When School Was Different: A Memory Across Two Eras
When I look at schools today - especially here in the UAE , I see how much has changed. Schools are structured and have clear policies in place, safety is taken seriously, and supervision is there all the time. As parents and educators, there is real comfort in knowing children are safe and looked after through the day, and that does matter.
What stands out today is the system behind it. Schools are not running on assumption anymore. There are clear rules, processes, and checks, and regulators set expectations that schools follow seriously. Teachers are also responsible for wellbeing, behaviour, and safety. There is more awareness, training, and responsibility, and most carry it out well, even in busy classrooms.
Support systems exist now that did not earlier—counsellors, safeguarding teams, structured pastoral care—and children who need help are noticed and supported. Transport, playgrounds, labs, and sports are also properly planned. Nothing is left to chance. It brings reassurance because you don’t just hope a child is safe—you know there is a system around them. And that is a real shift.
I have lived through a very different kind of school life. First as a student at St Joseph’s Allahabad and Boy’s High School Allahabad, and later as a teacher at Boy’s High School and for nearly 20 years at The Bishop’s School, Pune. I have seen it from both sides and i see the big difference .
Health, safety, wellbeing, and child support were not part of our vocabulary then, and we did not even think to ask for it. We drank water from round school tanks, and sometimes a light pink disinfectant—potassium permanganate—was added, and that faint colour was considered enough at the time. Broken taps added to ' the experience'.
Vaccinations were done in school too, and I remember the nurse using the same needle after dipping it in disinfectant. No one questioned it then, and it was simply accepted practice in those days.
Cameras in schools did not exist. You were expected to behave, and that was it.
At St Joseph’s, even the school bell stays in my memory—a long iron rod hanging in the play area, struck with another metal piece. It stood where we played, and boys sometimes ran into it and got badly hurt. It was just part of school life.
Breaks had very little supervision if any. If someone got hurt, we went to the infirmary, but beyond that there was not much structure.
Playgrounds were simple—monkey ladders over cement, swings without safety flooring. We learned by doing things, not being told.
Small things stay with me: cleaning blackboards, clapping the dusters , chalk dust everywhere, white hands, dusty uniforms, and that chalk smell through the day.
Discipline was direct. If you arrived late, you stood outside or were sent home with no discussion. Standing or kneeling outside the class was normal and accepted. In PE, punishment often meant running rounds until exhausted or being made to hop forward in a seated position. That was horrible!
Teasing, fights, and bullying were part of growing up, with no labels for it. In craft periods, we worked with saws, hammers, and chisels with very little supervision. Cooking and manual work also happened without much formal safety framing.
We cycled, climbed, ran races, used ropes—freely and competitively. We left school alone or in groups and made our own way home - no phones, no tracking, no check-ins, and we just reached. If something was lost, the answer was simple—you were careless, replace it. If you were caught cheating, consequences were immediate. Detention meant staying back, and parents were not informed and rarely involved.
Looking back now, it was rough in places, but it also built independence, resilience, and the ability to figure things out without being told every step. Today’s schools are far more aware, structured, and caring, and that is a good thing.
But sometimes I still wonder…
Are we becoming a bit too careful—not in safety, but in how we define childhood?
Are we removing the small scrapes, small failures, and unplanned moments that once quietly taught you and me how to deal with life?
I don’t really know.
Maybe children don’t need less care, just fewer reasons to believe we are watching their every step.