Thursday 16 April 2020

Burning Bright - Drama Teaching, Part One


 BURNING BRIGHT

Teaching Drama 1963 – 1996

 by

 Frank McKone



In the Foyer for Pre-Show Entertainment


My teaching career spanned the years of huge change in Australian education, from the 1950s to the the promise of a new world order in the 21st Century.

I’ve made it a three-act drama, with two brief intervals, and an epilogue with extra information.  The story begins in a remote Australian mining town, Broken Hill, in 1963.  The finale takes place in sophisticated Canberra, Australia’s capital city, in 1996. 

From the dusty fly-blown outback, via Sydney and the New South Wales Central Coast, and on to the foothills of the 1850 metre high Brindabella Ranges – freezing in winter, bushfires in summer – in the Bush Capital, on the ground it’s a 1200 kilometre journey.  In my mind, this is a trip from the rough-and-ready to a settled place; from intrepid exploration to what I see as a high point of understanding.  We begin low with 40 minutes a week reading plays in the English classroom (between Grammar, Short Stories and Poetry).  We reach the heights in the musical Tyger, written by Adrian Mitchell with music by Mike Westbrook, in my school’s well-equipped 250 seat theatre.

Please be seated.


In the style of Tennessee Williams, above the stage appears the sign

Palma non sine pulvere

This is the motto of Broken Hill High School, which translates metaphorically as

Victory not without toil
or literally as
Shall be free from dust

Explanation:
This is an allusion to Horace, Epistulae, 1.1.51: 'cui sit condicio dulcis sine pulvere palmae'.

'Pulvere' is the ablative case of 'pulvis' which literally means 'dust' but here is used metaphorically for any great toil, effort, or labour. Similarly 'palma' literally means 'palm' (of the tree, carried or won as a sign of victory) but here is used metaphorically for 'victory'.
[ https://www.proz.com/kudoz/latin-to-english/education-pedagogy/2462981-palma-non-sine-pulvere.html  ]









ACT ONE: Kicking Up the Dust 1963-65


Scene Locations:
            Broken Hill High School
            Broken Hill Repertory Theatre

From a beginning teacher’s viewpoint, Broken Hill High School in the height of summer, late January 1963, was an unknown unknown.  I had known the dun-coloured city of London, England, where I lived for my first 14 years. By now I knew the visibly magnificent city of Sydney,  where I completed my senior secondary schooling and undergraduate education.  By now, too, I was a bushwalker, thoroughly used to navigating across rough country in the coastal ranges.  But driving for the first time to the far west over the Blue Mountains, where the horizon was a hugely distant circle of hardly visible trees around me, inscribed on an entirely flat surface, I strangely felt as if I were not moving at all as the tiny town of Nevertire slowly disappeared far behind me. 

Nevertire, New South Wales, Australia
I was brought up in an ‘evolutionary socialist’ family, in the tradition of the Socialist Party of Great Britain, opposed to ‘revolutionary socialism’, and so I believed the destructive elements of capitalism could only be brought to heel by the education of ordinary people; never by violence and warfare.  Of course, as a child of the suburbs in the ration-card period of post-war reconstruction and development in Britain, followed by the boom of the 1950s in the ‘labourer’s paradise’, as Australia became known, I had been lucky not to have personally experienced violence and warfare once World War II had ended, when I was four years old.

How would I now come to terms with living – and with the responsibility of teaching – in this mining town, 735 miles (1176 kms) from the New South Wales Department of Education Head Office in Sydney; and where the miners’ unions supposedly had absolute control?  I had heard the stories of the six months’ strike in 1919, the ban on married women working, the ban on any woman going underground on the line of lode, and the ban on a man being employed unless he had lived in ‘The Hill’ for at least ten years.

How would I teach the children of these workers who ran their city of 30,000 as if it were an independent city-state?  “Where d’ya live to?” they asked.  “Aah,” they said.  “From away!”  And so I was defined, and wondered if it would be ten years before I might have any effect here.

Being single, appointed to Broken Hill for an expected three years’ minimum, I saw this as an opportunity for adventure and to follow up my interests in bushwalking and theatre. 

The High School was probably the largest in the State of New South Wales, so my teaching career began with limited chances of early advancement.  I would be teaching English and Social Studies to classes only in Years 7 and 8, in a 7 – 12 high school, except for one class in Year 9 still known as 3rd Form. The school was in transition from the colonial British grammar school system of five ‘Forms’ to a new arrangement of 12 ‘Years’ from Kindergarten to Matriculation.  Over my three years, in a strictly hierarchical system, I taught the lowest 3rd Form, 1A, 1D, 1J, 1K, 1L, 2B, and 2H. 

In the school context, the nearest I got to bushwalking was to form a team of the most difficult boys in the 3rd Form class to compete in the inaugural annual 10-mile charity walkathon.  The backstory for this event was that the insolence of Larry, who was – at 14 – at least a foot taller than me, had persuaded me to accept corporal punishment as a weapon of last resort.  I quickly learnt my lesson.  The deputy principal’s caning made no difference to Larry’s behaviour.  I don’t think he even became more resentful of me.  For him, to be treated like this was normal.  Though it was a long wait for the opportunity to arise, training for the mid-year winter walkathon eased some of my pain.

It wasn’t just the physical activity, but the sense of freedom walking out on dirt tracks miles away from town, and the excitement – of a king brown snake.  Before I quite realised what was going on, the lads were off across country, one of them picking up a large flattish rock.  As he dropped it, another jumped on it, standing still while others pulled at something.  It was the tail of a seven-foot long snake, as thick as my arm.  Their whoops of joy rang out as the head came off, and we marched in quick time home with wriggling remains of snake – one of Australia’s most deadly – over our shoulder.  Not my shoulder, nor back to my home, thank goodness!

King Brown Snake
also known as
Mulga Snake
We didn’t win the walkathon, but the effort gave them – and me – a better profile in the community, and solved my problem of classroom discipline, including becoming on my idea of normal terms with Larry, even if only for the final half of the year.

As I came to appreciate the strength of community feeling in this town, isolated not only geographically but socially – it was known as ‘Sin City’ in the sensationalist big-city tabloid newspapers – I realised that to teach effectively I needed to become part of the social network, rather than take the view of many of my colleagues ‘from away’, which was to see themselves as temporary, aiming to get back to ‘civilisation’ as soon as they could get a transfer. 

The size of the school – more than 1700 students when other high schools usually held no more than 1200 – was a factor in their attitude.  But the reason for the size was that the Minister for Education, Ernie Wetherell, representing the Far West constituency centred on Cobar, (the next famous mining town 450 kms east of BH), had been a Broken Hill lad.  He refused to divide the city by splitting up the High School into Broken Hill North and Broken Hill South.  For him the unity of the community was sacrosanct.  In the years before I arrived, when the city’s population was at its maximum around 50,000, the High School had blown out to 2,200!

Innovation, mining and bush regeneration
February 26, 2014
By Anni Turnbull




There was no bushwalking club, so I joined the Barrier Field Naturalists’ Club.  The ‘barrier’ in their title meant the Barrier Ranges, a long line of quite low hills which provided many places, mainly on pastoral sheep stations, to explore for plant and bird species.  The local expert was a doyenne of Broken Hill life, May Harding, who also taught art at the Technical College.

May Harding
https://trove.nla.gov.au/people/716082?q&c=people
May was an impressive figure of great charisma, so it was not long before I put aside my doubts and fears – having failed miserably at art in my younger days – and joined her art class for still life, figure sketching and portraiture. 

Though I have to admit my skills developed only marginally, since I did not naturally translate what I could see onto the sketch book page, my understanding of visual art grew. I was fortunate to find myself in the same class as an underground mineworker, Kevin, now known as Pro Hart, who was on the verge of abandoning mining to open his first one-man show at the Kim Bonython Gallery in Adelaide.  I bought an unusual experimental landscape, in green, from Pro for £5!, and, years later, he gave me and my wife a small landscape in his more usual outback red, as a wedding present.  Both paintings still grace our home.  That’s a little in-joke, because I originally bought the Pinnacles for my mother, Grace.

The Pinnacles (1963) and Near Menindee (1966)
Pro Hart
Photo ©Meg McKone
Another significant identity, Mrs Lillian Stevenson, had endured the death of her husband in a fire that had burnt down their homestead at Durham Downs Station, in the Channel Country near Cooper Creek in western Queensland, in 1952.  She had brought up Bill and Jean whom I knew in Broken Hill, running hostel accommodation for station children so that they could attend school.  (See Sydney Morning Herald article, March 21, 1967, page 19, “Courted by pedal radio” at

   http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=xoJWAAAAIBAJ&sjid=7-QDAAAAIBAJ&pg=6888%2C6900955 

Mrs Stevenson had become a matriarch, always known as ‘Mrs Stevenson’, or ‘The Missus’ by old timers, and also had a few flats to rent, one of which I shared with other teachers, Peter Farry and Pat Harte.  Pat was a science teacher who scared the whole school while demonstrating implosion.  Instead of using a small container to exhaust the air from and make a minor ‘pop’ to demonstrate how the outside pressure would collapse the tin, he used a 2 gallon kerosene tin.  The implosion-explosion reverberated around the three sides of the main stone building as it might in a rock canyon.

Pat, after a couple of years’ teaching, met some geologists doing helicopter gravity surveys, and ended up based in Canada with a career in oil drilling in North Africa, and we still keep in occasional contact 50 years later.

Bill Stevenson had a workshop in the backyard, where we spent many hours keeping my Series 1 Landrover in working order; while Jean became a teacher facing the same inspector as I did – with a similar result, because she related to the teenagers in Broken Hill as a Broken Hill person, instead of as if she came ‘from away’.

My friendships with locals – artist Pro Hart, art collector and historian Geoff Lithgow, Australian Broadcasting Commission radio personality John Pickup, and the Stephenson family among many others – meant I learnt as much or more from my three years there as ever I might pretend I taught. And this was true of my interest in theatre.  As a school student in my matriculation years I had discovered George Bernard Shaw, firstly because of his socialist writings, such as The Intelligent Woman’s Guide to Socialism and Capitalism.

Cover of The Intelligent Woman's Guide to Socialism and Capitalism
Bernard Shaw
Constable 1928
In addition to this family influence, I had a teacher, Neil Hope, a nephew I believe of the famous Australian poet and critic A.D.Hope.  Neil was a great radical for his time, who entirely failed to ‘teach to the exam’ by encouraging us to devise our own research project in literature, and to present a lengthy essay and an oral dissertation to the class on what we discovered.  However much education may have changed since that experience in my 4th Form, 1956, the light that dawned for me in Neil Hope’s English class has shone through all of my teaching.  I hope you will see the results in Act Three of this book.



Shaw had introduced me to reading plays.  In 1956, Eugene O’Neill’s Long Day’s Journey Into Night, written in 1941/42, was finally published three years after this famous playwright’s death.  It became news in Sydney that the play would be presented at the Australian Elizabethan Theatre in Newtown, and I think this was the trigger for me to research Eugene O’Neill for my English class presentation.  Long Day’s Journey was posthumously awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1957 and I saw the production, with Frank Waters as Tyrone and Dinah Shearing as Mary Tyrone, in 1959.  From ‘The Gods’ in the highest and most distant balcony in the theatre, all I could afford, I was completely absorbed in the emotion of this dysfunctional family, and drawn in further by the knowledge that it was the author’s own life being revealed through art.

