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Why is it that children nowadays...

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Kentishmaid

Kentishmaid Report 7 Aug 2021 15:57

There is one I remember from my Mums book


u?op ?pisdn ?ui?i?? ?q
ll? ?i ?liods o?? ?uo ??? ?o ?ui??
????s no? ???d si?? uo u???
?z?? no? ???d si?? uo u??M

and an elderly Aunt wrote on the last page of mine

Last in your book I have chosen to be
but last in your thoughts would be painful to me


OOps that didn't work, it was written upside down !!

When on this page you gaze
when on this page you stare
think of the one who spoilt it all
by writing upside down

ZZzzz

ZZzzz Report 7 Aug 2021 14:20

I had an autograph book in the 60s, my Mum was the first to write in it after making sure she had the middle two pages wrote across them both " hey diddle diddle I'm in the middle"

Kentishmaid

Kentishmaid Report 7 Aug 2021 13:36

The class of 2021 sweatshirts sound like a good idea Gwyn

I still have mine and my late Mum's autograph books, dating from school days. I wonder if people still collect autographs in these days of modern technology?

Gwyn in Kent

Gwyn in Kent Report 7 Aug 2021 12:19

At our local primary school, the Year 6 children are asked to come to school in their uniform and there is a Leavers' Assembly early in the day. They look very smart.
The children write a few lines each about their memories of their time at the school and they read these out..
There is often a slide show of past events, which prompts a few laughs.

At the end of that ceremony each leaver was given a hoody / sweatshirt with
;Class of 2021' on the back.

Later in the day came the signing of the shirts.

Kentishmaid

Kentishmaid Report 7 Aug 2021 12:06

It's nice to know that the parents didn't have to pay Linda, not sure if that is always the case though

LindainHerriotCountry

LindainHerriotCountry Report 7 Aug 2021 11:55

My granddaughters had a graduation ceremony when they left nursery to go to real school. The nursery have mini gowns and mortar boards which they dress the kids in. They are given a scroll to keep. All rather naff, but it doesn’t cost the parents anything and they have a family picnic afterwards. My oldest granddaughter left primary school this week and they were all told to bring a spare uniform polo shirt in for all the class to sign. I can remember my daughter doing that , but not until she left sixth form.

Kentishmaid

Kentishmaid Report 7 Aug 2021 11:48

Your mention of having shirts signed has reminded me, that was what my son did when he left senior school1992.

ZZzzz

ZZzzz Report 7 Aug 2021 11:41

Our son left school 1998 the "thing" then was to have their shirts or blouses signed by others in school including teachers, some of the comments were inappropriate but funny, one teacher wrote nice lad shame about the hair, he had tried to bleach it to be blonde but it turned out orange.

Kentishmaid

Kentishmaid Report 7 Aug 2021 09:33

Not sure Gwyn but in the photos the children were all identically attired, and it certainly didn't look like something Mum had knocked up the night before lol

Gwyn in Kent

Gwyn in Kent Report 7 Aug 2021 09:09

The companies that hire out the Graduation robes would have been hit too.

Goodness knows what they charge these days, but I thought the fees were quite high back when our 3 graduated.

Do the tinies have a supply at pre-school I wonder or are parents required to make their own arrangements?

Kentishmaid

Kentishmaid Report 7 Aug 2021 08:25

I had to look up Hedge Schools Dermot as I had not come across the expression before, made for interesting reading.

I saw on the news a while back that there was a shop, almost like a bridal shop, that was complaining about lack of business as they weren't selling the dresses for graduations/proms and a young girl bemoaning she had paid hundreds of pounds for her dress and not been able to wear it, she couldn't get a refund as they are custom made. Crazy

Allan

Allan Report 6 Aug 2021 21:59

As far as I am concerned the only Graduation is from University where students have always (as far as I'm aware) been called Undergraduates until obtaining their first Degree.

If they continued for further, higher degrees, they were called Graduate Students.

I think that the use of the word graduation, far from being competitive, has crept in to all earlier forms of education as part of the 'every one's a winner and deserves a medal' mentality that tries to make every one equal and actually stifles competition.

Why bother trying hard to achieve a goal if it's going to be handed to you on a plate.

My own great nephew when he 'graduated' from pre-school actually wore a mortar board and gown, as did all his cohort :-S

Edit; this was in Oz

Dermot

Dermot Report 6 Aug 2021 20:59

Some of my forebears were lucky to survive the local Hedge Schools. ;-)

Kentishmaid

Kentishmaid Report 6 Aug 2021 18:50

I can remember going to my son's Prize Giving, that would be 30 odd years ago !! Do they still have them?

SylviaInCanada

SylviaInCanada Report 6 Aug 2021 17:28

At school from age 4 to 19, only "graduation" we had was from high school

The final year 6th Form in each Grammar School in my home town organised a Christmas Dance, usually held during the last week of term in December. Teachers were invited, most didn't come!, and I think it was restricted to the 6th Form students (a 2 year group), although those in the 5th Form (ie GCE level) may also have been invited. Each school also invited the Head Girl and Head Boy, plus their deputies, from each of the other schools. It was considered only polite that at least 2 of those should attend at least one other dance.

The same happened at the school I taught at in the mid-60s.

All the schools held their dances in the school's Assembly Hall.

Then it was nothing else, until Prize Giving Ceremonies, usually held in October or November, when those who had left school had to return, if possible, to receive whatever awards and the A or O level certificates they had earned.

I'm sure most of us who graduated before the 1980s (or maybe 1970s) did something similar.


Quite quite different from now.

Of course all these "graduation" ceremonies originated on this side of the Atlantic, and the slow dropping of the stage at which a ceremony is deemed necessary also was due to the US.

We attended the first US-style Graduation Ceremony in Texas in May/June 1968 when we were invited to one. I was absolutely amazed then.

Kentishmaid

Kentishmaid Report 6 Aug 2021 17:06

I think it does Ann. Slightly off topic, a few years ago I did the first year of a combined studies course at Uni and was invited to Canterbury Cathedral as a graduate !!! I didn't go, on principal. Total farce

nameslessone

nameslessone Report 6 Aug 2021 17:04

We didn’t even have a special day to commemorate the opening of the school/ founders name day.

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 6 Aug 2021 16:58

And doesn't it 'downgrade' the real graduation ceremonies of students?

nameslessone

nameslessone Report 6 Aug 2021 16:57

No nurseries in my day. Also no school graduation, no prom and no school discos.

How have I survived :-S

Kentishmaid

Kentishmaid Report 6 Aug 2021 16:42

Island, I feel for you, it must have caused untold damage :-)

They have proms at our junior school Kath and each year there is a lucky draw for someone to arrive in a stretch limo.