A
boarding school is a
school where
some or all pupils not only study, but also live during term time,
with their fellow students and possibly teachers. The word
'boarding' is used in the sense of "bed and board", that is, food
and lodging. Most boarding schools also have day students who are
local residents or children of faculty.
Many
independent
schools in the
Commonwealth
of Nations are boarding schools. Boarding school pupils (a.k.a.
"boarders") normally return home during the school holidays and,
often, weekends, but in some cultures may spend the majority of
their
childhood and
adolescent life away from their families. In the
United States, boarding schools sometimes comprise grades 7 through
12, but the most reputable cover only the
high school years, from the 9th through the 12th
grades. Some also feature
military training, though
this is generally offered only at specialized schools. Many New
England boarding schools traditionally offer a post-graduate year
of study, unknown in many parts of the U.S., in order to help
students prepare for college entrance.
Boarding school description
Typical boarding school characteristics
A boarding school is when the pupils sleep, eat and work in or near
the school grounds. The term
boarding school often refers
to
classic British boarding schools and many boarding
schools are modeled on these.
A typical modern fee-charging boarding school has several separate
residential houses, either within the school grounds or in the
neighborhood of the school. Pupils generally need permission to go
outside defined school bounds; they may be allowed to venture
further at certain times.
A number of senior teaching staff are appointed as housemasters,
housemistresses or residential advisors, each of whom takes
quasi-parental responsibility for perhaps 50 pupils resident in
their
house, at all times but particularly outside school
hours. Each may be assisted in the domestic management of the house
by a housekeeper often known as
matron, and by a
house
tutor for academic matters, often providing staff of each sex.
Nevertheless, older pupils are often unsupervised by staff, and a
system of monitors or prefects gives limited authority to senior
pupils. Houses readily develop distinctive characters, and a
healthy rivalry between houses is often encouraged in sport.
See also House system.
Annexed to the house staff accommodation, houses usually include
study-bedrooms or
dormitories, a dining
room or
refectory where pupils take meals
at fixed times, and a library, hall or cubicles where pupils can do
their homework. Houses may also have common rooms for television
and relaxation, kitchens for snacks, and perhaps computer,
ping-pong or billiards rooms, together with facilities such as
cloakrooms and cycle sheds. Some facilities may be shared between
several houses.
In some schools each house has pupils of all ages, in which case
there is usually a prefect system which gives the older pupils some
privileges and some responsibility for the welfare of the younger
ones; whereas in others separate houses are designed for the needs
of different years or classes.
Each pupil has an individual timetable, which in the early years
allows little discretion. Pupils of all houses and day pupils are
taught together in school hours, but boarding pupils' activities
extend well outside school hours and a period for homework. Sports,
clubs and societies (e.g. amateur dramatics, or political and
literary speakers, or hobby clubs), or excursions (to performances,
shopping or perhaps a school dance) may run until lights out. As
well as the usual academic facilities such as classrooms, halls,
libraries and laboratories, boarding schools often provide a wide
variety of facilities for extracurricular activities such as music
rooms, gymnasia, sports fields and school grounds, boats, squash
courts, swimming pools, cinemas and theatres. A school chapel is
often found on site. Day pupils often stay on after school to use
these facilities.

British boarding schools have three terms a year, approximately
twelve weeks each, with a few days' half-term holiday during which
pupils are expected to go home or at least away from school. There
may be several
exeats or weekends in each half
of the term when pupils may go home or away. Boarding pupils
nowadays often go to school within easy traveling distance of their
homes, and so may see their families frequently; families are
encouraged to come and support school sports teams playing at home
against other schools.
Most school dormitories have a "lights out" time when the pupils
are required to be in bed, depending on their age, and perhaps a
later time after which no talking is permitted; such rules may be
difficult to enforce, and pupils may often try to break them, for
example by reading surreptitiously by torchlight or escaping on
nocturnal excursions. Pupils sharing studies are less likely to
disturb others and may be given more latitude.
