The Trusty Servant Nov 2019 No.128 | Page 17

No.128 A product was launched – the 12- Week Workshop, in which a group of students would meet with three different couples for three sessions with each: three different couples to demonstrate that no two marriages were the same; and three sessions because the process was so radically different to what normally took place in the classroom. These early trial workshops were voted a great success by the students and, with the help of some willing volunteers, the product was launched on the market. Over the next four years, the number of client schools slowly increased. But in 2000 came a major blow when Government introduced Curriculum 2000. Both schools and students said it would be impossible to afford the time that the 12-week workshop required. The year 2000 was a momentous year, for not only did Students Exploring Marriage, as it was then called, have to devise an entirely new product but the trustees decided that it should become a registered charity. A new product that was devised, the Half- Day Conference: the methodology was the same, but the whole process was compressed into half a day. So now, 18 years on, what conclusions can be drawn? Over 100,000 young people have The Trusty Servant taken part in over 1000 workshops. In the very early days students had told us that they learnt about reproduction in biology - they knew how to put a condom on a carrot. But where could they go to learn about respect, trust, patience, forgiveness and above all, love - the elements that are so vital in forging a lasting relationship? Personal, Social and Health Education was part of the National Curriculum and included sex and relationship education, but, whereas any half-competent nurse could talk about sex, most schools found relationships a bridge too far. This is the niche that SEM (now renamed Explore) seeks to fill: the students in their reactions to Explore’s workshops invariably give them an approval rating in the order of 90-95%. What they value above all else is the couples’ honesty! In these past 18 years, we have been hugely grateful to over 200 volunteer couples, who have been willing to share the stories of their married lives. In addition to our couples, Explore has employed over 100 volunteer facilitators, who have helped students get the most out of their dialogues. Of the numerous organisations that are engaged in the business of relationship education, Explore is unique in being the only one that interacts with the students face to face. Perhaps the most surprising fact that Explore has uncovered over the past 18 years is that 9 out of 10 of the young people have told us that they expect to have a family of their own one day (this despite all the negativity about family breakdown in the media week in and week out). Herein we believe lies genuine hope for the future. Explore does not teach and does not give lectures on how to succeed in marriage. Our conviction, however, is that as a result of the dialogues the students have had with our couples they will take away with them a degree of hope that they in turn will be able to have a family of their own one day in the context of a lasting relationship. Sadly, as many in this country will be aware, our basic building block is under enormous pressure. As one of Explore’s patrons, the Rt Revd Paul Butler Bishop of Durham, put it at Explore’s 18 th birthday celebration at the House of Lords recently: ‘The family as we have known it is in the midst of great change. The course we as a society are now on threatens not only to change the structure of the family unit but to move away from the stability and security we have traditionally valued.’ If you would like to learn more, please contact [email protected] Vox Senum ‘Algebra Wars’ (TS127) Snippets from voluminous correspondence: Robin Brodhurst: I enormously enjoyed the article by Nick MacKinnon. I was lucky enough to be at Marlborough when SMP was being written and I suspect that, although the impetus came from Win Coll, it was jointly developed by Winchester, Marlborough and, I think, Charterhouse – a lot of the equations used distances between Godalming, Guildford and other towns around Charterhouse! John Manisty was legendary for his railway knowledge: I recall him organising a journey for me from a school climbing trip in the Austrian Alps to meet my family on the Loire. I had to change 17 trains somewhere at 5.30 in the morning. ‘It’s not a scheduled stop,’ John told me, ‘but it will stop as the drivers change there!’ Sure enough it did stop. Why was Harry Altham in Berlin in 1936 at the Olympic Games? He was determined to see Sydney Wooderson run there, but he injured his ankle