Qrendi school
Leave your feedback
LEAVE YOUR FEEDBACK

Video ID: 671

Submitting Feedback

Remembering schooldays in Malta in the 1950s and 1960s

Description

We all have strong memories of our first few days at primary school in Malta, although nowadays most children tend to go to pre-school, so it is not such a shock to the system for them as it was for the children of the 1950s and 1960s.

Back then there were no nurseries, so for most children just turning five years old, their first day at school was the first time they had been on their own, away from home.

Most mothers in Malta did not work outside the home, so for many children this was also the first time they had been apart from their mums.

Consequently, the first day of school was usually a very tearful event for both child and parent.

Girls who liked football or boys who liked cooking might not have liked the 1950s and 1960s.

Attitudes about what girls and boys should like were still rather old fashioned and school lessons were strictly divided into classes of girls or boys.

In most schools, girls were expected to like sewing, cooking and domestic chores and were even taught how to iron clothes. Boys were encouraged to learn woodwork and technical drawing.

Children in primary schools would recite morning prayers and learn things like the ‘times table’ by heart. There were no calculators or computers to help work things out. And in a lot of schools teachers still wore big black cloaks.

Our archive film footage shows students nervously waiting for their exam results in 1966 as well as playground scenes in Qrendi in 1968.

More places from Qrendi

Remembering schooldays in Malta in the 1950s and 1960s
Qrendi school
We all have strong memories of our first few days at primary school in Malta, al...
Malta’s temples are older than the Egyptian pyramids
Qrendi Hagar Qim
The temple at Hagar Qim is probably the most well-known in Malta. The site has s...

Places Nearby

The fortress protecting Malta for over 400 years
Birzebbuga Fort San Lucian
St Lucian Tower in Birzebbuga is the second largest watchtower in Malta. It is o...
Remembering ‘Malta’s first Saint’ San Gorg Preca
Hamrun dun gorg preca
St George Preca was a Maltese priest and the founder of the Society of Christian...
The history behind Malta’s beloved Chadwick Lakes
Rabat Sir Osbert Chadwick Chadwick Lakes
Chadwick Lakes have long been popular with families who enjoy picnics in the Mal...
Remembering Maltese Prime Minister Dom Mintoff
Cospicua Dom Mintoff Prime Minister of Malta
Dom Mintoff dominated the political scene in Malta for almost four decades. Born...
Traditional games Maltese kids used to play in the street
Malta children's games
Less than 20 years ago Maltese children weren’t glued to smartphones, addi...
Malta miracle! How Cospicua Church defied the odds during the war
Cospicua National Pilgrimage of the Immaculate Conception
Cospicua is well known for its annual Feast of the Immaculate Conception, which ...
Remembering the Charlie Chaplin of Malta
Gwardamanġa George Farrugia
This is an excerpt from a comedy series featuring George Farrugia, known as Char...
Malta’s Silent City of Mdina over the years
Mdina
The charming walled city of Mdina, perched high on a hilltop, at the highest poi...
Malta’s Blue Grotto has always been a crowd-puller
Zurrieq Joe Dimech Blue Grotto
People have been flocking to the Blue Grotto for decades to see the spectacular ...
Restoration of Tarxien Parish Church
TARXIEN
The parish church of Tarxien was built in 1595 and is dedicated to the Annunciat...
A look inside one of Malta’s Royal Naval Hospitals
Mtarfa
The Royal Navy Hospital Mtarfa, also known as David Bruce Royal Naval Hospital i...
Cleaning up Malta more than 60 years ago
Malta clean up malta
Campaigns to make Malta green and clean are nothing new. Communities across the ...