Some boarding schools have only boarding students, while others
have both boarding students and day students who go home at the end
of the school day. Day students are often known as day boys or day
girls. Some schools also have a class of day students who stay
throughout the day including breakfast and dinner which they call
semi-boarders. Schools that have both boarding and day students
sometimes describe themselves as semi boarding schools or day
boarding schools. Many schools also have students who board during
the week but go home on weekends: these are known as weekly
boarders, quasi-boarders, or five-day boarders.
Day students and weekly boarders may have a different and perhaps
unfavourable view of the day school system, as compared to children
who attend day schools without any boarding facilities. These
students relate to a boarding school life, even though they do not
totally reside in school; however, they may not completely become
part of the boarding school experience. On the other hand, these
students have a different view of boarding schools as compared to
full-term boarders who go home less frequently, perhaps only at the
end of a term or even the end of an academic year.
Other forms of residential schools
Boarding schools are a form of residential school; however, not all
residential schools are "classic"
boarding schools. Other forms of residential schools include:
- Therapeutic schools
which provide clinical inpatient services for students with
disabilities, such as severe anxiety
disorder, obsessive
compulsive disorder, Asperger
syndrome, and/or for students with substance abuse and
socialisation problems.
- Residential education
programs, which provide a stable and supportive environment for
at-risk children to live and learn together.
- Residential schools for students with special educational needs, who may or may
not be disabled.
- Semester schools compliment a
student's secondary education by
providing them with a one semester
residential experience with a central focusing curricular theme.
These schools often appeal to students and families who aren't
interested in a longer residential education experience.
- Specialist schools focused on a particular
academic discipline, such as the public North Carolina School of Science and
Mathematics
or the private Interlochen Arts
Academy.
- The
Israeli
kibbutzim, where children
stay and get educated in a commune, but also have everyday contact
with their parents at specified hours.
- In
rural areas of the United
States
, general attendance public boarding schools were
once numerous; only one remains today: Crane Union High School in
Crane,
Oregon
. Around two-thirds of its more than 80
students, mostly children from remote ranches,
board during the school week in order to save a one-way commute of
up to 150 miles (240 km) across Harney
County
.
Applicable regulations
In the UK, almost all boarding schools are
independent schools, which are not
subject to the national curriculum or other educational regulations
applicable to state schools. Nevertheless there are some
regulations, primarily for health and safety purposes, as well as
the general law.
The Department for
Children, Schools and Families, in conjunction with the
Department of
Health of the United
Kingdom
, has prescribed guidelines for boarding schools,
called the National Boarding Standards.
One example of regulations covered within the National Boarding
Standards are those for the minimum floor area or living space
required for each student and other aspects of basic facilities.
The minimum floor area of a dormitory accommodating two or more
students is defined as the number of students sleeping in the
dormitory multiplied by 4.2 m², plus 1.2 m². A minimum
distance of 0.9 m should also be maintained between any two
beds in a dormitory, bedroom or cubicle. In case students are
provided with a cubicle, then each student must be provided with a
window and a floor area of 5.0 m² at the least. A bedroom for
a single student should be at least of floor area of 6.0 m².
Boarding schools must provide a total floor area of at least
2.3 m² living accommodation for every boarder. This should
also be incorporated with at least one
bathtub or shower for every ten students.
These are some of the few guidelines set by the department amongst
many others. It could probably be observed that not all boarding
schools around the world meet these minimum basic standards,
despite their apparent appeal.
History
The practice of sending children to other families or to schools so
that they could learn together is of very long standing, recorded
in classical literature and in UK records going back over a
thousand years. In Europe a practice developed by early mediaeval
times of sending boys to be taught by literate clergymen, either in
monasteries or as pages in great households. The school often
considered the world's oldest boarding school,
The King’s School,
Canterbury, counts the development of the monastery school in
around 597 AD to be the date of the school's founding. The author
of the
Chronicle of Ingulph
recalls being tested on his grammar by
Edward the Confessor's Queen Editha in
the abbey cloisters as a Westminster schoolboy, in around the
1050s.
Monastic schools as such were generally
dissolved with the monasteries themselves under Henry VIII,
although for example Westminster School
was specifically preserved by the King's letters
patent and it seems likely that most schools were immediately
replaced. Winchester College
founded by Bishop William of Wykeham in 1382 claims
to be the oldest boarding school in continual
operation.
