Kimbo
Leicestershire
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286 of 335
Sat 27th Feb 2021 11:42pm
They weren't all bad teachers. Some were quite good
Bernard Tranter was IMO the best one there. He looked after me very well as a very shy fuzzer in Cresswell in 1965/6 as my form tutor, and in Geography lessons.
Lofty Lee always treated me well too - contrary to his reputation.
Jim Wilkinson was a wonderful art teacher.
And Tim Hall, a Bristolian, was a decent man too. |
Schools and Education -
Woodlands School
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belushi
coventry
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287 of 335
Sun 28th Feb 2021 10:26am
From what I know Bernard Tranter would be most people's top choice - he was very helpful and friendly to me when I was there. |
Schools and Education -
Woodlands School
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Mick Strong
Coventry
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288 of 335
Sun 28th Feb 2021 1:54pm
I liked Harvey Wyatt as well. He started the same day as Bernard Tranter. Why did he have the nick name Jock?
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Schools and Education -
Woodlands School
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belushi
coventry
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289 of 335
Sun 28th Feb 2021 4:31pm
Harvey was a great bloke as well. Never heard him called Jock - he was from Portsmouth! |
Schools and Education -
Woodlands School
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Mick Strong
Coventry
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290 of 335
Sun 28th Feb 2021 4:54pm
No, Bernard Tranter was called Jock
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Schools and Education -
Woodlands School
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belushi
coventry
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291 of 335
Sun 28th Feb 2021 4:55pm
Must have been ironic as he was Welsh! |
Schools and Education -
Woodlands School
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Kimbo
Leicestershire
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292 of 335
Tue 2nd Mar 2021 10:08pm
I never heard Bernard called Jock either. |
Schools and Education -
Woodlands School
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gangan
Stockton, Southam
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293 of 335
Wed 3rd Mar 2021 8:03pm
I remember playing in the Coventry Schools rugby final at Coundon Road for Caludon Castle against Woodlands. We lost 6-3. I think it was 1965 and the fabulous Jack Pilbin was our 1st XV coach. |
Schools and Education -
Woodlands School
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Positively Pottering
East Midlands
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294 of 335
Wed 3rd Mar 2021 8:05pm
On 28th Feb 2021 10:26am, belushi said:
From what I know Bernard Tranter would be most people's top choice - he was very helpful and friendly to me when I was there.
Mmmmmm, I can only speak as I found.
I recall sitting in Tranter's class one day and him distributing homework books back to us all after marking.
He picked up on one individual's exercise book which was considerably thinner than everyone elses.
He made the poor lad count the sheets in his book, count the sheets in someone else's, then frogmarched him to the stockroom to pick up a new one and count the sheets in front of the whole class to demonstrate that pages had been removed.
It was clear as day that the lad had been tearing sheets out of his book (and none of us know why, before anyone judges) but this total humilation of this hapless lad, which lasted at least 15 minutes, was deplorable and unnecessary.
It was noticeable that as pupils started to grow in stature from, say, the 3rd and 4th years, fewer 'masters' picked on pupils.
As I've said before, Woodlands was a cesspit for bullying by so-called teachers. |
Schools and Education -
Woodlands School
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belushi
coventry
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295 of 335
Thu 4th Mar 2021 7:32am
Not sure when this would have been, but sad to read.
I started teaching in 1974, and for the first ten years or so caning was still allowed.
In the two schools in Coventry I taught at during this time I came across several bullying teachers. They were poor teachers but their classes were quiet - that was seen as the holy grail in those days.
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Schools and Education -
Woodlands School
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Mick Strong
Coventry
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296 of 335
Thu 4th Mar 2021 10:56am
I guess I was lucky, that I got Bernard Tranter in his early years at Woodlands and I found him to be OK.
There were probably 3 teachers during my time there that I did not take to, these being
Joe Routledge (maths)
Boland (science teacher)
& Morgan whom took TD
Of these, Joe Routledge was easily the worst, I only had him as a first year, but he left an impression on me for the whole time I was there.
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Schools and Education -
Woodlands School
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keeepa
coventry
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297 of 335
Thu 4th Mar 2021 11:17am
I suppose it's only with the benefit of hindsight that we recognise the bullying that went on, perhaps because "getting a slap" was not unusual at home. I now recognise that the teaching, or more importantly a wider education, was in many cases lacking and perhaps it was the system that didn't help, because there was early streaming, starting with the 11 plus that sent pupils in a direction that we were, in many cases, stuck with for the rest of our lives.
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Schools and Education -
Woodlands School
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Positively Pottering
East Midlands
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298 of 335
Fri 5th Mar 2021 8:41am
On 4th Mar 2021 7:32am, belushi said:
Not sure when this would have been, but sad to read.
My time at Woodlands...... 64-69 |
Schools and Education -
Woodlands School
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belushi
coventry
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299 of 335
Fri 5th Mar 2021 10:57am
I first met Bernard Tranter in 1991 - times had changed by then.
Your school education years are the same as mine, and a few of my teachers had the same traits as some of your Woodlands teachers, though luckily only a tiny few. |
Schools and Education -
Woodlands School
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Mick Strong
Coventry
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300 of 335
Fri 5th Mar 2021 7:32pm
Hi belushi, would he have been near retirement then? He would have been at Woodlands nearly 30 years.
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Schools and Education -
Woodlands School
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