In the meantime I had read every one of O’Neill’s works, studied each for the experimental techniques he used, and took on something of the mysticism of his belief that he should not see his plays on stage because he could always do a better production in his own mind.

I sought out other work to see.  Though Alvin Ailey’s Dance Company presented lighter work, I took the opportunity to go backstage, meet the lighting technician and study the expansive lighting plan for such ever-changing dance on such a large stage.  My building industry parents had thought I might become an electrician like my uncles, and I could see the connection here.

Merce Cunningham was a quite different experience: images taken from life and abstracted into movement with its own emotional language; even at one point without the crutch of supporting music.  To see such intense dance done in complete silence has been an essential memory all my life.

Through my years at Sydney University I had maintained my sense of purity and integrity derived from absorbing Eugene O’Neill.  I therefore found the Sydney University Drama Society rather too superficial, not up to the kind of intensity that I required of theatre work.  And so I brought to Broken Hill an expectation of finding ways of working at this level.  When I got there, of course, drama in the English classroom was no more than stilted reading around the class; and the extra-curricular drama productions were directed by the music teacher.  But they were, fortunately, Gilbert and Sullivan, whose work is demanding, and full of satirical humour, which went down very well in this anti-authoritarian mining town. 

I learnt to lighten up!  (And later learnt that I had left behind in SUDS people like Albie Thoms, who went on to become an important avant-garde film-maker.)

I also had to learn not to assume a prima donna directorial role.  The head music teacher always directed the stage production, the other music teacher conducted, and a woodwork teacher designed and built the sets.  I found myself in a dual role. 

First was stage technician, which meant rigging and operating curtains and lights, using ten very hot rheostat dimmers, with levers longer than on one-armed bandits (old-fashioned poker machines).  These were set up with five on each side, so that either you needed two people (who can’t see each other because the rack is between them), one to operate 1 – 5 and the other 6 – 10, or one person who madly runs around the rack to make changes.  For The Pirates of Penzance I had 13 foolscap pages of lighting cues, including re-patching plugs to use different lights in different scenes, as well as setting levels, and training a keen 3rd Former (not one from my lowest English class) to operate opposite me.  Very satisfying!

A rheostat resistance dimmer rack
Mine was less cluttered with other equipment.
The sets of five dimmer levers were placed
one on the front side, the other on the rear side.
My other role turned out to be mediator and conciliator between the dominant (I won’t say prima donna) male head music teacher, the very efficient and productive female second music teacher and an industrial arts teacher who saw his design and construction work as entirely his province regardless of other people’s ideas.  I learnt a great deal about the business of being a teacher from this experience – nothing of which had been taught in my post-grad Diploma in Education course: negotiation and compromise are keys to success.  I have to admit, though, I didn’t always succeed in applying this principle.

The next obvious thing to do was to join Broken Hill Repertory Theatre.  This was the one institution where ‘staff’ (that is, managers and administrators) from the three large mines on the line of lode came into contact with ‘town’ – the underground workers, small business people and people ‘from away’ like bank officers and teachers.  My participation (1964: The Roaring Days!, The Reluctant Debutante; 1965: South Pacific, The Teahouse of the August Moon, The Harp in the South, All My Sons) ranged from acting a comic miner (I was the short one) in The Roaring Days!, a musical about the beginning of mining at Broken Hill in the 1880s by John Pickup; to All My Sons by Arthur Miller which I directed.

At the High School I teamed up with Don Hammond (who also acted in Teahouse) to add variety to the Gilbert and Sullivan offerings by establishing a Drama Club.  There was no provision in the school’s financial arrangements to fund out-of-classtime activities, so we inveigled staff to take part in a fundraiser, aiming to present a serious drama with mainly Year 7 to Year 9s who joined the club. 

We devised a 10-minute Macbeth in which Macduff flew in to the attack on a flying-fox arrangement (much later to come to mind when the chandelier flew down over the audience in Phantom of the Opera, and quite in keeping with nearby mining operations); while the high moment of tension took place around the aspidistra and the whatnot in Out in the Cold, Cold Snow.  Being producer, director and production manager as well as actor (and teacher!) meant that I had not had time to learn my cues, or in fact most of my words.  So as we huddled around the whatnot furiously polishing the aspidistra leaves, the others fed me my lines, much to the amusement of the crowd.

The evening gave us enough cash without having to draw on students’ money for sets and props for Cloud Over the Morning by T B Morris (1959).  The story of children naively trying to help in an internecine war, the youngest being killed unwittingly by a bomb planted by their own side, was a telling tragedy in a mining town where sirens would warn of impending blasts.  For me this production was an important first experience of successfully working with young people to create a highly emotional impact on stage.  But I was only on the cusp of beginning to learn about how drama can spill over off-stage – fortunately in this case into a strong sense of satisfaction for the performers.  It was much later in my career, with students playing Arthur Miller and Eugene O’Neill, before I came to understand more of the depth and spread of emotional overflow; and much later again before I learnt how to plan, implement and guide the workshop, rehearsal, performance and learning process.

Out of school, performing in so many different types of shows over two years saw me find my inner clown, as the comic foil David Bulloch in The Reluctant Debutante (William Douglas Home 1956); as the shortest miner, bopped on the head as he tried to clamber up to reach the good-time girls in The Roaring Days!; and as one of the sailors in South Pacific getting down to bass-ics in ‘Nothing Like a Dame’.  I also had to drive an original World War II jeep, with a loose gear lever and virtually no brakes, out of a mine pit, up a ramp crossways onto a flatbed truck, so that I could drive it off the other side onto the raised stage for Teahouse of the August Moon

That show also taught me to respect Rep’s tradition that a proposed new director had first to be assistant director with an experienced, reliable and trusted mentor.  Unfortunately, I laughed so much in rehearsals for Teahouse that Pat Calder finally tossed me on stage as a Japanese peasant.

Back in the classroom, during the 10 nights’ season, my little goatee dyed black was hardly conducive to the normal standards of school discipline; but especially, chrome yellow make-up had its moments.  “You’ve got yellow ears, Sir!” came the dreaded cry. 

Yet the Committee still accepted my request to direct All My Sons (Arthur Miller, 1947), but only after rejecting my proposal for Look Back in Anger (John Osborne, 1956).  It seemed to me at the time that the Committee was not yet ready for kitchen sink drama; but within a few years of my departure they had produced modern Australian works: Ray Lawler’s Summer of the Seventeenth Doll and The One Day of the Year by Alan Seymour, as well as An Enemy of the People (Henrik Ibsen’s still relevant highly political play of 1882).

As it turned out, All My Sons, about the supplier of faulty aeroplane engines to the US war effort, whose elder-son was pilot of a plane which crashed while flying a mission, was just right for an industrial city where machinery had always to be relied on.  Corruption or just cutting financial corners to make more profit could easily result in deaths above and below ground.  In fact the early history of Broken Hill showed up the risk.

In my last year there, as I was working on All My Sons, I joined with others to form a Historical Society.  We found a room in an old building near Argent Street which had once housed a library but was now disused.  I discovered books – pages after pages – of death certificates from the period 10 or 15 years prior to World War I.  Time and again there were the names of young men, aged around 15 to 18.  Cause of death: lead poisoning.  Why?  Because the mines were not ventilated.  Result: finally, after that six months’ strike in 1919 I had heard about, the mine owners agreed to put in the huge extraction fans needed to make a silver, lead and zinc mine safe to work in.

All My Sons was also a turning point for my thinking about staging drama.  It is an interesting play in the development of Miller’s use of symbolism, written a couple of years before Death of a Salesman.  The apple tree, whole in the first act but broken in the second, was a simple device.  I needed to give the image more emotional significance and realised for the first time how colour and lighting were as direct in their effects on feelings as music is.  Using lighting I could create the contrasts I wanted between the moods of sunlight and moonlight, with a warning implied in a blue whole tree before the storm, which turned broken and red before the impending death, as the single light in the upstairs bedroom window switched off and the gunshot exploded in the silence.

Though the gunshot was no more than a long piece of wood, one end held under the stage manager’s foot, and let go to strike the stage floor along its length, each night that ensuing silence hung undisturbed while the mother and the remaining son sat ever so still in the dark, for at least half a minute – and some nights for more than a minute – before the stage manager would slowly bring lights up ready for curtain call.  I did not use a curtain, but waited for the audience to begin to respond with applause before Kate Keller (Marilyn Hall) would softly rise and walk forward in increasing light, bringing her surviving son Chris (Ken Mount) with her.  Only when he felt ready did Jim Leo, the now dead Joe Keller, enter on stage from the wings, followed in sombre mood by the rest of the cast.

The feeling was unforgettable, especially for the young woman playing the middle-aged wife.  However, one member of the audience on 25th September 1965, the reviewer Ted Mosher, wrote in the Barrier Daily Truth: For those who like comedy and "escape" plays, it must be said that Arthur Miller, the American playwright who married Marilyn Monroe, is rather morbid, and there is a sort of hopeless inevitability about his “All My Sons” which had a depressing effect on this critic at least.
And so it should have, as Wikipedia records in some detail:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_My_Sons

All My Sons is based upon a true story, which Arthur Miller's then mother-in-law pointed out in an Ohio newspaper.  The news story described how in 1941-43 the Wright Aeronautical Corporation based in Ohio had conspired with army inspection officers to approve defective aircraft engines destined for military use.  The story of defective engines had reached investigators working for Sen. Harry Truman's congressional investigative board after several Wright aircraft assembly workers informed on the company; they would later testify under oath before Congress.  In 1944, three Army Air Force officers, Lt. Col. Frank C. Greulich, Major Walter A. Ryan, and Major William Bruckmann were relieved and later convicted of neglect of duty.
Just the story for Broken Hill, where, in a mass meeting of the miners’ union (which I attended as a teachers’ union ‘observer’ through the good graces of a friendly parent), the grass-roots members spoke out and voted against the union leadership.  The motion was to no longer give money to continue supporting the union members on strike in Mount Isa, the copper mining town in Queensland.  The motion was lost, much to the union president’s chagrin.

Though I had worked on building sites to help pay my way as a student, I was surprised – and impressed – by the capacity of the mine workers to argue their case, against their own leadership, in an open-air stadium, speaking to several hundred members without microphones.  This was drama in real life.

I was never privy to the whole story of why these union ‘bosses’ were seemingly acting in the interests of the mine owners. The strike which began in August 1964, was initially over the issue of adequate showers for men at the end of shift. It escalated into a demand for a £4 a week wage rise and better conditions. 
http://www.smh.com.au/comment/obituaries/rank-and-file-hero-who-led-mt-isa-miners-strike-20091204-kb1b.html

But this 2009 Sydney Morning Herald obituary did not go on to explain what I discovered at the time.  Pat Mackie, as a union organiser, traditionally had the right to attend union business in work-time.  But the Mt Isa mine management sacked him for this, only after the industrial negotiations had been under way for quite some time.  The workers saw Pat as having represented them in good faith and according to accepted industrial rules.  It was his sacking which was the trigger for the strike to begin.  But why did the management choose that moment to take action which they knew would start a strike?

