Going To School For One Day A Week, Cork City, Ireland 1966

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 11. 10. 2023
  • Hundreds of young people under the age of 16, the state prescribed age for leaving school, are employed in a variety of jobs, but to fulfill Department of Education requirements, they must attend a vocational school for one day per week.
    This one day system was pioneered in Cork in the 1930s and Chief Executive Officer of the City of Cork Vocational Educational Committee Paddy Parfrey outlines the educational benefits of the scheme.
    The one day a week gives the students an ordered disciplined routine for at least one day out of the seven...whatever literacy they had when they came to us...at least they maintain that amount and add to it.
    The cost of the scheme is about £20 per student annually and he considers the benefits for the students far outweigh the costs.
    Headmaster Padraig O’Dalaigh’s school includes an employment bureau and social work element. The boys in his school receive a practical education and are often trained according to their employment. Many of the boys have poor standards of writing, spelling and speech and all of these are worked on at their own pace.
    The system is different for girls who receive education based around homemaking and are trained in dressmaking, cookery, laundry, religious instruction and some Irish and English. Headmistress Eileen Quinlan says
    The attendance at school for one day in the week helps to bridge a rather difficult gap in the life of these girls, when they’ve left full-time school at 14 and before they become full time workers at 16.
    A ‘Newsbeat’ report broadcast on 27 September 1966. The reporter is Bill O’Herlihy.
  • Zábava

Komentáře • 18

  • @jamesbradshaw3389
    @jamesbradshaw3389 Před 8 měsíci +19

    Going to school every day was too much for me, For most of my school life, each day I went to school I felt like I was in prison, my family came from the wrong part of the world and lived in a council house in a part of west Ireland where almost no council houses existed, the head teacher did not like my family, we were not taught anything, we were mostly dismissed or mad to feel worthless, some of the bully boys were allowed to attach us at play time with the teacher looked on some times. For that last year of my schooling, I went to a different school a5 miles away, it was like Heaven, I was shocked at how much I liked going to this new school and how much I learned, even becoming one of the best pupils on a few subjects, all because of a kind and caring teacher. Plus the remainder of my family was treated as normal at this school and in this new area. Goodness, kindness and receiving good advice is far more useful than abuse and nastiness as they have no values at all

    • @maryfox7440
      @maryfox7440 Před 8 měsíci +3

      The teachers were monsters in those days!

    • @jamesbradshaw3389
      @jamesbradshaw3389 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@maryfox7440 Some were, most did not have the skills of how to teach, Over 100 children attended our school, headteacher and younger teacher, the head teacher looked after his relatives and friends who attended the school very well,but to the great pleasure of telling my brothers and I that we would amount to nothing, we emigrated after leaving school, some years later my eldest brother became a missionary priest to the poorest and forgotten people of Tanzania. Just after my brother was ordained he returned back to Ireland and visited our old home place a council cottage that our parents bought and keep, the following day after his arrival he said mass in our old home and people came from all around, after the mass was over and older man came up to my brothers and said you man not remember me, i am your old teacher, his asked for forgiven for what he had done to us, my brother said yes I forgive but I can never forget what was done to us, to this very day my brother the priest tells us it is because of the very hard times that some people gave to us as a young family is one of the reasons why he has also worked with the poorest people to give them a chance to do better in their lifes

    • @chocolatecake6588
      @chocolatecake6588 Před 8 měsíci +3

      It's so stupid how much emphasis is put on school. Some people just don't have the mentality for it and have no interest. They should be allowed alternative platforms to education or work

    • @TheShillChannel
      @TheShillChannel Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@chocolatecake6588
      It's deliberate. School is compulsory not because it's beneficial but because it's harmful. The whole point of school is to crush us, bore us, and waste our time.

    • @pomerau
      @pomerau Před 6 měsíci +1

      Thanks for the story, genuinely. I left a Cork school of Christian brothers and lay teachers in 1974 at 15. Can't knock them as much, but my class was taught every subject in Gaeilge creating long school nights and I gave up on everything.
      I'm sorry for your earlier experiences and treatment, and hope it mostly worked out well for you from the new school.
      Cheers from a miserable London which I now hate after 37 years, but I wouldn't go back "home" despite You Tube pushing more Cork videos on me 🙃

  • @EverGreen1888
    @EverGreen1888 Před 8 měsíci +8

    A young Bill O'Herlihy looking well!

  • @declantwomey7525
    @declantwomey7525 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Class keep up the great work

  • @pomerau
    @pomerau Před 6 měsíci

    I never knew this was a thing - one day a week.
    Seems very hard on the kids.
    I was seven then and possibly starting Primary school at the North Mon.
    Haven't been to Cork since 1977.
    Left school after Inter Cert at barely 15 in 1974 to work with my father (bad idea).
    They forced us quiet kids to learn all subjects through Gaeilge / Irish. Fat lot that did me as I would study too long in the evenings, quit, later left home and couldn't get back to education in Dublin some years on. (terrible Something Adviser)
    Hats off to that boy though. I didn't watch it all the way thru' but I hope he did well. Thank you You Tube - ish for putting more Cork videos up after looking at Cork Airport.
    Thank you to CR's V V.
    (I remember the name O'Herlihy mentioned here but wouldn't recognise him. )

  • @fukhall6710
    @fukhall6710 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Okie doke

  • @moos5221
    @moos5221 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I wouldn't mind working as a teacher in that school...1 day a week.

  • @georgel74
    @georgel74 Před 8 měsíci

    Bet he loved that 😮

  • @ciaran5588
    @ciaran5588 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Wasn't it because we realised we were totally wasting our time trying to teach them anything? They were "special" people. The average Cork kids hand /eye coordination only developers around 8. Made picking their nose a bleedin' nightmare. One eyed kids all over Cork today.

    • @fergal2424
      @fergal2424 Před 8 měsíci +7

      good ole productive intelligent comment.

    • @TheRose087
      @TheRose087 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Wtf you even on about you absolute Muppet sit down

  • @richiehoyt8487
    @richiehoyt8487 Před 7 měsíci +1

    "Everything a girl should know..." I could see the presenter thinking "Right, so you're going to make me drag it out of you!" (and he did, fair play to him.)
    Without wishing to libel the actual chaplain concerned, I'll bet I can't be the only person watching this today to note the potential for unsavoury "Fr. Jack" - type "shenanigans" inherent in a scenario where it would be specifically part of a priest's remit to "help" teenage girls with their "little" (relationship/sexual) "problems"?

    • @macker33
      @macker33 Před 3 měsíci +1

      typical. thats a complete upsidedown view. People are more respectable than you think.