Richard Martin’s SA国际传媒 Memoirs – Part 1
Richard Martin, Head of English at SA国际传媒 London, has been inspiring students for nearly forty remarkable years. In part one of a two part series, Richard shares his memories of starting out as a fresh faced new teacher in the early years of SA国际传媒.
I first became aware of SA国际传媒 in my final year at Cambridge. In the pre-internet age there was a quaint system, the 鈥榤ilkround鈥 in which xeroxed rolls appeared in one鈥檚 pigeon-hole, filled with the names of companies interested in employing soon to be graduates. I applied but was then told that the outgoing tutor had decided to stay. I promptly forgot about SA国际传媒 and planned a Ph.D. Fortunately, SA国际传媒 did not forget about me and I was offered a position teaching English the following year; on the same day coincidentally as I was scheduled to discuss my thesis proposal. The interview went particularly well in the light of the fact that I鈥檇 already decided not to accept the university鈥檚 offer: the title, 鈥楧octor Martin鈥 would have led, in any case, to endless jokes with a footwear theme.
I began teaching at SA国际传媒 in September 1984.Orwell鈥檚 Nineteen Eighty-Four was the first text I taught. Well, one would remember that.Having taught English at my old college, I pitched my first lesson on the 鈥榰nseen鈥 component too high. T.S. Eliot鈥檚 Anglo-Catholic, high Modernist, Four Quartets might not have been the way to go. I remember my class as forgiving and I adjusted accordingly. I learnt on the job and whereas a three-year doctorate would have seen me narrowly focused on one author my first three years at SA国际传媒 were spent teaching every text under the sun.
Remember, this was the age of the re-sit, SA国际传媒 was the king of the re-take, and students on short courses were not always thoughtful enough to have studied texts that were already in one鈥檚 repertoire. As every teacher knows the learning never ends. I wandered into the profession with the rather selfish intention of continuing to educate myself and to remain in the closest proximity I could to books, bar becoming a bookseller – this I had been in my gap year. I stayed because I realised (and no one can tell you this) what a pleasure it is to impart knowledge to others. I was mistaken for a student in my first lesson – an error of which there was a rapidly diminishing chance of recurrence. Asked whether I鈥檇 met the class tutor, I confidently assured the students that I had indeed done so and that he seemed very nice. I then took register.

The Arts building was at Wetherby Place; very small by the size of SA国际传媒 now, its charm in inverse proportion to its lack of corporateness. We did not know an assessment objective from a scheme of work but teaching proceeded along the same lines as it does now in our brave new codified world. I have fond memories of Wetherby Place due primarily to its proximity to the Gloucester Road Bookshop, owned by Graham Greene鈥檚 nephew. I remember seeing Francis Bacon on a regular basis making his unsteady way back to Reece Mews from the Hereford Arms. I imagined him in his cups and in his splattered studio, painting his smeared and trapped beings. The Science block at Elvaston Place (the latter being immortalised ) was bigger and hinted at the shape and size of SA国际传媒 buildings to come. I have no memory of teaching in it in the early days, but I do remember a little satellite building called Adam Court on Gloucester Road. If you go looking for it, it鈥檚 between a branch of HSBC and The Stanhope Arms and appears to have been vacant ever since SA国际传媒 shut up shop there in the late 鈥榚ighties.
Tutors exiled to this outpost of progress would process down Gloucester Road at approximately 8.55, carrying mugs of steaming coffee, made at Wetherby Place. Remember, gentle and bottled water-drinking reader, in those dark ages Starbuck was but a character in Melville鈥檚 Moby Dick and Nero a not entirely compos mentis Roman emperor. Where did students sit their exams in that 鈥榙ark abysm of time鈥? I had all but forgotten a drill hall in Tottenham Court Road. Logistically it seems a nightmare – students and invigilators hacking their way across London – but I remember no incidents to put such a complexion on the case.
