Terry - Somerset
Established Member
I had the pleasure of a very contemporary education. A technical school (for bright kids with practical tendencies) closely associated (same site) with the local polytechnic back in the pre-uni days where they actually taught technology.
Latin and Greek were precisely that - incomprehensible but was one of the first schools to offer computer science A level, along with metal work, woodwork, physics, chemistry, 3Rs.
When it came to the arts, they were sadly deficient.
Teaching of both German and French naively assumed the student already had a knowledge of English grammar - but concepts like adverbs, past participles, pronouns etc were something of a mystery having never encountered the same in English classes.
In similar vein I volunteered to learn piano. This was well before the days of electronic keyboards and headphones. Enthusiastic piano students were sat in front of a keyboard with none of the other components normally associated with a piano - hammers, strings, pedals, harp etc.
I learned that middle C was to the right of the screw in the middle of the keyboard - in truth it made no difference as the only sound it made was "clack, clack clack, clack, clack, clack.
Latin and Greek were precisely that - incomprehensible but was one of the first schools to offer computer science A level, along with metal work, woodwork, physics, chemistry, 3Rs.
When it came to the arts, they were sadly deficient.
Teaching of both German and French naively assumed the student already had a knowledge of English grammar - but concepts like adverbs, past participles, pronouns etc were something of a mystery having never encountered the same in English classes.
In similar vein I volunteered to learn piano. This was well before the days of electronic keyboards and headphones. Enthusiastic piano students were sat in front of a keyboard with none of the other components normally associated with a piano - hammers, strings, pedals, harp etc.
I learned that middle C was to the right of the screw in the middle of the keyboard - in truth it made no difference as the only sound it made was "clack, clack clack, clack, clack, clack.