The answer came from an examination of the price of copper, the main product of Mt Isa Mines.  Over-production or lower international demand meant the price was dropping rapidly in mid-1964.  After many weeks on strike, with the mine shut down and production reduced, the price began to rise again.  The motion in Broken Hill, if passed, would shorten the strike as Mt Isa miners would have run out of money.  The rejection of their leaders’ motion meant the Mt Isa miners had support for longer.  Finally, after 32 weeks of the strike, the Mt Isa Mines managers must have reached the point where the price had risen high enough to recoup the losses, and also so high that they could not afford to take the risk of losing market share.  So Pat Mackie was mysteriously reinstated, and the strike ended.

Perhaps the union leadership were acting in collusion with the mining company, or were being threatened with total shut down of Mt Isa Mines, and were willing to sacrifice Pat Mackie to save their members’ jobs.  What happened about the showers and the wage rise I don’t remember, but surely there was a story here for the likes of Arthur Miller – and a good reason for All My Sons having a very successful season at Broken Hill Repertory Theatre.

But now, to conclude my Act One, I should return to my teaching experience in the school and in relations with the NSW Department of Education. 

I always had the feeling that because Australia had begun its modern life in New South Wales as a penal colony way back in 1788, government in that state remained hierarchical and authoritarian, despite Australians regularly claiming to be egalitarian in the ‘Lucky Country’ of the ‘fair go’.  So there was both an anti-authority strand in society, which the workers in Broken Hill amply demonstrated, alongside an authoritarian strand also demonstrated in Broken Hill by the dictatorial powers that the union leadership supposedly commanded.

Why were married women not allowed to work, for example?   As The Honourable Justice Mary Gaudron said at a law school graduation ceremony in 1999:

Forty years ago, there was much for a young graduate to question, particularly a young law graduate. Despite our democratic traditions, despite our self-proclaimed egalitarianism and despite our commitment to a fair go, ours was a society of marked inequalities, inequalities which were often entrenched or reinforced by the law itself. A working woman was, by law, worth approximately two-thirds of a male worker doing the same job. In some contexts, a woman was worth nothing at all. For example, a married woman could not work in the Commonwealth Public Service.
http://www.hcourt.gov.au/assets/publications/speeches/former-justices/gaudronj/gaudronj_sydusp2.htm

In the NSW Public Service the 1932 Married Women (Lecturers and Teachers) Act, which had immediately meant the dismissal of some 200 teachers, had to be amended in 1935 to allow for ‘special cases’ – but limited by an annual investigation into matters like whether the husband’s income was sufficient to support the family, in which case the wife would lose her job.  This legislation was repealed in 1947 essentially because of the extreme shortage of teachers, as a report in the Sydney Morning Herald shows (trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/18053440).

The Barrier Industrial Council was finally brought to the heel of equality in 1981 by Mrs Jeanine Whitehair, who was employed as the most senior of five dental assistants at the Town Dental Clinic in Broken Hill. After her marriage in November 1980, Jeanine was one of three people who lost their jobs at the clinic purportedly for economic reasons. With the support of the New South Wales Equal Opportunities Board, Jeanine was successful in her attempt to seek reinstatement. This was a landmark case which not only engendered a significant shift in the nature of women's employment in Broken Hill, but also signalled the beginnings of the erosion of the power of the Barrier Industrial Council. 
(Georgia Moodie http://www.womenaustralia.info/biogs/AWE4104b.htm )

Being a young graduate I found much to question, not only in my first years of teaching but as I grew older throughout my 33 year career.  Some issues were about my community involvement.  Generally no-one complained about my stage performances, but one particularly ludicrous situation arose.  As a bushwalker I was keen to continue long-distance walking, so I planned to spend a free Sunday on a 50 mile (80kms) walk – 25 miles out of town and back.  Some of my students were keen to assist, though they were too young take on the whole distance.  So with their parents’ permission a group rode their pushbikes alongside me for the first hour or so, setting me a good pace.  Their camaraderie set me up for an average of 4 miles per hour which made for a satisfying day’s walking.

My planned walk became common knowledge, just as news about anyone rapidly flashed down Argent Street as everyone went shopping on Saturday mornings.  Early in the week before the chosen Sunday I was having my haircut when the barber asked me about the walk.  Shoes became the subject of conversation.  For speed and light weight I used Dunlop Volley sandshoes.

“You’ll wear a pair out on a walk like that,” the barber thought.  Then he thought some more and said “I’ll give you a pair!”  Well...!  The next day, Tuesday, the Barrier Daily Truth published a short piece about this momentous example of sponsorship by a local business.  On Thursday, my Principal called me up to his office.

“You can’t do it,” he said as a highly mysterious opener to the conversation.  I’m sorry, can’t do what?  “This walk,” he said.  It was the business of the sandshoes.

It turned out that in the Department of Education head office in Sydney somebody was employed to read through every newspaper published in the whole of New South Wales every morning to note any reference to any teacher.  I did the walk in my own sandshoes, of course, but I believe the issue, technically, for the Department was that a teacher was not allowed to have a second job without permission of the Director General.  Rather than see the value of my being supported by the local community to the tune of a few £’s, the rules were to be followed to a silly extent.

Since my Principal already saw me as a maverick with no proper classroom discipline, he was probably glad to have an opportunity to thwart me.  But in town, both the barber and myself gained in reputation, as these authorities ‘from away’ proved how little they understood Broken Hill.

This, my first Principal, had me in his crosshairs on another hairy matter.  I had been one of the few men in Sydney to sport a beard.  Because I wasn’t sure how this would be received in Broken Hill, I had shaved before my first appearance.  After two months, I returned to Sydney for Easter, deciding that shaving was for other men.  When I reappeared with a few days’ stubble, Stewart Garnsey bailed me up in a corridor to demand that I shave. 

“On what grounds?” I asked.  “Your classroom discipline,” he growled.  “Or rather, lack of it!”

“Ah,” I said.  “Give me two weeks.  If my classroom discipline is worse by then than it is now, I’ll shave.”  Knowing, of course, that my classroom discipline could never be worse than having a complete lack of it.  Fortunately, my standing up to him left him red-faced but silent.  The only time I shaved after this was when I had acting parts in plays.

And so it is that I come to the stories of 1A, 2B and 1K.

1A were bright, energetic, enthusiastic – and noisy.  In the new education system which had just begun, the Wyndham Scheme, students’ intelligence quotients (IQ) were used to put them into ‘Advanced’, ‘Credit’ or ‘Ordinary’ classes.  I had completed three years’ Psychology in my undergraduate degree and, having studied the Binet and Wechsler tests which were used, I had my doubts about the scientific value of this approach.  I had also studied the new ideas about people management. 

1A became my first experiment.  The students loved it, because my way was based on the idea of group cooperation; getting on with things without the teacher boring them or, in 1A’s case, slowing them down; and taking responsibility for their own learning.
 
I trust that in modern times as you read this book, these ideas do not seem too radical.  In 1963, the result was conflict with other teachers taking the class for other subjects; a year’s delay on my being passed by an Inspector for permanency and a salary upgrade; and a serious attempt on my part to leave teaching.

To take these in turn – I was teaching Year 7 English and Social Studies with a curriculum which was already terribly old-fashioned.  Even for academically capable students, but especially in the social context of Broken Hill, top-down instruction was not what they needed to open up their responses to arts and history.  Outside the school the arts and history were vibrant forces in daily life, as Pro Hart, the Repertory Theatre and the drama of the union movement made clear.

Inside, they were expected to have their desks in serried rows, watch the blackboard and listen to the teacher without comment – and learn all they needed to know.  Harold Wyndham, though, in the forefront of new developments in education, had taken ten years since his appointment as Director-General in 1952 to set up his new scheme, about which Wikipedia records: Key amongst the changes was the objective of presenting all students with the opportunity to experience a wide range of subjects, including visual arts, industrial arts, music and drama, and a wide range of languages. The Five-year Secondary School system was abandoned in favour of adding another year to the course, with major state-wide external examinations at the end of the tenth (School Certificate) and the twelfth (Higher School Certificate) years of schooling.  This was my new system, and I was determined to take every opportunity to fulfil its aims.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harold_Wyndham

So I moved the furniture.  I took the 1A class for fourteen 40 minute periods per week, in which I set up the (fortunately small) desks into groups scattered about the room, so that my 41 students were divided into 8.2 groups, with 5 in each facing each other in a squarish circle.  Using my knowledge of the newly published information about the Volvo car manufacturing management techniques, I observed the dynamics in each group and chose, after consulting the five members in each case (the 0.2 made one group 6) one of their number to be the ‘foreman’. 

They had chosen their own groups in the first place, so most groups were of boys or girls with a few mixed.  The class had about the same number of each sex in total.  I didn’t use the word ‘foreman’, as Volvo did in its factory.  They became something like ‘organiser’ and ‘representative’, and as they did projects I found myself dealing with four girls and four boys who took the leadership roles.  The result was that the class operated like a network with me as coordinator.

I had to prepare materials which could go to each group so that they could work independently.  Only occasionally did I need to use the blackboard to write up instructions or a written explanation of an answer to a question that may have arisen in one group so that everyone could see it.  Most of the time I would be moving around among the groups, checking how they were going, making sure as well as I could that everyone was taking part equally, and explaining things.

However ... another teacher took the same class for fourteen periods of Maths and Science.  He insisted that all the desks had to be moved back into straight rows from the back to the front, each row having desks in pairs, the spaces between each row such that he could walk up and down next to every student.  It appeared he could only teach to students in a grid pattern.  Though I took the rap, and spent wasted time moving desks to avoid direct conflict, it was a year of bad blood, however cheerful and forthright I was.  After all I was just the new, inexperienced, ineffectual youngster at the bottom of the pecking order.

By the time of my first Departmental Inspection well into the second half of the year I had come to understand and enjoy the nature of the people of Broken Hill.  However I was faced with a tall spartan kind of woman who had been promoted to Inspector from the elite Sydney High.  She was a stickler for convention and conformity to academic standards which had little or no relevance for most of the students I taught.  She displayed no sense of humour – the very quality which I had found was necessary to establish a working relationship with these people, my students and their parents.

She came into classes, often taking them over rather than watching me work.  Finally, in the crucial interview she turned out to be terribly disappointed that I had not had every English class learn a piece of poetry by heart to present to her.  Of course, I took the discussion up to her, explaining about my approach to group dynamics, but – of course – I was deemed not to have passed my inspection.

But I did have a major in Psychology, which got me into more strife with the Principal.  Against his apparent type, he announced – possibly under pressure from the Department to take a more modern approach – that he would hold a special staff meeting in which we younger teachers could present new ideas.  We would call this inservice training in later times.

I led a presentation by a team of three, including Don Hammond, about student assessment.  An important part of my degree had been the study of psychological testing, emphasising two essential issues: reliability and validity. 