Boarding schools across societies
Boarding Schools manifest themselves in different ways in different
societies. For example, in some societies children start boarding
school at an earlier age than in others. In some societies, a
tradition has developed in which families send their children to
the same boarding school for generations.
One observation that appears to apply globally is that a
significantly larger number of boys than girls attend boarding
school and for a longer span of time.
Boarding schools in England started before medieval times, when
boys were sent to be educated at a monastery or noble household,
where a lone literate cleric could be found.
In the 12th century,
the Pope ordered all Benedictine
monasteries such as Westminster
to provide charity schools, and many public schools started when such
schools attracted paying pupils. These public schools
reflected the collegiate universities of
Oxford
and Cambridge, as in many ways they still do, and were
accordingly staffed almost entirely by clergymen until the 19th
century. Private
tuition at home remained
the norm for aristocratic families, and for girls in particular,
but after the 16th century it was increasingly accepted that
adolescents of any rank might best be educated collectively. The
institution has thus adapted itself to changing social
circumstances over 1000 years.
Boarding preparatory schools tend to reflect the public schools
which they feed (they often have a more or less official tie to
particular schools).
The classic British boarding school became highly popular during
the colonial expansion of the British Empire. British colonial
administrators abroad could ensure that their children were brought
up in British culture at public schools at home in the UK, and
local rulers were offered the same education for their sons. More
junior expatriates would send their children to local British-run
schools, which would also admit selected local children who might
travel from considerable distances. The boarding schools, which
inculcated their own values, became an effective way to encourage
local people to share British ideals, and so help the British
achieve their imperial goals.
One of the reasons sometimes stated for sending children to
boarding schools is to develop wider horizons than their family can
provide. A boarding school which a family has attended for
generations may define the culture to which parents aspire for
their children; equally, by choosing a fashionable boarding school,
parents may aspire to better their children by enabling them to mix
on equal terms with children of the upper classes. However such
reasons may be stated to conceal other reasons for sending one's
child away from home. These might apply to children who are
considered too disobedient or underachieving, children from
families with divorced spouses, and children to whom the mother or
parents do not relate much. These reasons are rarely explicitly
stated, though the child might be aware of them. .
In 1998 there were 772 private-sector boarding schools in England,
and 100,000 children attending boarding schools all over the United
Kingdom. In England they are an important factor in the class
system.
Most other societies
decline to make boarding schools the preferred option for the
upbringing of their children, except in former British colonies; in
India, Nigeria, and other former African
colonies of Great Britain, for example,
boarding schools are one of the preferred modes of education; in
Ghana
the majority of the secondary schools are
boarding.In some countries, such as New Zealand
and Sri
Lanka
, a number of state schools have boarding
facilities. However these state boarding schools are
frequently the traditional single-sex state schools, whose ethos is
much like that of their independent counterparts. Furthermore, the
proportion of boarders at these schools is often much lower than at
independent boarding schools, typically around 10%.
The
Swiss
government
developed a strategy of fostering private boarding schools for
foreign students as a business integral to the country's
economy. Their boarding schools offer instruction in several
major languages and have a large number of quality facilities
organized through the
Swiss Federation of Private
Schools.
In the
United
States
, boarding schools for students below the age of 13
are called junior boarding schools, and are not as common
and not as encouraged as in the United Kingdom
and India
.
The
oldest junior boarding school in the United States is the Fay School in Southborough, Massachusetts
. Boarding schools for this age group are
often referred to as
prep
schools.
Some notable examples are Choate Rosemary Hall, Woodberry Forest School, The Hotchkiss School, Kent School ,The Hill School
, Deerfield
Academy, Phillips Exeter Academy
, Phillips
Academy Andover
, The Lawrenceville School
, St. Paul's School
, and Canterbury School
, the state's first Catholic Boarding
School.
Native American boarding schools

Pupils at Carlisle Indian Industrial
School, Pennsylvania (c.
