|
Lillian
de Lissa 1885 - 1967 educator
Lillian
Daphne de Lissa (1885-1967), educator, was born on 25 October 1885
at Darlinghurst, Sydney, daughter of Julia (born Joseph) and Montague
de Lissa, merchant; they were Jewish. Lillian was educated at Riviere
College, Woollahra, and became an accomplished pianist. On seeing
the transformation of slum children by the Woolloomooloo free kindergarten,
she dedicated herself to the education of young children. In 1902
she entered Australia's only kindergarten college, in Sydney, under
Chicago-trained Frances Newton. She gained her diploma brilliantly
and in 1905 accompanied Newton to Adelaide to give kindergarten
demonstrations organised by the Rev. Bertram Hawker. The Kindergarten
Union of South Australia was subsequently formed.
Next year de Lissa became director of the first Adelaide free kindergarten,
Franklin St, in a west-end city cottage, and for a year she lived
next door. Her compassion was tempered by a sharp intellect. She
attracted mothers and children and also intellectuals and philanthropists
by her appealing personality and effective work, based on Froebelian
principles. She encouraged the full development of each child's
faculties: 'We are concerned more with helping children to be than
to know'. She made home visits, conducted mothers' and, at their
request, fathers' meetings, and was assisted by young women volunteers
before persuading the Kindergarten Union to initiate teacher training.
In 1907 she became principal of the Adelaide Kindergarten Training
College, setting its directions for decades ahead, and director
of the Union.
In 1909 de Lissa was on the foundation committee of the School for
Mothers with Dr Helen Mayo (q.v.) and joined the Women's (Non-Party)
Political Association under Catherine Spence's (q.v.) presidency.
Believing in the vital importance of the child's early years, she
fought passionately and publicly in 1910 to save the Kindergarten
College from absorption in the state Education Department, which
she regarded as rigid and bureaucratic. Her evidence to the 1912
royal commission on education ensured the College's independence
and continued government financial support for the Union. In 1911
de Lissa's visit to Perth resulted in the establishment of the Kindergarten
Union of Western Australia.
In late 1913 de Lissa travelled to Rome at Rev. Hawker's expense;
she gained the Montessori diploma and visited European experimental
schools. At an English education conference she impressed 'New Educationists'
who invited her to open the first English college for teachers of
young children. She agreed, but first returned to Adelaide in 1915,
introducing some Montessori methods into the kindergartens and the
College. She also persuaded a wealthy citizen to give substantial
North Adelaide premises for the College.
Lillian de Lissa became foundation principal of Gipsy Hill College,
Surrey, in 1917. The following year she married businessman Harold
Turner-Thompson; they were later divorced. A founder of the Nursery
School Association of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, she wrote
and lectured widely, including a six-months' tour of the United
States in 1943. The quality of her influential work, she acknowledged,
was firmly based on her Australian experience. After retiring from
Gipsy Hill to a country cottage in 1946 she continued advising on
early childhood education.
In 1955 Lillian was welcomed back to Adelaide for the Kindergarten
Union's golden jubilee; she visited kindergartens and addressed
meetings with her customary verve and insight. She died at Dorking,
Surrey, on 16 October 1967. The Lillian de Lissa postgraduate scholarship
and the De Lissa Institute of Early Childhood and Family Studies
in the South Australian College of Advanced Education are named
for her.
Helen Jones
Helen Jones 'The Acceptable Crusader' Melbourne Studies in Education
1975.
|