A breakdown of reformatory education: remembering Westbrook
Author(s)
Carden, Clarissa
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2018
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Purpose – Westbrook Farm Home for Boys in Queensland, Australia, existed in various forms for over 100 years.
As such, it offers a valuable window into Australian approaches to managing and reforming boys through the
twentieth century. The purpose of this paper is to examine its approach to reforming teenage boys during a period
marked by a mass escape in 1961. It argues that the reformatory education initially intended was no longer tenable
during this moment in history, and that this period represents a breakdown of that approach.
Design/methodology/approach – This paper draws on material including newspaper reports, ...
View more >Purpose – Westbrook Farm Home for Boys in Queensland, Australia, existed in various forms for over 100 years. As such, it offers a valuable window into Australian approaches to managing and reforming boys through the twentieth century. The purpose of this paper is to examine its approach to reforming teenage boys during a period marked by a mass escape in 1961. It argues that the reformatory education initially intended was no longer tenable during this moment in history, and that this period represents a breakdown of that approach. Design/methodology/approach – This paper draws on material including newspaper reports, memoirs, and the report of an inquiry into an escape by inmates in 1961. These are analysed in order to construct a picture of the type of reformatory education during this period and the public and official responses to this. Findings – Westbrook Farm Home for Boys was, during this period, an institution attempting to provide a reformatory education at a historical moment when such an education was no longer viewed as appropriate means of addressing the criminal behaviour of youths. This, combined with the leadership of a domineering figure in Superintendent Roy Golledge, led to a culture of abuse, rather than education. The uncovering of this culture was a pivotal moment in the transition of Westbrook into an institution explicitly dealing with criminal youths. Originality/value – No academic work relating to this moment in Westbrook’s history has been previously published.
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View more >Purpose – Westbrook Farm Home for Boys in Queensland, Australia, existed in various forms for over 100 years. As such, it offers a valuable window into Australian approaches to managing and reforming boys through the twentieth century. The purpose of this paper is to examine its approach to reforming teenage boys during a period marked by a mass escape in 1961. It argues that the reformatory education initially intended was no longer tenable during this moment in history, and that this period represents a breakdown of that approach. Design/methodology/approach – This paper draws on material including newspaper reports, memoirs, and the report of an inquiry into an escape by inmates in 1961. These are analysed in order to construct a picture of the type of reformatory education during this period and the public and official responses to this. Findings – Westbrook Farm Home for Boys was, during this period, an institution attempting to provide a reformatory education at a historical moment when such an education was no longer viewed as appropriate means of addressing the criminal behaviour of youths. This, combined with the leadership of a domineering figure in Superintendent Roy Golledge, led to a culture of abuse, rather than education. The uncovering of this culture was a pivotal moment in the transition of Westbrook into an institution explicitly dealing with criminal youths. Originality/value – No academic work relating to this moment in Westbrook’s history has been previously published.
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Journal Title
History of Education Review
Volume
47
Issue
1
Subject
Specialist studies in education
Historical studies
Australian history