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Sylvia Ashton-Warner collection

 Collection
Identifier: MSS-Archives-2023/25

Content Description

This collection brings together material from two sources: The Sylvia Ashton-Warner Library collection of material, and material donated by the family via Jasmine Beveridge. These sources are represented by the collection's two series.

The Library series contains a range of materials, but mostly focuses on resources and published articles relating to, or by Sylvia, and to the renaming of the library and related exhibitions and conference. The family series contains personal papers, samples of teaching materials, and publication samples.

Dates

  • Majority of material found within 1970 - 1985
  • 1928 - 2003

Conditions Governing Access

Not restricted

Biographical / Historical

Sylvia Constance Ashton-Warner (Sylvia Ashton-Warner was her chosen pen-name) was a New Zealand novelist, non-fiction writer, poet, pianist and leader in the field of childhood education. Her theories on child-based approaches to the teaching of reading and writing, are still acknowledged, debated and practiced internationally.

Warner was born on December 17, 1908, in Stratford, New Zealand. She was the daughter of Francis Ashton Warner, a bookkeeper, and Margaret Maxwell, a schoolteacher. Ashton-Warner was one of ten children. Sylvia attended Wairarapa College in Masterton, 1926–1927 and Auckland Teachers' Training College, 1928–1931. She chose teaching as a career partly because it was familiar to her from childhood days spent in her mother’s classroom, and partly because it gave her a chance to teach her passions of art and music. During most of her teaching career, Warner worked for the Native Schools programme teaching in schools in Horoera, Pipiriki, Waiomatatini and Omahu. During her time at these schools Warner developed her ideas on child-based or organic literacy teaching and her key vocabulary techniques. Warner's pedagogical approaches were heavily influenced by theories of psycho-analysis and social-psychology. Articles about her teaching frameworks were published first in the New Zealand journal existing at the time called Here and Now from 1952–55 and in New Zealand Listener .

In late 1970 she took up an invitation to establish a community school in Aspen, Colorado, where she spent a year. Her final book about education, Spearpoint: "teacher" in America, published in 1972 was her account of this experience. During 1972 and 1973 Ashton-Warner was employed at Vancouver’s Simon Fraser University, where she ran courses on her teaching methods. She wrote a book of short stories, O children of the world: songs and their stories (1974) and started her autobiography, I passed this way (1979).

Sylvia Ashton-Warner returned to Tauranga 1973. She was diagnosed with bowel cancer in 1981 and died at home on 28 April 1984. In 1989 Lynley Hood’s biography, Sylvia! which traces Ashton-Warner’s life and work, won first prize at the Goodman Fielder Wattie Book Awards.

Extent

1.4 metres (3x Type 1 archival boxes, 1x A3 outsize box; 1x poster folder)

Language of Materials

English

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Donated by Jasmine Beveridge, 2022

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Transferred from Sylvia Ashton-Warner Library, Epsom, 2024

Title
Inventory of the Sylvia Ashton-Warner collection
Status
In Progress
Author
Nigel Bond
Date
October 2023
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Edition statement
Revised and expanded by William Hamill, September 2024

Revision Statements

  • 2024: Revised and updated by William Hamill

Repository Details

Part of the Special Collections, University of Auckland Repository

Contact:
5 Alfred Street
Private Bag 92019
Auckland 1142 New Zealand