The theme of our talk, illustrated with quite simple examples, showed first that it was very unlikely that all the items in a test made up by a teacher would be technically reliable.  Test items needed to be checked out by item analysis for faults, such as in the wording of test questions.  I was still using my undergraduate notes in 1963, but the book published in 1966, Psychological Tests by Edgar Anstey, lays out “Twenty-one Types of Item Fault” from p142! 

A simple example in Anstey explains the basic problem.  Fill in the second word:

OBSTINATE        STU . . . . .

In a group of 103 people, 33 whose mean on the whole test was 54.5 put the correct answer STUBBORN.  But 10, whose mean on the whole test was 55, put the incorrect answer STUPID.  This was presumably because the 10 were influenced simply by how common the word ‘stupid’ is, rather than concentrating on finding the nearest less common synonym.  But their results over the whole test showed they were similar to or even a little better than the other 33.  The item is at fault, not the people who chose the ‘wrong’ answer: they may all have known the correct answer but in the test situation didn’t stop to think.

In my day I had learnt the Friedman chi-square F test for analysis-of-variance, but Anstey goes into the d Method and Short-Cut Methods of item analysis. 

By this stage of the inservice, our audience was already placed in the invidious position of either realising that none of their tests could be taken as reliable, or had glazed eyes of incomprehension.

But validity was the cruncher.  Since no-one on staff could have their tests validated against whole populations, of which their particular class would be only a small part, the scores given to students in the classroom or even in yearly tests were virtually meaningless.  As we know, statistical manipulation of raw scores to make standardised scores which allow scores to be compared across a state system or across the whole country is a huge operation.

At this point, we had shown that all the effort that went into classroom testing was pointless.  Most teachers could probably guess the rank order of their students and reach just as, or more useful conclusions.

Stewart Garnsey never called another new ideas meeting, and transferred to Finley on the Murray River at the end of the year.

In the September holidays I put in an application for a job in the Vocational Guidance Bureau which was a small section of the NSW Public Service designed to assist young people, most of whom still left school at 15 in those days, mainly to find apprenticeships.  The work was seen as counselling rather than mere administration, and at the interview in Sydney it was made clear to me that I was a candidate the Bureau wanted to take on.

Throughout the final term after this interview, however, I heard nothing to say that I had been accepted or rejected.  But quite unexpectedly, I found I was to have another inspection, this time by the local inspector who was responsible for the Far West region.  This event turned out to have the same result as before, but with an interesting twist.  The gentleman inspector (I call him that because he was very polite) only observed one class.  I had found some war poetry which mentioned types of aircraft, so I asked the class (especially for Year 8 boys) to draw pictures of the planes.  This inspector didn’t take over the class, but walked around looking at the kid’s books, all very relaxed. 

Then he said, politely, to a girl that the plane she had drawn looked like an airliner, but that wasn’t the kind of plane mentioned in the poem.  He knew about warplanes because he had been a pilot in the airforce.  My reaction was to ask him if he would tell us more about his experiences, but he almost seemed shy and wouldn’t offer anything further.  It was a great opportunity missed from my point of view, because he could have brought the poems alive in a way I could never do.

He went away politely and I was told some time later that I still hadn’t been passed.  Yet I still have the feeling that if it had been entirely up to him, I might have been OK.

In early January 1964 during the six-week Christmas holidays (this is summer in the southern hemisphere), while I was staying with my parents in Sydney, I received a telegram instructing me to attend the office of the Deputy Director of Education.  This seemed an unexpected privilege considering my status in the Department.

As I entered the office, the first words spoken were “You haven’t got the job with the Vocational Guidance Bureau!”  Here was another example of officialdom keeping tabs on my personal information.  I came to understand later from other sources that the Bureau was not going to be allowed to ‘poach’ a Department employee. 

Before I could respond to this blunt instrument piece of information, I was harangued for my behaviour in Broken Hill, but then told that I was to go back to redeem myself.  This was not put in terms of any concern for my development as a teacher, but clearly as a punishment for my misdemeanours.

So I stood up and said, “I think this interview is over” and walked out.

I had a choice, but not so much as you might think.  A friend of the family had taken on the role of guarantor for my Teachers’ College Scholarship which had paid not only my university fees but also a small living allowance which had been the only way I could have afforded to attend university.  This scholarship required me to teach for five years.  If I resigned at this point, my guarantor would be expected to cough up perhaps £500 – but I knew there was no way he could afford it, or should be put in the position of having to face up to such a demand because of my self-indulgence.  My year’s wages were no more than the amount that would be owed, so my savings at that point would be nowhere near enough.  My parents were certainly in no position to help from their small plastering sub-contracting business.

Even considering the Department’s dictatorial approach, it was also true that I enjoyed teaching young people, and I was confident that my approach was the right way to go, even if I was never going to be the sort of disciplinarian that people like the Deputy Director assumed I should be.  I knew that a teacher could not become too close to his students personally, but I also knew that for the student to be motivated to learn, humour and friendship were an essential ingredient.  Psychology made it clear to me that motivation was the key to all learning: students only really internalise new learning because they are emotionally engaged.

And there was no doubt that I was not going to let the Department win. 

So I began my second year, still with no permanent Teaching Certificate, with a new Principal. Unfortunately I proceeded to put this Principal into a difficult spot.  2B was the other academically ‘good’ class I had, so I introduced them to literature, including To Sir, With Love by E.R.Braithwaite.  This was a famous semi-autobiographical novel by a black teacher in a school in London long before Britain became anything like as multicultural as it is now.  In a sense, his experiences were a bit like mine teaching in Broken Hill ‘from away’.

The book is still famous (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E._R._Braithwaite ) and is a regular on curriculum reading lists, but although I only presented it to the class by reading passages, carefully chosen to avoid controversy, a parent complained to the Principal.  One feature of the new Wyndham Scheme was that class materials were no longer to be strictly prescribed.  No longer was it true that at any point in time one could know that every Year 8 student would be reading the same text.  Now the teacher could and should choose material to suit the class, and for this class To Sir, With Love could generate lively discussion about the characters, the story, and the experience of going to school in another country, as well as about social issues such as discrimination and prejudice.

The upshot was that the Principal insisted I give him what was my only, personal, copy of the book to pass on to the parents.  I never got the book back and, although I was never formally disciplined, I was probably a kind of persona non grata for having caused embarrassment to the Principal.  Rather like E.R.Braithwaite’s experience, though he had a much more empathetic Principal.  I was not looking forward to my inspection.

This year I taught 1J not only to remember the mediaeval ballad, Lord Rendell, but to sing it in the manner of the famous counter-tenor Alfred Deller, by playing the tune to them on the harmonica.  The same woman inspector took over the class as was her wont, kept them until the lunchtime bell had rung, and then said, “And have you a poem for me?”

Lord Rendell is a long narrative ballad which the students had made fun of as they learned it, but they understood (without prompting from me) that this recitation was important to me.  They did it straight without hesitation – all 10 or so verses – and Madam allowed them to go late to lunch: and gave me a pass!

What for me was even more wonderful about the students was that to be held back after the bell in the city where the unions ruled, was the worst thing that insensitive inspector could have done.  They were overjoyed when I was able to tell them that their effort had resulted in success.  And so I stayed in Broken Hill.

But, despite the dramas in my role as a teacher, I still haven’t written about teaching drama.  In fact, it was 1K that taught me. 

Trying to teach this lively, outspoken bunch of kids according to the standard approach of chalk and talk was simply nonsensical.  Whatever my reputation, I simply had to find another way.  I managed Social Science mainly by giving them information – for example, about the use of the shadoof in ancient Egypt – by drawing comic-book story-boards on the board.  They found these interesting enough to copy into their classwork books which they were quite happy to bring out for me to inspect, giving me the opportunity to talk one-on-one or to a small group.

English was a different matter. Off the scale below 1K in the academic hierarchy, starting from 1A, were three ‘GA’ classes, called General Activity because it was believed that, with such low IQs these students were barely able to learn anything worthwhile.  Though 1K might be classed as ‘slow learners’, most behaved as if they were normal kids.  But writing and reading was certainly way behind the average for their age group.

Yet they had imaginations which I could hardly avoid noticing.  One day I asked them to entertain me.  Almost in an instant they began to act out an improvised story.  From day to day they would come with different stories, many based on pirates and similar kinds of derring-do adventures.  Even within one period of 40 minutes stories would diverge, sometimes into several different lines of development running in parallel in different parts of the classroom.

Though this activity hardly endeared me to those teachers who wanted classrooms to be havens of peace and quiet, fortunately our room was in a ‘portable’, that is a temporary building somewhat isolated from the main building.  When it was installed as temporary I don’t know – perhaps when the school population had been 2200 – but it was certainly in use throughout my three years there.

Giving 1K the licence to entertain opened them up to the possibility of taking responsibility for what happened, and being concerned about what should happen in their classroom.  For a long time most of the action was boys’ adventure.  I had never had any experience of children’s improvisation and became fascinated to see how in an instant someone would pick up a shoe and immediately talk into it.  Another person would hear a book ‘ringing’, pick it up and answer the other person on the shoe.  I watched as over time any loose object in the room could become anything, from a foghorn on a pirate ship, to its mast, or its navigation light, or a megaphone to speak through the fog to the captain of another ship.

But I was concerned that most of this kind of action involved the boys – and there were more boys than girls in the class.  A group of three girls obviously looked down on these dramas, and one day announced that what was happening was stupid.  They would put on a play.

Over a period of a week or more, these girls took charge.  The script was never written down, in fact I don’t even remember a title, but they did what in later times we would learn to call ‘workshopping’.  They set people to improvising ideas for a dramatic story, which gradually coalesced into the tragic story of a princess who had two lovers.  The whole class could be involved as members of the court, encouraging the princess to decide.  But she could see the good sides of both, and found them so equal that she couldn’t make up her mind which to accept.

Finally, in a ritual ending, the two suitors were set up to fight each other: the winner to have her hand in marriage.  But the two were so equal in their strengths that the fight only ended when each had dealt the death blow to the other in the same moment.  The princess in sorrow was left alone to contemplate her sense of guilt, knowing that one would have been her husband if she had chosen him, while the other, though without her as his wife, would at least have lived.

I could not miss the opportunity to stage their play in the main hall and invited other Year 7 classes to come along.  We had a good crowd interested, so production went into full swing with costumes and rehearsals.  I took the backseat role of operating lights and curtains. 

I have never forgotten the image, which I saw from above on the lighting platform, of the two dead swordsmen and the grieving princess in the final spotlight – so simple, so sad, so quiet, as I slowly dimmed the spot and closed the curtain.

The question at the end of my first three years’ teaching was never so much about my teaching drama; the answer was how much I was taught by 1K.  It was about trust; about recognising that to learn, the students must – indeed, can only – begin where they are at; and about my learning that real learning comes from being engaged in creativity – on my part as much as for the students.

The class party at the end of the year was a well-established tradition.  The students ate cup-cakes and soft-drink and gave their teachers gifts of appreciation.  I hope such celebrations still take place in schools.  Once again it was 1K that took the cake.

Quite small, almost tiny, red-haired Alan was always good for a side-comment and a laugh, sitting right up the front, right under my nose.  It was his task to present me with a very large parcel, wrapped in newspaper, but which weighed almost nothing.  What on earth could it be?