- See also:
Native American education and boarding schools
In the late 1800s, the United States government undertook a policy
of educating Native American youth in the ways of the dominant
Western culture so that Native Americans might then be able to
assimilate into Western society. At these boarding schools, managed
and regulated by the government, Native American students were
subjected to a number of tactics to prepare them for life outside
their reservation homes.
In accordance with the assimilation methods used at the boarding
schools, the education that the Native American children received
at these institutions centered on the dominant society’s
construction of gender norms and ideals. Thus boys and girls were
separated in almost every activity and their interactions were
strictly regulated along the lines of Victorian ideals. In
addition, the instruction that the children received reflected the
roles and duties that they were to assume once outside the
reservation. Thus girls were taught skills that could be used in
the home, such as "sewing, cooking, canning, ironing, child care,
and cleaning" (Adams 150). Native American boys in the boarding
schools were taught the importance of an agricultural lifestyle,
with an emphasis on raising livestock and agricultural skills like
"plowing and planting, field irrigation, the care of stock, and the
maintenance of fruit orchards" (Adams 149). These ideas of
domesticity were in stark contrast to those existing in native
communities and on reservations: many indigenous societies were
based on a matrilineal system where the women’s lineage was honored
and the women’s place in society respected. For example women in
indigenous communities held powerful roles in their own
communities, undertaking tasks that Western society deemed only
appropriate for men: indigenous women could be leaders, healers,
and farmers.
While the Native American children were exposed to and were likely
to adopt some of the ideals set out by the whites operating these
boarding schools, many resisted and rejected the gender norms that
were being imposed upon them and continued in traditional
lifestyles, thwarting the process of assimilation. Women were at
the center of this resistance.
One such school for Native Americans, which
was famous for its size, was the Carlisle Indian Industrial
School in Carlisle, Pennsylvania
.
Emerging perspectives
It is claimed that children may be sent to boarding schools to give
more opportunities than their family can provide. However, that
involves spending significant parts of one's early life in what may
be seen as a
total institution and
possibly experiencing social detachment, as suggested by
social-psychologist
Erving Goffman.
This may involve long-term separation from one's parents and
culture, leading to the experience of
homesickness and may give rise to a phenomenon
known as the 'TCK' or
third culture
kid
Some modern philosophies of education, such as
constructivism and new methods
of music training for children including
Orff Schulwerk and the
Suzuki method, make the everyday interaction
of the child and parent an integral part of training and education.
The
European Union-Canada
project
"Child Welfare Across Borders" (2003) , an important international
venture on child development, considers boarding schools as one
form of permanent displacement of the child. This view
reflects a new outlook towards education and child growth in the
wake of more
scientific understanding of
the
human brain and
cognitive development.
Concrete numbers have yet to be tabulated regarding the
statistical data for the ratio of the boys that
are sent to boarding schools, the total number of girls, the total
number of children in a given population in boarding schools by
country, the average age across populations
when children are sent to boarding schools, and the average length
of education (in years) for boarding school students.
Boarding schools in fiction
Boarding schools and their surrounding settings and situations have
become a genre in
British
literature with its own identifiable conventions. (Typically,
protagonists find themselves occasionally having to break school
rules for honourable reasons which the reader can identify with,
and might get severely punished when caught - but usually they do
not embark on a total rebellion against the school as a
system.)
Notable examples of the
school story
include:
- Charles Dickens's Nicholas Nickleby serialised novel
(1838)
- Charlotte Brontë's novels
Jane Eyre (1847) and Villette (1853)
- Thomas Hughes's novel Tom Brown's Schooldays
(1857)
- Frederic W. Farrar's Eric, or, Little by Little
(1858), a particularly religious and moralistic treatment of the
theme
- Talbot Baines Reed's
The Fifth Form at
St. Dominic's (1887), written for the "Boy's Own Paper" (which also published many
other boarding school stories) and distributed by the Religious Tract Society
- Most of the oeuvre of Angela
Brazil (early twentieth century)
- Rudyard Kipling's novel
Stalky & Co (1899)
- Frances Hodgson
Burnett's novel A Little
Princess (1905)
- Horace
Annesley Vachell's novel The Hill (1905), set at
Harrow
School

- Frank Richards's
long-running series Billy
Bunter (from 1908)
- Australian novelist Henry
Handel Richardson's coming of age novel, The Getting of Wisdom (1910)
- Hugh Walpole's novel Jeremy at
Crale (1927)
- Erich Kästner's The Flying Classroom (Das Fliegende
Klassenzimmer) (1933) is a conspicuous non-British
example.
