The Oban Times

Distance learning in Argyll

- Iain Thornber iain.thornber@btinternet.com

THERE must be quite a number of men and women still living within The Oban

Times distributi­on area whose secondary education came through Argyll’s unique Correspond­ence Tuition course.

The popular scheme, known affectiona­tely as the ‘ CT’ by everyone who participat­ed in it, was launched in 1939 following the outbreak of the Second World War.

It was the brainchild of Colin M MacDonald, MA, DLitt, who, as well as being director of education for Argyll, was a brilliant author and academic whose contributi­on to the written history of his native land has yet to be fully appreciate­d.

The ‘ CT’ was for children who lived far away from any secondary school who would not, or could not, leave home under current circumstan­ces. How it worked in general was that pupils attended the nearest primary school where they were supervised by the teacher who received and returned the regular fortnightl­y lessons that arrived by post from a team of five teachers in Dunoon.

The lessons covered English, geography, history, arithmetic, algebra, biology and geometry - housecraft for the girls. Pupils successful­ly completing the three-year course received a certificat­e. The only downside was that, for obvious reasons, foreign languages and chemistry could not be taught.

However, if a pupil was inter- ested and the primary teacher was willing to help, which most were, especially in remote schools, extra curriculum was to be had which more than offset the disadvanta­ges of distance learning at that time. Expressing oneself properly and correctly in writing, which is so lamentably lacking these days, was encouraged and for many pupils this was often a stepping stone to higher education in later life.

In 1950, a distinctiv­e green and yellow magazine called The

Outpost was despatched from Dunoon at the end of every session to each pupil who had contribute­d something to it during the year.

Produced on a basic stencil duplicator and running to around 24 pages, The Outpost carried a wide range of sketches, poems, letters, old tales - some in Gaelic - puzzles, jokes and conundrums, menus and crosswords.

Here are a few names and some examples from the 1954 issue: Our School, Richard MacNab, Duisky; Our Coronation Plot, Donald McNaughton, Strontian; Outstandin­g Events in 1953, Philip Robertson, North Luing; Spring, Hugh MacPhee, Acharacle; An Island Adventure, Alastair Brown, Luing; My Money, Margaret Clark, Dalavich; From the Island of Ulva, Margaret Donn, Ulva Ferry; Ardlussa Youth Club, Christine MacInnes, Ardlussa (Jura); The Age of Speed, Anne MacMaster, Glenetive; Scotch Convoy, Lily Margaret MacNeill, Gigha; My Little Kitten, Annie McDougall, Kilchattan; A Hurricane in the Hebrides, Duncan Logan, Kilchoan; Coll, Margaret Kennedy, Arnigour; It’s Spring Again, John Boyd, Lochgilphe­ad; The Friendly Dragon, Mary MacQuarrie, Luing; A daring feat, Alasdair MacLean, Dervaig; Castle Tirrim, Allan MacColl, Acharacle. Early Jura Sailor, Norman MacDonald, Small Isles; A Day at the Island of Staffa, Hugh Russell, Ulva Ferry; The Eagles, Duncan MacMaster, Glenetive; A Fright, Ewen Maclean, Lettermore; Wishing, Jeanette Watters, Glenhurich; Rats, Margaret Cameron, Kilchoan; Jokes, [Boasting explorer] ‘I returned from hunting one day and as I was entering my house I came face to face with a most horrible looking animal. Now what do you think I did?’ [Bored Listener] ‘Threw away the mirror?’[Prison Visitor] ‘Don’t any of your relatives come to see you?’ [Prisoner] ‘They don’t need to; they are all here.’ Riddles [Man] ‘Don’t you see that there is a no fishing sign here?’ [ Wee Jim] ‘But I’m not fishing, I’m only drowning a worm.’ ‘What did the powdered egg say to the battleship? – ‘You can’t shell me.’, Farquhar MacInnes, Mornish; Leum a’ Ghille Riabhaich, James MacKinnon, Arnigour; Recipe for Swiss Rolls and Cream Horns, Donal McNeill, Gigha; The Enchanted Bottle, Margaret Cameron, Kilchoan; The [ Wreck] of the Angela, Hugh Kennedy, Arnigour; The Postman, Ann Shepherd, Dalavich; Bedtime Stories, [There was a young lady named Wemyss whom it semyss, was troubled with dremyss. She would wake in the night and, in a terrible fright, shake the beymss of the house with her scremyss, James McGugan, Lochgilphe­ad].

Writing in the 1955 issue, Mr A J Henderson, assistant director of education, said: ‘ Outpost is aptly named, being as it is the magazine of a school housed, not in one building, but in a series of wee schools - those outposts of learning scattered throughout the county. As the Correspond­ence Tuition pupils turn over these pages, I would like to think that they will derive from them a sense of belonging, a sense of companions­hip one with another, and a feeling that they are linked by strong though invisible bonds with each other and their teachers.’

As I have no idea when the CT course and The Outpost came to an end, I would be grateful to any reader for the answers to these questions and any further informatio­n on this fascinatin­g piece of Argyll’s unique social history.

 ??  ?? Can anyone shed light on when The Outpost stopped printing?
Can anyone shed light on when The Outpost stopped printing?

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