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Remembering My School Years

posted Wednesday, 5 September 2007

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Back in the day when I was in school, this was the week we always started a new school year. Up north, starting back to school in August was completely unheard of. Of course, most schools were not air-conditioned then, unless one had the good fortune to go to school in a brand-new building, so starting that early wouldn't have made sense.

During my elementary years, I'd go to school on the first day in brand new clothes and shoes. Back then, you weren't allowed to wear jeans or t-shirts to school, nor were sneakers permitted. Both boys and girls had to wear "hard shoes", saving your sneakers for gym. And in the 1960s, they didn't have the wide variety of athletic shoes we have today -- kids generally wore black high-top canvas Converse sneakers with the big white rubber toe or low Keds which came in black, red, white, blue, and denim. Girls had to wear dresses and boys had to wear collared shirts and pants in something other than denim. By the time I started the 7th grade in the fall of 1970, they'd relaxed these rules and I was able to wear t-shirts, jeans, and sneakers from then on -- which I did. By the mid-70s, you began to see more variety in sneakers, closer to what we have today. I can remember my first pair of Adidas suede basketball sneakers that I paid $35 dollars for around 1974 or so -- and thought it was a lot of money.

You didn't have to buy your own school supplies then, either, unless you wanted to. The schools provided everything that a kid might need and didn't have. No kid carried a backpack to school at that time. In elementary school, you kept your books inside your desk, and you were in the same classroom all day long. They didn't give out much homework before the fourth grade, so you didn't have to lug every book and notebook you had home with you every night. Starting in the 7th grade, we got lockers so we continued not to have to lug everything we had around all the time. If you'd brought a backpack to school at any time during my 12 years of public school, people would have looked at you funny and asked if you were going camping or hiking after school. It also would have been seen as a seriously nerdy thing to do as well.

Most kids brought their lunch to school in a square metal lunch box with a thermos with a glass lining. The lunch boxes came with all sorts of themes, usually relating to a TV show. I had a Hogan's Heroes lunch box in the third grade, for example. The thermoses in these lunch boxes were rather fragile -- several times, I'd open mine to find a broken pile of glass on the bottom. I eventually ended up giving up thermoses altogether and just buying my milk at school. And I mean milk. You didn't get any other choice in elementary school then. Even in high school, you got milk or orange juice. If you wanted a soda, you had to bring your own from home. In high school, I usually bought my entire lunch -- for 40 cents a day by my senior year.

Back then, from the first year onwards, kids either rode the school bus or they were "walkers". You didn't see parents ferrying their kids to school each and every day like you do now, even though many more kids had stay at home mothers then. You were a walker if you lived within a certain radius of the school, and even the youngest kids did this on their own -- there weren't very many hovering or "helicopter" parents in those days.

I could go on, but this has almost turned into a novel already, so I'll leave it at this. Feel free to share memories of your own school years in the comment box. 

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1. catty left...
Wednesday, 5 September 2007 8:10 am :: http://savetheamericanfamily.blog-city.c

Cleveland public didn't have buses. There was a school in every neighborhood within walking distance. I wore all my cousin's hand me down dresses and we had to wear those blue bloomer bottomed gym suits. The gym suits were usually one piece. Later, you had your choice between the one piece or two piece. The cool girls usually had the two piece gym suits. Everyone walked home for lunch so we didn't have to contend with lunch boxes. When my family moved out to the suburbs in 7th grade everyone rode the bus, bought or brought their lunch, and wore jeans and t-shirts. It really doesn't seem very different from when you went to school.


2. miss negative left...
Wednesday, 5 September 2007 10:11 am

I started school in a totalitarian system, so we had to wear uniforms. it was quite flexible though, you could mix & match an outfit from several pieces (blue shirts, jumper dresses for the smaller girls, pants and vests and different jackets of the same navy fabric for both boys and girls, plaid skirts for older girls - and the fabrics were also available separately, so those unhappy with the available pieces could get something else made: many highschool girls wore DIY pencil skirts and mini skirts. after the change of system, you could pretty much wear whatever, which brought pressure to "dress cool" in order to fit in. not that nice, really.

I got free school lunches, as my parents had 3 kids (only the kids with less than two siblings under 18 had to pay). I didn't much like the available food though, and I also had a general problem with eating out until my teens, thus I don't remember ever eating a full meal at school. started skipping lunch completely after my ED kicked in during highschool.

I walked to and back (10 minutes) for the first 8 grades, from then on I took the bus to get to my chosen highschool in the city - plain public transportation, as school buses only exist in the countryside here. taking the bus was pretty nasty. I had several encounters with scary freaks and perverts and I've also seen bullying, physical attacks and theft. and, even though walking with friends was usually nice, walking alone as a kid felt distinctly unsafe to me and there were occasions when I got bullied and harrassed (everyone else did too, my older brother was beaten up by a gang once). I have to say I would much rather drive my kids to school.


3. Paula Reed left...
Friday, 14 September 2007 6:37 pm :: http://paulareed.blog-city.com

I was a walker, as were many of my friends. The world was not seen as a dangerous place. In high school, I had the occasional adult man pull over to ask if I wanted a ride and I just said no. One guy on a motorcycle copped a quick feel. I grabbed his hand, sunk my nails into it, and yelled at him. He sped off as fast as he could. I wasn't afraid as so many kids today are.


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