a career, and it was an accepted view that Army life constituted a natural
                                                                                          continuation of boarding school life. Forty-six per cent of the bishops were Public School graduates, mostly
                                                                                          from the older schools; outstandingly, Eton graduates constituted the majority of those serving in the Church
                                                                                          (Armstrong, 1981). In industry and banking, the graduates' interest had been considerable from 1777;
                                                                                          graduates of Eton and Harrow especially aimed at filling top positions in the Bank of England. From the
                                                                                          middle of the nineteenth century a 6% rise in Marlborough graduates was noted in the fields of commerce and
                                                                                          foreign careers (Mack, 1938; Ward, 1967).
                                                                                     [12] The phenomenon is especially noticeable in boarding school arrangements connected or parallel to the events
                                                                                          of World War II. These boarding schools should be considered from the beginning of the 1930s. They
                                                                                          originated in reaction to the Nazi regime in Germany, and ended as a movement of saving, rehabilitating and
                                                                                          educating boarding schools. Aliyat Hano'ar (Youth Immigration) (Kol, 1957) was the pioneer of this
                                                                                          movement. From the ranks of the Zionist Youth Movements in Germany, and a very few other countries,
                                                                                          about 10,000 young people were brought to Israel to youth villages and to 'youth societies', a kind of small
                                                                                          boarding school for pioneer training on the Kibbutzim. In the given conditions, the Youth Aliyah (Immigra-
                                                                                          tion) should only have been able to use the boarding school as a central educational tool, but it utilised it far
                                                                                          beyond organisation or instrumental needs. About 10 years later a movement of students and teachers of
                                                                                          peasant origin began to operate in the universities of Budapest. Showing opposition to the Fascist regime and
                                                                                          Nazi occupation, this movement laid the ideological and organisational foundation for a system of boarding
                                                                                          schools which encompassed, after the war, over 10,000 young people in the popular Kollegium (Kardos, 1977).
                                                                                          The third movement was a continuation of the activities of the Youth Aliyah (Immigration). Under the
                                                                                          leadership of activists of the Zionist Youth Movements, survivors of the War and the Holocaust, and of
                                                                                          emissaires from Israel, about 15,000 children and youths from the remnants of European Jewry were collected,
                                                                                          helped, organised and educated in the Youth Aliyah Children's Homes. These were a kind of mobile boarding
                                                                                          school—on the way to the shores of Italy and France—with the aim of emigrating to Israel. From 1945 to 1949
                                                                                          these groups migrated—joined by a common fate and commitment to a Zionist Youth culture—through Europe
                                                                                          and British detention camps in Cyprus, till they reached the youth villages and youth societies in Israel (Dapej
                                                                                          Europa, 1948; Sha'ari, 1981; Oren, 1985). Parallels to this movement, in supplying the basic needs of
                                                                                          rehabilitation and ensuring frameworks of care and education, were to be found all over Europe, especially,
                                                                                          Poland, Yugoslavia and Hungary. In these countries, because of lack of other facilities, the boarding school or
                                                                                     362     Y. Kashti
                                                                                          'children's home' was utilised widely (Payne & White, 1979). Another boarding school system, which focussed
                                                                                          on caring for needy children at the end of the war, was the SOS organisation in Germany. Its boarding schools
                                                                                          developed new organisational and educational methods, aiming to supply the homeless child with psychological
                                                                                          and environmental conditions similar to those in the families living in their community (Gmeiner, 1976). In
                                                                                          the 50s, the majority of these movements had fulfilled their original task. Their institutions—except for the
                                                                                          popular Kollegium, whose activities had already been stopped in 1949—began undergoing a process of
                                                                                          stabilisation and routine, while the population of their students changed. Some of them were confronted with
                                                                                          the expectation or demand to change their patterns of activity on the basis of their integration into already
                                                                                          established systems, or for reasons of ideology, or as a result of social changes. These boarding school
                                                                                          arrangements, at least until the 1950s, tended not to select their students according to class, origin or scholastic
                                                                                          achievement, and thus the students tended to stabilise at the social centre.
                                                                                     [13] In the absorption of Oriental youth into the boarding schools, changes took place at three levels: (a) diminished
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                                                                                          application of ideological orientation and 'elite' training; (b) exchange of progressive pedagogy for traditional
                                                                                          or therapeutic pedagogy; and (c) viewing the students' 'absorption needs' as adjustment to the framework of
                                                                                          the school. These developments were reinforced from the 1970s onwards, from the time when these young
                                                                                          people—called now 'disadvantaged' or 'needy'—constituted about two-thirds of all boarding school students.
                                                                                          The proportion of boarding school students in Israel, (about 20% of children aged 13-18) is perhaps the
                                                                                          highest in the world: (Arieli, Kashti & Shlasky, 1983).
REFERENCES