I had become well-known in town, in my bushwalking mode, for my old Series 1 Landrover.  There’s another quite long short story to be written about my bush adventures from the Blue Mountains in the east to the Flinders Ranges in South Australia, and north to Tibooburra and the Queensland Dog Fence.  I began unwrapping – and unwrapping...and unwrapping, layer after layer of newspapers.

I was down to something solid but no more than about two inches long, an inch wide and an inch high.  A tiny model Series One Landrover!

So happy and yet sad at the same time, for by now, looking at the world from a bushwalker’s point of view, in the landscape of life I had met my future wife on a literal and metaphorical mountain top some six years previously.  We had followed ridges and creeks, sometimes in company together, often in many different directions in the company of others, yet now we had reached a confluence, a meeting of the waters, late in 1965, looking ahead together across a new kind of bushland which we named ‘marriage’.  It was time for me to leave Broken Hill.








© Frank McKone, Canberra


Monday 13 April 2020

Burning Bright - Drama Teaching, Part Two

BURNING BRIGHT


Teaching Drama 1963 – 1996


 by

Frank McKone
 

PART TWO

Interval One
In the Foyer 1966


In this year I saw my first play to begin in a foyer: Rodney Milgate’s A Refined Look at Existence (at Jane Street Theatre, University of New South Wales, directed by Robin Lovejoy).  While we were seated, waiting for action to begin, two uniformed policemen looked in from the foyer, then went backstage and appeared on the stage, clearly searching for someone.  After scanning us from the stage, they came in among the seats and arrested a man.  Despite claiming to be innocent, the man was rather forcibly removed to the foyer, where his loud protestations had no effect and he was apparently taken away.

Nothing else happened.  House lights were still up.  Nothing changed on the stage.

Suddenly behind us a wild looking bushman appeared, rifle pointed at the stage.  A shot over our heads nearly deafened us.  Somebody appeared on the stage, and only then did we begin to realise that the play had begun.  Only later, when the well-known figure of actor Michael Boddy was present in the curtain call could we be sure that even the policemen in the foyer and the arrest were part of the fiction.  Michael Boddy’s generous body shape was the final clue.

Teaching in Sydney was a bit too close to Head Office for me, but clearly drama was on the move as the National Institute for Dramatic Art got under way at Jane Street and then the Old Tote Theatre, while La Mama in Melbourne had already established the reputation of the new Australian ‘physical theatre’.

After a break from academia in Broken Hill, I had also decided to take on more study.  This was not because I could expect more recognition (or salary) from the Department.  If I had completed an Honours level BA degree, and then a Dip Ed, I would have begun teaching classed as five-year trained.  With only a Pass degree and Dip Ed, I was classed as four-year trained.  Five-year trained teachers began at second-year out salary.  Because of my early hiccup, I came to Sydney for my fourth teaching year on third-year out salary and extra academic qualifications would not now change my salary progression.

But I had long wanted to follow up my special interest in Bernard Shaw, so I had proposed to Sydney University to enrol in an MA in literature for a thesis studying his novels and plays and to show them in the context of his philosophy.  My proposal was accepted but I had to spend a year first in an MA Qualifying course to bring my qualifications to Honours standard.  It was to satisfy this requirement, and my desire to understand Shaw, that brought me back to Sydney.

Where would I be posted?  First to Drummoyne Boys’ High School.  After Term 1 and our marriage in the May holidays, although the Department would not guarantee that my fiancée teaching in Coonabarabran (in north-west New South Wales) and I would be moved to schools near each other, my wife was moved to Bankstown Girls’ High and I to Homebush Boys’ High, both in Sydney.  The schools were fairly near each other, but a long way across the city from where we lived, meaning an hour and half’s driving twice a day: but I guess, from the Department’s point of view, beggars can’t be choosers.

Three years of the Broken Hill culture did not prepare me well for the conservatism and lack of sense of humour at the Sydney schools.  Though I did get to teach one senior class, I found the greater level of aggression quite depressing.  Partly due to the sense of competition built in to Sydney culture, but even more because of the nature of single-sex boys’ schools, classroom teaching was not exciting for this year.

Drama could be found, but not of my kind at Drummoyne.  I was immediately in strife since the young – hardly radical – men teachers and bank officers in Broken Hill had established the costume of shorts and long socks for work.  My new Principal promptly informed me that only the Physical Education teacher was allowed to wear shorts, despite the heat and humidity of late summer in Sydney.  But irony is always around the corner.  The only subjects I was allocated to teach were English and ... PE!  I still couldn’t wear shorts without time to change between 40-minute periods but, since I had never been trained to teach PE and was seriously concerned that I didn’t have the techniques to keep somersaulting teenagers safe, I conducted a term’s course in yoga.

The connection with drama might seem vague, but I had found that yoga breathing and concentration had been useful in the wings before going on stage.  So my Drummoyne boys may not have gained much from PE, but I had the opportunity to explore more about yoga and to design exercises – which I hope also helped reduce a little of the city aggression.  But, although I was transferred when we married without being consulted, I was glad: one term at Drummoyne was more than enough.

Homebush offered me a chance, as luck would have it, to take part in two drama events.  The help Mr. Deamer gave in the production of the opera [The Beggar’s Opera by John Gay in the Benjamin Britten version]was greatly appreciated – we thank him and wish him all the best for his stay in Canada wrote students J. Lalchere and L. Pater in the school magazine, in which I am listed in the English Department.



In fact, Tom Deamer did as many Australian teachers did: went to Canada where higher remuneration was the icing on the cake of adventure.  Others I knew came back only in the mid-1970s, after the Federal Government under Gough Whitlam made a major effort to inject funds into the school systems, constitutionally the responsibility of impecunious or stingy State Governments.  I took over Tom’s plans for a shortened version of The Beggar’s Opera to be performed for age pensioners and hospital patients.  The logistics of touring – even only to half a dozen venues – in between teaching a full load was a major commitment. 

However it did mean some escape from supervising sport on Thursday afternoons, and for me was the precursor to negotiations for theatre production to be a legitimate alternative to competitive sports, which I finally achieved in Canberra ten years later.

Then I had a call from Don Hammond.  Could I please help?

Don was now the producer, seconded by the Department, of the upcoming Metropolitan Western Area High Schools Drama Festival.  Could I get myself seconded to be the Lighting Designer and Stage Manager?  Please!!!

At least being in Sydney meant I was close to Head Office – a bonus after all.  I made an appointment to see Dan Dempsey who had long been the Supervisor of Speech and Drama.  Hopefully, he would have forgotten my name since I had failed his audition to perform Shakespeare on the steps of the War Memorial in Sydney’s Hyde Park in my final year as a student at North Sydney Boys’ High, 1957.  He had told me I would never be an actor.

If he remembered, he said nothing about that little disaster, and was obviously very keen to see the Western Area Drama Festival succeed.  He wrote what was effectively an instruction to the Homebush High Principal to release me for two weeks, even though Homebush was not in the Metropolitan Western Area.  At Homebush the Deputy Principal effectively ran the school, and I had seen even senior boys waiting outside his office in tears as he prepared to cane them.  How would he take Dempsey’s letter?

Once again I was lucky that the Principal must have decided that the good will of an officer of Dempsey’s standing in the Department was of more value to him than following his Deputy’s advice.  In tones of great begrudgement, I was more or less told I was a traitor to his school but, after all, he really had no choice. 

Off I went for a new adventure – and another bout of learning the ropes of stage production, this time in a festival format, where teachers and their lively drama stalwarts would arrive for one rehearsal, no real lighting or sound check, and in need of a stage manager who could find pronto any sort of props they might need, give them advice about blocking, take over supervising their technical ‘experts’ and set them up as operators, and do it all again for another group half an hour later.  It was all so full on that I can’t remember anything about the shows now.

But Don Hammond was happy Рand my name in the Department had a little more cach̩, perhaps.

In the interval I passed my MA Qualifying having attended two evening seminars a week (in university term times) and presenting a short essay on Samuel Beckett.  A central quote I used in my theme was where Estragon and Vladimir decide to abuse each other to keep from being bored. 

They begin with Moron!, Vermin!, Abortion!, Morpion!, Sewer-rat!, Curate! and Cretin!

Then it’s Estragon (with finality): Crritic!
And Vladimir: Oh! and “He wilts, vanquished, and turns away”.

Maybe it was a warning for, after retiring from full-time teaching, I became a theatre critic.  I always felt humbled by Beckett’s venom, and took care to write fair comment.

So this year-long interval was nearly over.  Family needs were pressing. I was accepted by Sydney University for the MA by thesis course, so that I did not need to live in Sydney: I could research during the school vacations, send chapters by mail to my supervisor, and meet occasionally if there were problems.  So we were on the move to the Central Coast north of Sydney, about halfway to Newcastle.  The next seven years I taught at Wyong High.


ACT TWO: Finding My Way 1967-73

Scene Locations:
            Wyong High School
            Wyong Drama Group


In the early 1960s, influenced by having seen Merce Cunningham, I had once briefly attended a dance class, with Margaret Barr, the then lecturer in movement at NIDA.  Then at a summer school I had had a week’s classes with her on movement and improvisation based on animal forms and internalising imagery.  She was introduced in an ABC Radio National Hindsight program as

…an extraordinary woman [with a] commitment to dance and social justice - the choreographer and teacher Margaret Barr.  After training in New York with the pioneer of modern dance, Martha Graham, and working at the famous Dartington Hall in England, Margaret Barr founded a dance-drama group in Sydney in 1953.

She created over sixty works that engaged with the widest cultural concerns of the day - from the Vietnam War to the poems of Judith Wright, from the hardships of rural life to the excitement of the Melbourne Cup. Margaret Barr was also director of movement at the National Institute of Dramatic Art (NIDA) for twenty three years, but the political nature of her productions often put her at odds with the dance establishment. Drawing on interviews she gave before her death in 1991, and accounts from dancers, friends, critics and historians, this feature portrays the life of an individual who believed in the power of art to change the world, and the necessity for dance to communicate a social message.

(http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/hindsight/margaret-barr/3424224)

My brief encounter with Margaret Barr (I have always referred to her by her full name in recognition of the strength of her character and intensity of her teaching) was far more influential for my drama teaching than you might expect.  She gave me two basic principles to work from, which were confirmed by Broken Hill’s 1K: that movement is the basis of drama (rather than text); and that imagery is the core of emotion.  “Imagery” does not only refer to visuals, but to any of the other four senses – touch, sound, taste, smell – plus the sixth sense called the kinaesthetic which tells us where parts of our bodies are in space.

At another summer school another significant teacher from an earlier generation, Eunice Hanger from the University of Queensland, had taught writing, using the image of opening doors to reveal what was to be found behind them.  I found the idea fascinating because it allows you, as you write, not to know beforehand what will be discovered.  Yet, the story you write falls into place, with a beginning, middle and end.  At this point you can close the door, and return to real life.
(http://australianplays.org/playwright/CP-hanger)
(http://trove.nla.gov.au/people/481427?c=people)

Thus imagery also became central to my work teaching drama, but it took me years of experimenting, failures and partial successes, and a change of employment from one jurisdiction to another, before I understood how to put the idea into practice.

