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Pioneering educational psychologist Joy Schaverein dies at 82

Analyst who debunked the boarding school myth and described the pervasive legacy of the Holocaust

June 26, 2025 10:47
Joy Schaverein
5 min read

The quintessentially British boarding school, designed to produce the ‘English gentleman,” was dismissed in the 1960s by child psychoanalyst John Bowlby, as “time-honoured barbarism”. The system which had generated a long roll-call of British prime ministers, had never been debunked by any literature on the psychological impact of boarding schools.

Until Jungian psychoanalyst and art therapist Joy Schaverein published her acclaimed book, Boarding School Syndrome: The Psychological Trauma of the ‘Privileged’ Child, (Routledge, 2015). Joy Schaverein who has died aged 82, following a stroke, worked on her project during Etonian David Cameron’s time as prime minister, and knew the risks of “going up against the establishment”, as she put it. “There is a huge social pressure not to complain about what is generally seen as a benefit of privilege,” she said.

The book was lauded, not just for its clinical analysis, but because it launched a cultural and intellectual debate among its readership – adult survivors of the English middle class propensity to send children away to an alien environment while still young and impressionable. To her boarding school was a peculiar abuse of the British establishment. She felt it was like putting a child into care. Her book cited Roald Dahl and George Orwell’s experiences where she explained that growing up in an institution without much love or appropriate touch, could lead to depression, broken relationships and problems with intimacy. Young boys separated from their mothers, she suggested, could develop an unconscious fear of women.

“Children need to grow among people who love them,” she said in 2011. “Things have improved but children are still exposed to regimented lifestyles, loneliness and separation. They often turn into very successful adults...but they can suffer from a poverty of emotion.”