- James Hilton's novel Goodbye, Mr. Chips (1934)
- Madeline by Ludwig Bemelmans (1939)
- George Orwell's Such, Such Were the Joys (1946 or
1947) is an exceptionally bitter depiction of boarding school
life.
- Enid Blyton's Malory Towers, St. Clare's and the Naughtiest Girl series of children's
novels
- Elinor Brent-Dyer's
Chalet School series of
children's novels
- Antonia Forest's Marlow family
stories, four of which are set at the fictional Kingscote School
for Girls
- Anthony Buckeridge's
Jennings series of
children's stories (from 1950)
- Muriel Spark's novel The Prime of Miss Jean
Brodie (1961)
- Geoffrey Willans' Nigel Molesworth series (illustrated
by Ronald Searle)
- Ronald Searle's St Trinian's series of books (1948
onwards)
- R. F. Delderfield's novel To Serve Them All My Days
(1972)
- The
popular 1972 Hebrew novel "The Renownwed
Teacher Shmilkiyahu" (המורה הדגול שמילקיהו) by Yisrael "Puchu"
Weiseler (ישראל ויסלר פוצ'ו) (see [13382][13383]), and its various sequels and prequels,
take place in the pecularly Israeli
istitution
of an agricultural boarding school,
where pupils are supposed to take up the traditions of Pioneer
Zionism - through the reality, as depicted
with considerable humor, often falls short of such
ideals.
- Death of Fathers by Charles Jonathan Driver (1972) (see
[13384])
- Roald Dahl's Boy (1988)
- Bryce Courtenay's The Power of One (1989)
- Elizabeth George's Well-Schooled in Murder
(1990)
- Ursula LeGuin in "A Wizard of Earthsea" (1968) and
Trudi Canavan in "The Novice" (2002) adapted the traditional
boarding school themes to fantasy settings of schools teaching
magic.
- Gillian Rubinstein's
Under the Cats
Eye: A Tale of Morph and Mystery (2000)
- Jill Murphy's The Worst Witch stories.
- Libba Bray's A Great and Terrible Beauty
and Rebel Angels series.
- Tyne O'Connell's Calypso Chronicles A four-book
series starting with 'Pulling Princes' (2004)
- Michelle Magorian's Back
Home
- Ludwig Bemelmans' Madeline series of children's picture books
(1939-present)
- J. K.
Rowling's Harry Potter series Hogwarts School of
Witchcraft and Wizardry
- Kate Brian's Private series
The setting has also been featured in notable North American
fiction:
There is also a huge boarding-school genre literature, mostly
uncollected, in British
comics and serials
from the 1900s to the 1980s.
The Setting is used frequently in animated television shows:
Fictional boarding schools have also been depicted on live-action
television shows:
In video games:
The sub-genre of books and films set in a military or naval academy
has many similarities with the above.
Boarding schools in films
Boarding schools in video games
See also
References
- Bamford T.W. (1967) Rise of the public schools: , a study
of boys public boarding schools in England and wales from 1837 to
the present day. London : Nelson, 1967.
- The Oregon Story. Three Days at Crane: About Crane
Union High School
- http://www.dh.gov.uk/assetRoot/04/03/43/14/04034314.pdf
- http://www.sws.soton.ac.uk/cwab/Session6/ICWs62.htm European
Union - Canada project Child welfare across borders (2003)
- Duffell, N. "The Making of Them. The British Attitude to
Children and the Boarding School System". (London: Lone Arrow
Press, 2000).
- Schaverien, J. (2004) Boarding School: The Trauma of the
Privileged Child, in Journal of Analytical Psychology, vol 49,
683-705
- Duffell, N. "The Making of Them. The British Attitude to
Children and the Boarding School System". (London: Lone Arrow
Press, 2000).