By the time I arrived at Wyong High in 1967, I was beginning to appreciate that there was much, much more for me to learn about the process of acting.  My major undergraduate study in Psychology raised ideas about internal mental processes and external behaviour; while my minor study of Philosophy, and an interest in the nature of religions which had led me to Zen and Yoga (in company with many others in the 1960s) also took me into concerns about the distinctions between fact and fiction, reality and imagination, being in reality and being an actor.
The Ensemble Theatre, Sydney
originally a boatshed.

The Ensemble Theatre - in the round
https://www.ausleisure.com.au/images/ausleisure/files/Ensemble_Theatre_Sydney_1.JPG
Hayes Gordon (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hayes_Gordon), founder and director of the Ensemble Theatre in Sydney, developing his own approach to the Stanislavski method, became the third highly influential figure from an earlier generation in my next seven year search for bringing Drama into the curriculum fold.  But the practicalities of teaching English and History in classes ranging from Year 7 to Year 12, and from slow learners to Level 1 Matriculation, and being Careers Adviser, while also researching and writing a thesis, placed Drama into the slow lane of new understanding.

That didn’t mean the slow lane wasn’t very busy.  I performed, directed and teched for the Wyong Drama Group, which I also chaired for some time.  As in Broken Hill, the local theatre group provided contact and friendship with people from across the community, including parents whose children I was teaching.  The school Drama Club and the Wyong Drama Group were closely linked by a group of three or more teachers presenting stage productions under both auspices.

The story in this Second Act could never be a chronology of seven years of intense activity.  Instead it concerns the bits and pieces I garnered from different experiences, some set up by me to experiment with possibilites, some coming at me from welcome or occasionally unpredictable sources.  The setting is Wyong High School, which had around 1000 students enrolled, but with only a small percentage going as far as Years 11 and 12.  The group taking Level 1 English in Year 12 was often only about five in number.

But at least, maybe I could say at last, four years’ previous experience made effective teaching much more likely to happen in my classrooms; and especially welcome was the attitude of Bob Goldie, long-term senior teacher and later deputy principal, who took the view that the younger staff coming through should be taking the senior students through the new process of matriculating under the Wyndham Scheme.  I could feel more like a youthful but adult professional working in his orbit.

The Department was little changed, but I was able to make approaches and find more reasonable responses – until my last inspection in New South Wales in 1973.

The essence of Hayes Gordon (1920-1999) is well expressed in his book Acting and Performing (Ensemble Press, Sydney 1992), but the thing to remember is that around 1970 when I took students from Wyong to the Ensemble Theatre to see Hayes run a demonstration rehearsal, as well as see the evening’s performance, the finished book was nearly twenty years away.  He passed the directorship of the Ensemble to Sandra Bates in 1986, only then finishing the text of his book in 1987.

I was keen to show students the quality and life of the Ensemble productions which I had found fascinating.  The in-the-round layout made Sean O’Casey’s The Shadow of a Gunman especially powerful.  Directed by James Upshaw, with a set consisting of no more than suspended window frames and a door frame to represent the upstairs room, I found being seated in the front row near one ‘window’ almost an invasion of the characters’ privacy.  But how much more affecting it was when I sat barely a metre in front of the actress in tears as she looked down, through the ‘window’ and straight through me, to see Minnie being shot in the crossfire in the street below.

In the English classroom, all these influences meant not only should the furniture be moved, as I had done in the beginning in Broken Hill, but that drama should be a physical and emotional experience, especially for younger teenagers, rather than an intellectual study of text as it had been for me as a student in the 1950s.  Yet, even then, at Enfield Grammar School in London, in Form 2 (Year 8) in the year before my parents took me to Australia, I had performed in an excerpt from Henry IV as Prince Hal.  It was still a reading and fairly static, but it was on a stage with others from the class as an audience.  I can say nothing about the quality of that production, but I can clearly remember the feeling of pride and sense of expressing myself to an audience.

Fortunately in the early period at Wyong High, several of us with an interest in drama had ‘home’ rooms in a group at the end of a corridor on the upper floor.  This was my first experience of a home room, meaning I stayed there for almost all my classes.  The students, who had different teachers for each of their subjects, had a five-minute changeover time between periods (still only 40 minutes) to move to their next teacher.  This system was not maintained throughout my seven years there, as the school grew when more people moved into the area and commuted by train or the new F3 freeway to Sydney for work.  The Central Coast became known as a dormitory suburb since many workers only had time to sleep there between hours of travel and work.

I, and my colleagues, found the home room congenial – provided yours was near another drama type who didn’t mind performances going on across the corridor, acoustically made more difficult by the rooms having open louvres into the corridor for ventilation.  The result was a kind of excited pandemonium, and a tendency for more conservative teachers to demand home rooms at the other end of the school, or at least downstairs.

At this time the Wyndham Scheme was still coming to grips gradually with the move away from dictatorially planned lessons with strictly controlled content, towards more freedom for each teacher and their colleagues, even within one subject and year level, to provide for the particular needs of their classes.  For example, Year 8 History studied the Renaissance.  One class I taught had a mix of abilities from very ‘Ordinary’ to extremely ‘Advanced’, because History was an option timetabled on the same line as other subjects such as Geography, Industrial Arts or French.

My solution was drama, taking 1K as my example.  While the Advanced group were working independently in the library researching topics such as the relationship between the Church and the State in Europe in the 16th Century, the Ordinary group played out Spanish and English pirate stories of exploration and conflict leading to the Armada of 1588.

After Year 10, Advanced, Credit and Ordinary became Levels 1, 2 and 3.  In one English class I discovered that a number of students whose previous results showed they were likely to succeed at Level 2, or even some at Level 1, had enrolled in Level 3.  In the late 1960s and early 1970s the old Australian ‘tall poppy syndrome’ was still a strong cultural influence, especially in country areas.  Part of the Level 3 curriculum was for the students to study aspects of media – print and television.

The nearest I could get to drama in this case was for small teams to create their own advertisements.  I didn’t have the technology available to make video recordings, but I asked the students to make up ideas as storyboards so that they would take the study further than static newspaper or magazine ads.  The key to making this study experiential (a word which made it into the regular lexicon in the 1980s) was to take the class to a well-known advertising agency in Sydney for some reality assessment.

It wasn’t long before the higher ability students realised how the advertisers were attempting to manipulate their audience’s attitudes and feelings, when the agency – after giving highly positive judgements about the student’s presentations – took us into a studio to show us one of their new productions.  They asked the students what they thought about the ad, but what those with Level 1 potential noticed was how the agency staff watched and noted the students’ reactions while being shown the movie.  From our discussions back in the classroom I am fairly confident that several students learnt to analyse what they were seeing on television, and some degree of cynicism developed.

But, after all, one aim of the English course was to develop critical thinking!

Getting drama into the classroom in its own right was not going to happen easily, because suitable timetabling, rooming and anything like theatre facilities were simply not thought of when the school was built.  There was not even an assembly hall or gym.  As the population of the Central Coast increased, a new wing of classrooms was added.  Once again I tried moving the furniture.

One requirement of the new building was to include a GA Suite.  This was supposed to be for those classes below 1K, remembering my Broken Hill experience, called General Activity, on the assumption that such low-IQ children would need more floor space than the standard for normal children.  At the same time, since the school population was changing as well as increasing, something flexible was needed.  The answer was to have three rooms separated by heavy sound-insulated concertina walls.  With some (in fact quite considerable) effort, you could have three separate rooms, or one standard plus a double size room, or even a triple size room.  I thought there had to be some way I could use this arrangement.

I had to engineer not just the physical space, of course, but the mental space of my senior teacher.  There were two steps in this process.  First I had to propose that the English weekly program could be restructured from the convention which had been the norm since I had first attended secondary school in 1952.

Each English period each week was dedicated to one genre: poetry, short story/novel, drama, and language.  Fortunately, under the auspices of a mature radical senior teacher like Bob Goldie and with support from the other young radicals, I successfully lobbied to be allowed – in only one of my classes, and only for one term – to teach each genre for a week’s lessons in a row, so that over a four week period each genre received the same teaching time.

Timetabling and rooming came next.  There was usually a need for some classes to have a double-length class, especially as the Wyndham Scheme had encouraged a wider variety of courses to be available for a greater proportion of the clientele.  Timetabling had become so unpredictable by this time at Wyong that only after the new staff and students had arrived for each year could the timetable be worked out – often taking a week or two to finalise.  It was in this chaotic gap that I was able to have one class (in Year 9) allocated a double room in the GA Suite.  For standard English lessons I could use one room with desks, but for drama I could open up the concertina wall and move furniture to one side to make a drama space.

Fortunately for my sanity and reputation, this arrangement only lasted one 14 week term.  By this time, 1971, I had picked up some ideas from watching Hayes Gordon rehearse which distilled down to ‘improvisation’.  I thought that asking the students to improvise acting out scenes that they invented would release their creativity and produce wonderful performances.  I did have some idea about ‘warming’up’.

Quite a lot of warming up happened while the furniture was stacked aside, only to reveal an open area of very new highly polished floor.  Of course I had asked the students to remove their shoes, and within a few seconds sliding across the shiny surface became an extended warm-up – at first in their socks, and before long on their backs.  It was great fun, though it sometimes turned into a potentially dangerous competition as some became handlers, flinging a partner willy-nilly across the floor.  I could see some loosening up was taking place – it was certainly done with a sense of freedom not normally seen in the classroom – but I had only seen warm-up and improvisation take place among already experienced and disciplined adults.

I hadn’t expected this kind of ‘behaviour’ which looked like very large kindergarten children going berserk.  I was trained as a secondary teacher, so I had no skills in setting up the sorts of rules and signals that early childhood teachers knew to control young children’s impulse for constant movement.  I had expected Year 9 to be hesitant about being on an open floor, a bit like having stage fright that I had experienced in the theatre.  What I hadn’t thought of was that in this situation there was no audience to judge them, except perhaps me – but, except again, that I had apparently given them unlimited freedom.

Some sort of intuition took me to where any kindergarten teacher would have begun, and some kind of ragged circle formed.  But now what should I do?  I had no training and little experience for working drama with teenagers, let alone these ratbags.  I couldn’t get angry with them, of course, because that wouldn’t be fair.  The only practical step that I could hope might work was to have a small group perform a skit for the others to watch and respond to.

As 1K, in Year 7, had shown me, this could develop into something worthwhile, though there was always the risk that it wouldn’t.  I also had memories of a successful effort with Year 7 when I had been practice teaching at Normanhurst Boys’ High in Sydney in 1962.  The class was reading Wind in the Willows, so I took them out into the wooded grounds of the school, divided them into six small groups, sent each group off to work out a playlet drawn from one part of the story, and had them return and perform the whole story in six parts.  Of course I was barely passed by the Teachers’ College supervisor, since he had turned up to find my classroom empty and had to search the grounds to find me.

But suggestions of this kind did not work with Year 9.  Skits hardly developed beyond imitations of tv ads or a couple of family arguments.  Where was the depth that I had been looking for since reading Eugene O’Neill?  Not in Wyong, apparently.

