A
hedge school (Irish names include scoil chois claí, scoil ghairid and scoil
scairte) is the name given to an educational practice in 18th and 19th century Ireland, so called due to its rural nature. It came about as local educated men began an oral tradition of teaching the community. With the advent of
the commercial world in Ireland
after 1600, its peasant society saw the need for greater education.
While
the "hedge school" label suggests the classes always took place
outdoors (next to a hedgerow), classes were sometimes held in a house or
barn. Subjects included primarily basic grammar, English and maths (the fundamental "three Rs"). In some schools the Irish bardic tradition, Latin, history and home economics were also taught. Reading was generally based on chapbooks, sold at fairs, typically with exciting stories of well-known
adventurers and outlaws. Payment was generally made per subject, and brighter
pupils would often compete locally with their teachers.
While
Catholic schools were forbidden under the Penal laws from 1723 to 1782, no hedge
teachers were known to be prosecuted. Indeed, official records were made of
hedge schools by census makers. The laws' main target was education by the main
Catholic religious orders, whose wealthier establishments were occasionally
confiscated. The laws aimed to force Irish Catholics of the middle classes and
gentry to convert to Anglicanism if they wanted a good education in Ireland .
Hedge
schools declined from the foundation of the National
School system by
government in the 1830s. James Doyle, Bishop of Kildare and Leighlin preferred this, as the new schools would be
largely under the control of his church and allow a better teaching of Catholic
doctrine.
It has been found that hedge schools existed into the
1890s and suggested that the schools had existed as much from rural poverty and
a lack of resources as from religious oppression. Marianne Eliott also mentions
that they were used by the poor and not just by the Catholics. While the hedge
schools were unfunded, the national school system set up from 1831 was ahead of
school provision in England at that time. After 1900, some historians like Daniel Corkery tended to emphasize the
hedge schools' classical studies (in Latin and Greek),
but while these studies were sometimes taught (based on a local demand), they
were not always common to every school.
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