- Schaverien, J. (2004) Boarding School: The Trauma of the
Privileged Child, in Journal of Analytical Psychology, vol 49,
683-705
- Duffell, N. "The Making of Them. The British Attitude to
Children and the Boarding School System". (London: Lone Arrow
Press, 2000).
- Schaverien, J. (2004) Boarding School: The Trauma of the
Privileged Child, in Journal of Analytical Psychology, vol 49,
683-705
- Adams, David Wallace. Education for Extinction: American
Indians and the Boarding School Experience, 1875-1928. University
of Kansas Press, Lawrence: 1995.
- Adams, David Wallace. Education for Extinction: American
Indians and the Boarding School Experience, 1875-1928. University
of Kansas Press, Lawrence: 1995.
- Adams, David Wallace. Education for Extinction: American
Indians and the Boarding School Experience, 1875-1928. University
of Kansas Press, Lawrence: 1995.
- Goffman, Erving (1961) Asylums: Essays on the Social
Situation of Mental Patients and Other Inmates. (New York:
Doubleday Anchor, 1961); (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1968) ISBN
0-385-00016-2
- Goffman, Erving (1961) Asylums: Essays on the Social
Situation of Mental Patients and Other Inmates. (New York:
Doubleday Anchor, 1961); (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1968) ISBN
0-385-00016-2
- Brewin, C.R., Furnham, A. & Howes, M. (1989). Demographic
and psychological determinants of homesickness and confiding among
students. British Journal of Psychology, 80, 467-477.
- Fisher, S., Frazer, N. & Murray, K (1986). Homesickness and
health in boarding school children. Journal of Environmental
Psychology, 6, 35-47.
- Thurber A. Christopher (1999) The phenomenology of homesickness
in boys, Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
- Pollock DC and Van Reken R (2001). Third Culture Kids. Nicholas
Brealey Publishing/Intercultural Press. Yarmouth, Maine. ISBN
1-85788-295-4.
- http://www.sws.soton.ac.uk/cwab/Session6/ICWs62.htm European
Union - Canada project Child welfare across borders (2003)
Selected bibliography
- Cookson, Peter W., Jr., and Caroline Hodges Persell.
Preparing for Power: America's Elite Boarding Schools.
(New York: Basic Books, 1985).
- Fisher, S. & Hood, B. (1987). The stress of the transition
to university: a longitudinal study of psychological disturbance,
absent-mindedness and vulnerability to homesickness. British
Journal of Psychology, 78, 425-441
- Hein, David (1986). The founding of the Boys' School of St.
Paul's Parish, Baltimore. Maryland Historical Magazine,
81, 149-59.
- Hein, David (1991). The High Church origins of the American
boarding school. Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 42,
577-95.
- Hein, David, ed. (2009). Religion and Politics in Maryland
on the Eve of the Civil War: The Letters of W. Wilkins
Davis. Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock. Revised edition of book
published in 1988 as A Student's View of the College of St.
James on the Eve of the Civil War.
- Hein, David (4 January 2004). What has happened to Episcopal
schools? The Living Church, 228, no. 1, 21-22.
- Hickson, A. "The Poisoned Bowl: Sex Repression and the Public
School System". (London: Constable, 1995).
- Johann, Klaus: Grenze und Halt: Der Einzelne im "Haus der
Regeln". Zur deutschsprachigen Internatsliteratur.
(Heidelberg: Universitätsverlag Winter 2003, Beiträge zur neueren
Literaturgeschichte, 201.), ISBN 3-8253-1599-1. Review
- Ladenthin, Volker; Fitzek, Herbert; Ley, Michael: Das Internat.
Aufgaben, Erwartungen und Evaluationskriterien. Bonn 2006 (7.
Aufl.).
- Department of Education and Skills of the United
Kingdom, Boarding School guidelines
- Duffel N. (2000)
The making of them. London:
Lone Arrow Press
- Schaverien, J. (2004) Boarding School: The Trauma of the
Privileged Child, in Journal of Analytical Psychology, vol 49,
683-705
(http://www.isana.org.au/_Upload/Files/2005112215407_Boardingschool%5B1%5D.pdf
)