After another attempt in the second week, I had no choice but to abandon the idea and return to the conventional 40 minutes per genre English classes.  It was a significant failure on my part which I could hardly discuss with teaching colleagues, not even the ones who had become real friends.

I wasn’t sorry when even the time-tabling and rooming had to change for the next term.

Barry Payne, Howard Cassidy, Heather Brown, Jim Saunders and I formed the core group of teachers who combined our personal interests in theatre with our desire to teach drama.  In Wyong Drama Group we wrote, directed, acted, stage managed and teched.  We directed school productions in a close relationship with the WDG, whose members at times included high school students and parents.  As in Broken Hill, my relationship with the local community was almost as much a part of my teaching as my work in the school, and I continued to work in this vein until, indeed even after, my formal retirement.

In Broken Hill, though, my involvement in the Repertory Theatre was essentially separate from the business of teaching.  Now, with a coterie of teachers with the same interests, my work both in the Drama Group and with the students began to coalesce.  Working on plays like Mother Courage and her Children, Rhinoceros, The Crucible, and Mourning Becomes Electra (Eugene O’Neill!) with the school group was not too different from working on Arms and the Man, The Glass Menagerie, and She Stoops to Conquer in the Drama Group.

Light relief came from WDG productions like Love’s a Luxury, and Central 2000.  This has been recorded on the website as  a revue for eight players with a view to the CENTRAL COAST in the year 2000 a.d.  It's interesting to note that the term "Central Coast" existed in 1969, and we can see how accurate they were with sketches like "Hospital Call" calling for a hospital at Wyong, which finally opened in 1980, not beyond 2000 as implied by the call.  The revue was produced by Barry Payne.

The writing credits go to Frank McKone (for "Concrete", "Races" and "Prawner") Howard Cassidy (for "Hound" and "Milking") and Barry Payne himself (the rest - ie MOST of the revue).


These photos may give some idea about the show:

These costumes represent prawns, as found in the Tuggerah Lakes.  The punchline for the Prawn Lake Ballet was "don't come the raw prawn with me".  Of course it was built up over a while... George Geatches, Heather Brown, Jim Saunders & Ann Cassidy coming the raw prawn with all of us.



Howard Cassidy holds a swimming Frank McKone in the Prawn Lake Ballet.

And yet, of course, I was not ‘teaching’ drama.  What, from my point of view was not just fun, had no formal recognition.  The community involvement was ‘personal’ and productions with students were ‘extra-curricular’.

Yet how could it be that the school would give me permission and time off to take students ‘on excursion’ to the Ensemble Theatre, or to the Australian Broadcasting Commission’s recording studios in Sydney as I did with the group working on The Crucible? 

Why had Dan Dempsey been so keen to see schools take part in a two-week long drama festival back in 1966?  And why, as I discovered at Wyong High, was the principal very happy for me to top up the school’s finances with box office income from student productions, while costs were left to the participants?

What was in it for the school system?

As many others found out, it was about prestige and reputation.  The school and the Education Department took the credit, but the individual teacher was given little in return – though I have to say that I still value the support that students and community people gave me over many years.  I still occasionally receive heart-warming phone calls and emails from the now long distant past.  A very special occasion was the 50th reunion of students from the 1968 Year 12, organised by Chris Gavenlock, which I and Howard Cassidy attended.  We read back to them the poetry they had written for the school magazine for which I had been the editor.  In 2018 they were as impressed with the depth of the feelings and understanding they had shown, as we had been in 1968.

On 1 October 1968 the first strike action by teachers in New South Wales took place.  One of the issues particularly interested me.  We demanded clerical staff to support our work as teachers.  Politicians and the general community were so surprised that we won much of what we demanded after just one day on strike.

My concern was that I had no access to the school accounts.  What happened to the money we collected at the box office?  If we had a proper bursar rather than the Principal’s secretary, perhaps I could negotiate a budget for stage productions.

This certainly was unlikely with a series of principals who regarded the school as their personal fiefdom, and not surprisingly it didn’t come to pass at Wyong High.  But it set me thinking about the future.  In the meantime, productions with students became a tradition of serious work, beginning with Barry Payne’s staging of Bertolt Brecht’s Mother Courage and her Children.

Working on this play in the political atmosphere of the time – not only union action like ours, but the protests against the war in Vietnam and events in Paris, as well as the shooting of students at Kent State University – took us into a new level of education in conservative New South Wales.  For the senior students the sorts of issues in Mother Courage were real.  Among the Year 12s, now turning 18 and becoming adults while still at school, I remember a couple who deliberately started a pregnancy, so that their parents would accept their marrying before the young man was sent to Vietnam.  He had been selected by the lottery system based on birthday dates as he turned 18, and his wife was determined to make sure she would at least have his child if he failed to return.

Directing, designing and performing Brecht was not a simple matter.  None of us had enough background to properly appreciate how to make the ‘alienation effect’ work, but one scene silenced the Wyong Memorial Hall: Scene 11.  However much Brecht may have wanted the audience to ‘understand’ through being ‘distanced’ from ‘sentimental’ emotion, our audience was overwhelmed by Kattrin’s self-sacrifice to save the village below.  Her drumming on the roof-top focussed attention absolutely.  The single gun shot as she wept and died sent a shock wave throughout the hall.  At last, I could see the possibility of really teaching drama.  Yet there were risks I was barely aware of – for the girl who played Kattrin.

I guess the central issue for teenagers, in my experience from about Year 8 and increasing in intensity as the Years go on, is Who Am I?  The key feature of this question is emotional sensitivity.  For most kinds of teaching, what the student is feeling is set to one side in the quest for critical thinking, objective analysis, logical argument and even simple ‘common sense’.  This is the language of the modern scientific approach to life, which has stood us in good stead economically and socially as the philosophy of humanism has gradually spread – and continues to fitfully spread – throughout the world since about 1500.

Teaching, or perhaps let me say ‘enjoying’, the arts in schools is not about denying or opposing the scientific method.  But the arts are essential in schools to provide for the personal development of people to balance the impersonal.  In adult life we need both.  If there was ever one playwright who understood this, it was William Shakespeare.  Drama is not the only necessary artform, but think about why his works – as literature and in performance – are such a powerful force today not only in traditionally English-speaking parts of the world but in every nook and cranny where theatre takes place, on stage, screen or audio.

Acting is experiencing, enacting and creating feeling.  In my seven years at Wyong High School, starting from observing the girl who played Kattrin, I bit by bit began to become aware of the effects of playing roles of great emotion. 

My own acting, as you may have observed from my playlist, was essentially light-weight amateur, in comedies. Nothing too demanding there.  And yet playing the incompetent Scoutmaster in Love’s a Luxury gave me some insight into the experience of playing Kattrin, and especially later for the girl who played Mary Warren in The Crucible, and even later for the girl who played Lavinia in Mourning Becomes Electra.

The Scoutmaster in Love's a Luxury
The connection was fear.  My Scoutmaster had to front up to the Figure of Most Importance in the village society, knocking at the knees (which I could do visibly to great effect), causing great gusts of laughter.  I was then dismissed off stage, only to have to return in a later scene having proved to the utmost the judgement made previously by the FMI that I was incompetent.  Fearful though I had been in that scene, now I had to face something like a Tyrannosaurus Rex ready to devour me (played incidentally by a well-known Wyong lawyer, at the time the President of the Wyong Drama Group, and a real Figure of Most Importance in that town.)  Rather than knock my knees even louder, I tried a little of the so-called American Method, made famous by Lee Strasberg, to make myself believe I was really afraid.

The result was electric with laughter for the audience, but the electricity remained in my emotional system for the rest of the evening, even though that scene was my last appearance.  It was actually quite hard to go on for a happy and relaxed curtain call.  I was still feeling ‘in character’. 

You will also have noticed that much of my stage work was as a technician, mostly in lighting.  Even in early childhood my family and others had seen me as an observer rather than as a pure participant.  Later in life my personality became at least seen as introspective, even if not introverted.  I had often thought of myself as just shy.  The great thing about lighting a play is that you learn to watch everything very closely as you wait for the right moment to operate the next cue.

Watching these three girls, I could begin to see when they were ‘in character’ and when they were not.  The risk of not coming out of character was something I learned to watch for.  But it’s not easy to tell.  ‘Kattrin’ played her self-sacrifice very much in character, even as she was carried off in death.  She represented her fear through her drumming, steadfastness and fixed determination, took the audience with her (in a large rectangular multi-purpose hall), and was justifiably proud of her achievement at the curtain call only a few minutes later after the short Scene 12.  But did I really know how she felt?

At the time I felt satisfied with what we teachers had done to bring about such maturity of performance in a school production.  It was a feather in our cap to have students take on and successfully create ‘adult’ theatre.

While rehearsing The Crucible after hours one evening, Abigail and the girls who see the spirit-bird in the rafters, screamed with such intensity and sincerity in their belief that a cleaner came rushing upstairs to help with the emergency.  But in the play, Mary Warren is not sure of her position, knowing that the girls are really only acting on Abigail’s instruction, while being mortally afraid of Abigail’s destructive power.  Acting such a character by a Year 9 girl about the same age, with such conflicting emotions, was a major achievement in my eyes.  The production was seen as a great success by the audience, largely of parents, because they could see the learning and the development that had taken place in their children, through the engagement with Arthur Miller’s work. 

Again I was content.

But two weeks later some of the other girls in the cast came to tell me that ‘Mary Warren’ had been fearful and found that she couldn’t concentrate on other schoolwork – in fact that she had only just by then found her way out of ‘character’, with a lot of support from her friends.

My mistake.

The ending of Mourning Becomes Electra is deeply depressing.  Set on the front steps of a Southern States mansion, we painted Grecian columns on 4 foot wide flats extending upwards beyond the lighting bars to make them seem to continue to the heights of an Ancient Greek stage.  The theme of the play is to reveal the disaster which is the grand delusion of the American Dream.  For Lavinia, the only member of the family to survive, there is nowhere else to go.

We made the doors into the house of 12 foot high flats, monstrously huge, yet themselves seemingly nothing against the massive columns.  After the deaths of her father, mother and brother, in which she has no small part, Lavinia is left, standing alone, downstage centre.  In theory she has a choice to walk away, to leave the house as a mausoleum, to find a new life, to go somewhere.  In that she would represent hope, possibility of change, of progress, of life.

On the other hand, she cannot escape the past and her own guilt.  She turns slowly towards the steps, resolutely, step by step, away from the light, up carefully, almost in a dreamlike state.  As she approaches those great doors, they seem to look down upon her.  She seems to become visibly smaller as she climbs and crosses the platform.  One of the double doors begins to open, just a fraction, just enough to see that all is dark inside.  There is no hope, no possibility of change, no progress, no life in there.

Lavinia slips through the narrow crack in this monumental wall of cold stone.  Silence.  Nothing changes on stage.  Lavinia has gone.  That is the end.

The audience, in that same Wyong Memorial Hall, remains in silence until they can no longer stand the dread.  They begin to clap, as if half-heartedly.

