Maharishi School

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Maharishi School
260px
Motto A school with a difference
Established 1986
Type Free school
Head teacher Derek Cassells[1]
Location Cobbs Brow Lane
Lathom
Lancashire
L40 6JJ
England
DfE number 888/6018
DfE URN 137498 Tables
Ofsted Reports
Students 135[2]
Gender Coeducational
Ages 4–16
Website www.maharishischool.com

The Maharishi School (Maharishi Free School or Maharishi School of the Age of Enlightenment) [3][4][5][need quotation to verify] is a non-academically selective free school in Lathom, Lancashire, UK.[1][6] The school was founded in 1986 and uses "consciousness-based education" methods including Transcendental Meditation. Despite political criticism, it became a flagship free school in 2011.

Description

The school takes it name from Maharishi Mahesh Yogi and utilizes an educational approach called "Consciousness-based Education". Its students learn the Transcendental Meditation technique (TM) and practice it in 10-minute sessions, three times during the school day[7] Students also learn the principles of the "Science of Creative Intelligence" such as "order is present everywhere" and "the nature of life is to grow" which are said to allow the students to appreciate broader values of life and then apply them in their daily life.[8] According to school officials the program enables the students to be calmer, more focused and relaxed and improves their ability to learn.[7][9][10][11] A 1998 report by National Public Radio said the school has been ranked in the top two percent of the country's schools for the past 12 years.[12] In 2002 the Liverpool Daily Post reported that the school had 100 percent pass rate on GCSE tests in seven out of the prior 8 years.[13] In 2011 a spokesman for the Department for Education said the Maharishi School was "outstanding in almost all categories" and that the school "has a strong record of high academic achievement".[2] He cited an Ofsted report which says the school provides an "outstanding education" [2] and according to the school's web site, Ofsted reports its GCSE scores to be in the country's top 2.5 per cent.[14] The school is reported to be located "in the top 20 per cent of England’s most wealthy areas".[15] Schools with similar curriculum include the Maharishi School of the Age of Enlightenment in the Fairfield, Iowa U.S.A. and the Maharishi School in Reservoir, Australia.[16] At the Maharishi School in Reservoir, Australia, it was reported that one of the parents complained in 2015 that that "the school had kept little-to-no test or assessment records" for her child. It was expected that in 2016 a third of the students would not be returning to the school, due to the policy of gender separation and inadequate record keeping.[17]

History

The school was founded in 1986 as an independent, fee-based school with 14 pupils.[8] In 2009, the student body numbered 70, ranging in age from four years to 16 and their General Certificate of Secondary Education scores were reported to be double the national average.[4]

In 2011, it was one of 24 schools that applied for and received government funding as a flagship free school.[2][18][19] At that time the school's tuition fee was GBP 7,620 for its secondary school students. According to the school's Head Teacher, Derek Cassells, free school status allows the school the potential to double its attendance while retaining its character. As of September 2011, 135 students were enrolled.[1][2] The school has applied to open two branch schools in 2014 for 11- to 18-year-old students. One would be in Woodbridge, Suffolk, near a community of TM practitioners in Rendlesham,[20][21] and the other would be at Oldfield House in the London borough of Richmond upon Thames.[22][23][24] They would expand by "one year group at a time, with 20 pupils in each year".[25][26] The Rendlesham school proposal was denied by the Department For Education in early 2012.[27]

Reception

The school's 2011 qualification for government funding was criticized by The Lancashire branch of the National Union of Teachers who called it the funding of the "education of the members of a religious sect" with links to a defunct political party. A spokesperson for the School responded to the criticism saying the school is run by an "independent charitable company" and its Consciousness Based Education approach is non-religious and has no links to any political party.[28] Further criticism came in June 2011 from the Liberal Democrat MP for Southport, John Pugh, and the Liverpool city council leader, Joe Anderson, both of whom attacked the government for funding the Maharishi School while depriving funds from mainstream schools. Labour MP Lisa Nandy made similar complaints in August and the British Humanist Association (BHA) voiced concerns about the school's "spiritual and 'pseudoscientific' teaching".[11][14][22] The school's headmaster, Cassells, said: "We bring a balanced curriculum and all we do is introduce a few minutes of meditation three times a day".[29] A Department of Education spokesman said "the Maharishi School, like all Free Schools, will enter pupils for the same exams as other state schools" and "will be open to all pupils of any or no faith"[2] In 2012, the school was reprimanded by the Department for Education for not entering any of its pupils into compulsory National Curriculum assessments. The school has responded by saying that it did not receive the appropriate materials and guidance in time to conduct the tests, but has committed to do so in the future.[30]

References

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  3. Official web site, retrieved June 14 2012
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  12. Lyden, Jacki (September 12, 1998) Meditating Students, NPR Weekend All Things Considered
  13. (Jan 12, 2002) Children meditate on top class GCSEs, Daily Post (Liverpool, England)"Few schools can boast a 100pc top pass rate in GCSE exams. Fewer still have managed the feat in all but one of the last eight years."
  14. 14.0 14.1 Teed, Paul (November 19, 2011) This is Local London
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  16. Ryan, Denise (Oct 22, 2012)School Puts Stress On Staying Calm, retrieved Oct 27, 2012
  17. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  18. "Om Schooling;'Ridiculous' Gove Plan Sees State Fund Maharishi High" 'The Mirror' August 29, 2011.
  19. "Meditation every day at the yogi's state school" Daily Mail (London) January 31, 2011.
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  22. 22.0 22.1 (November 21, 2011) Free Schools Malicious Rumors The Guardian Retrieved Dec 5 2011
  23. Teed, Paul (November 25, 2011) Meditation School gets warm welcome" Richmond and Twickenham Times
  24. Teed, Paul (December 20, 2011) Maharishi meeting attracts a crowd, Your Local Guardian
  25. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  26. Robinson, Craig (November 20, 2011) EADT 24
  27. Robinson, Craig (February 9, 2012) Maharishi Free School Bid Set To Be Handed to Department of Education EADT24
  28. [1] Champion News, Maharishi school hits back at Lancashire NUT criticism, David Simister, Feb 19 2011
  29. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  30. Richardson, Hannah (13 December 2012) Maharishi free school fails to enter pupils for Sats BBC, accessed Dec 27, 2012

See also

Consciousness-Based Education