Backstage, the cast and crew have gathered around ‘Lavinia’ to comfort her, to wipe away her tears, and finally to enter from the wings, and stand, a small group, on the stage before that house of doom.  The clapping firms until at last ‘Lavinia’ herself appears, steps forward and bows, with all the cast, in recognition of their community’s applause.

Have I made a mistake again?  Is ‘Lavinia’ OK?  I check with other cast members as the audience is leaving.  No, she’s good, they say.  As she leaves the dressing room, ‘Lavinia’ smiles and says, ‘Thank you’.

I give her two weeks, with others saying ‘No worries’, and arranged for a talk.  “How do you do it?” I ask.  She tells me how her parents divorced when she was 10; how they each have remarried and have had new children – and how much she enjoys her life now, age 16!  “I have two homes,” she explains, “and eight grandparents.  They all live in different parts of the country.  They all love me and I’m never short of somewhere to stay whenever I want.  What could be better than that?”

What indeed – and I often feel that, if only, I would love to tell that story of ‘Lavinia’ to Eugene O’Neill.  Maybe this is the Australian Dream?

Pinterest image - this production is not named.  This is not my Lavinia.
This set design is similar to mine in concept, but less intimidating in its effect.
As always, what may seem to be a dream in one aspect – the work with the young people and the community in the enjoyment of the arts – has its backside.  Paul Roebuck was a significant mover in the teaching service in New South Wales towards Drama becoming a separately recognised curriculum area, as Music and Art had been for decades.  Among the moves was the idea of specialist high schools, and I had been invited on to a committee, which included Sandra Bates from Ensemble Theatre, in 1969, to suggest designs for drama studios for schools specialising in the arts.  I believe Forest High, in the expanding Sydney suburb of Forestville, was expected to be the first.

With this project in mind, and as I was completing my MA thesis on Bernard Shaw, I met with Noel Cislowski, the current Head of Speech and Drama, in his office in Sydney.  I thought by this time, 1971, that I could look forward to some progress, but Noel’s response was “Don’t even think about it for at least ten years.”  My response, as you have seen, was simply to get on with doing it, extracurricularly as usual.

By 1974, “Do It” had become the title of the first journal of the NSW Educational Drama Association, but by that time I was no longer teaching in New South Wales.

I began looking around for other opportunities, but one of those unfortunate twists in the fabric of the universe possibly set me back – or maybe set me on the best path for me.  I completed my supposedly 3-year thesis, after being granted a year’s extension, in 1970.  The formal award of the degree should then have taken place around May 1971.  Busy as I was, and assuming the Sydney University administration was working normally, I realised later in the year that I had not received the documentation and had missed the ceremony.  Enquiries ended up concluding that the university was not to blame.  The mail had disappeared.  Yet the Post Office couldn’t trace it.

At the same time, at the University of NSW, which had hosted NIDA since its inception, action was in train to establish Drama as an undergraduate course in the BA Degree.  Since I now had to wait for my MA to be formally awarded until 1972, I applied to NSW and had to attend an interview without the appropriate piece of paper in hand.  Recalling the interview, I am not at all confident that it would have done the trick.  My MA could only be at Pass level, since I had not originally gained Honours in my BA.  As well, my MA is formally in Literature, which prevented me from including the study I would have liked to make of Shaw’s plays in production.  And, of course, the work had not been published at that point (nor since). 

As time has moved on, I also discovered that I was never well suited to the world of competitive academia, though I had brushes with it at various times.  At this particular time, a different unexpected twist presented me with an opportunity for 20 years of development of my ideas about teaching drama.  A friend called me to say that he had found a way to escape the clutches of the NSW Department of Education (though in fact we were both now past the five years’ teaching which our scholarships had demanded of us).  Had I realised, he asked, that the Australian Capital Territory, belonging to the Commonwealth (or Federal) Government, had made the decision to run its own education system instead of contracting out that function to the NSW Government?

No, I had not.  The ACT, after a great deal of argument between the States when the Federation was established in 1901, was placed geographically between Melbourne and Sydney.  The site finally chosen for Canberra turned out to be rather closer to Sydney (a little under 300kms) than Melbourne (about 800kms) and was therefore completely surrounded by New South Wales.  At first the Commonwealth Government continued to sit in Melbourne until the first temporary (now known as the Old) Parliament House was built.  With the intervention of the two World Wars, Canberra did not grow substantially until the 1950s as departments were gradually moved from Melbourne.  It had been convenient for the Commonwealth to have NSW continue providing schools in the Territory as it had begun to do in the 1880s before federation.

Within the NSW system there was considerable jealousy and competition about being appointed to Canberra, because the Commonwealth resourced the buildings and equipment more generously, and because the establishment of the Australian National University and the influx of the upper echelons of the Public Service gave Canberra schools a high status comparable to other elite government schools in Sydney.

However now that the 1960s were well advanced, and the population increased and became more permanently settled, Canberra began to put pressure on the Commonwealth Minister for Territories to escape the clutches of a conservative Sydney-centred NSW Department of Education.  An agreement was made that teachers who wanted to stay in Canberra would have that right, and that teachers leaving the NSW jurisdiction and joining the ACT would have all their leave and superannuation entitlements transferred directly to the new system.  The Commonwealth set up the ACT Schools Authority as an ‘arms-length’ body, giving the local community the power to decide how it would operate.  In this way teachers in the new ACT system did not become Commonwealth Public Servants with all the rights and employment transfer structure available to them.  But ACT teachers were automatically members of the defined benefit Commonwealth Superannuation Scheme.

Would I consider, alongside my telephoning friend, applying for an interview?  You bet.  (In the event, though, he obtained a place at Griffith University in Queensland – the escape he fervently desired from school teaching.)

In my interview in 1972, about starting a new system from scratch, I made it clear (with my MA in hand by now) that I intended to establish Drama as a subject in its own right in secondary schools.  I got the nod in mid-1973 to start in a brand new (in fact not yet completed) school from February 1974.  But before Interval, there’s one last Wyong story to tell.

This is not a Drama story, but illustrates the quality of change as I moved out of the old and into the new. 

By the early 1970s, the NSW Department was trying to come to grips with one of the consequences of the Wyndham Scheme which was ‘unforeseen’.  The scheme was meant to provide more appropriate education for a wider range of children.  A large proportion of children still left school without attempting matriculation but how was their educational status to be measured and described?  In prior times, children left school at 14, some completing the Intermediate Certificate and leaving at the end of Year 9 (Form 3), and others going on to the Leaving Certificate to try to matriculate to university at the end of Form 5 (Year 11).  This was the system I underwent, matriculating in 1957, and entering university as I just turned 17.

Wyndham extended the system to Year 12 before matriculating and looked for not only more children staying in education longer, but a wider range of abilities being catered for, for more years.  So the Year 10 Certificate replaced the Intermediate, and the Year 12 Certificate replaced the Leaving.  In my Leaving Year, 1957, only some 5% of the total age group cohort matriculated.  But in 1972, the Federal Government elections were won by Labor, led by Gough Whitlam, after 23 years of conservative government by the Liberal and Country (later re-named National) Parties.  It was time for the NSW Wyndham Scheme to prove its worth in Australian Labor Party terms.

(Purely aside, only the ALP uses the American spelling ‘labor’, while in every other situation the British spelling ‘labour’ is used – an historical anomaly.)

Trying catch up with the world moving around it, NSW had defined its children by their supposed intelligence levels – the Advanced, Credit and Ordinary system.  But then how should anyone know how these children related to each other educationally?  So began the belief in the ‘normal curve’. 

I had begun my teaching career with a major in Psychology, including a reasonable smattering of statistics, 10 years before my final run-in with the NSW system.  I had shown a staff meeting in Broken Hill how their off-the-cuff classroom tests were probably statistically invalid and certainly statistically unreliable.  I knew perfectly well that statistics may be useful for describing observations and perhaps for some qualified predictions under carefully controlled conditions (which never occur in real classrooms), but it is completely inappropriate to predetermine what will happen to specified individuals.  Yet this is exactly how the NSW  Department began to use the idea of the ‘normal curve’, often also called the ‘bell curve’.

On the basis of IQ testing and previous results, each school was told that it could present, say, 1 class for the Advanced level in the Year 10 Certificate, 2 classes at Credit level and any others at Ordinary level.  This was the situation I faced when teaching a Year 10 English class in 1973.

I had always, perhaps especially because of my Psychology background, been very keen to study what we teach, what children actually learn, and how we know what they can do as a result of what they have learned.  By 1973 I had spent a good deal of time reading the recent research on the relationship between talking and writing.  The research was not all as scientifically precise as one would like, but the essence that came through was that talk provided people with the opportunity to work out what they understood about a topic.  If writing was required, then the writing of ideas and arguments was improved if talking the ideas through took place first.  Part of the discussion of these results included the point that in the ordinary real world (in a modern literate society like Australia) it was common for talk to take up about 75% of communication time, and writing about 25%.

I considered the class I faced, without using IQ test results, and thought that, based on my now 10 years’ experience, that perhaps 75% of the group should be capable of passing the Year 10 Certificate at Advanced level.  I thought that the information from the research would be useful in planning lessons, using up to 75% of the time in talk, followed up by 25% of the time used for writing based on the discussion.

But the school had been told by the Department that only one class could sit the Advanced paper.  My class was regarded as the next class down, and could sit only the Credit paper.

I took the issue up with the students and parents and presented the Principal with an argument that my class should sit the Advanced paper.  Anyone not passing at that level could still be expected to receive a Credit pass.  In the background, though not made explicit in my discussions with senior teachers and the Principal, was that others also thought the predetermined allocation of classes to levels was unfair and the reputation of the school would be enhanced if more passed Advanced.  I also wanted to prove the point that this use of statistical method was a serious misuse which could affect individuals’ future prospects.

At the same time, early in the year (not at this stage having a job confirmed in Canberra) I put a bid in to be inspected for promotion from List 1 (that is, an ordinary teacher) to List 2 (from which I could apply for Senior Teacher positions such as subject head).

As it turned out, the inspection would not be until Term 3 (in the days of the Three Term Year).  As it further turned out, I received an offer of a job in Canberra early in Term 3, about two weeks before the inspection.  I kept quiet about this information (though going on my previous experiences I would not be surprised if the Department already knew).

Now to the nub of the story.  I had done as I planned, using the 75% talk, 25% writing approach.  The students had taken a mid-year test and shown that many, if not all, were likely to do well at Advanced level, and the school (that is, the Principal) presented two classes for Advanced instead of the official one.

The inspector came as expected, walked around the room while the students worked on a writing task, asked some to show him their books.  His first observation to me in his interview was that there wasn’t much written work in their books – obviously in his view they should have full to overflowing books by Term 3.  Knowing my future employment situation, I decided against making the mistake I had with my very first inspector.  Rather than argue my case, I said very little.  However, what interested me was that he did not make a decision on the spot, which was the usual procedure.  It was some ten days later before I received the notice of rejection.  Perhaps it was thought they could get rid of this fly in their ointment by letting me go to Canberra.

As I duly did that December; but only after the results of the Year 10 Certificate had come out.  Only one in my class did not receive an Advanced pass, receiving a Credit instead.




© Frank McKone, Canberra