Lundsbergs boarding school

Lundsbergs boarding school
Motto Mens sana in corpore sano
Established 1896
Type Independent school
Headmaster Ann Kabo (interim)
Founder William Olsson
Website www.lundsbergsskola.se

Lundsbergs boarding school is a Swedish boarding school located in the Parish of Storfors north of Kristinehamn in Värmland, Sweden. Lundsberg was founded in 1896 with inspirations from classical English boarding schools, and has approximately 200 students today. The school is run by the Lundsbergs school Foundation, Stiftelsen Lundsbergs skola and is well known for its conservative atmosphere.[1]

The school is one of the three elite boarding schools in Sweden. Annual tuition is about £20,000. The cost is subsidized by the state but augmented by parents.[2] The school consists of six dormitories, of which three are boys' dormitories (Forest Hill, Björke and Gransäter), two are girls' dormitories (Herrgården and Klätten), and one is a mixed dormitory (Skogshult).

The school was closed on 28 August 2013 by the Swedish School Inspectorate due problems concerning abuse and bullying.[3][4] However, on 6 September 2013, the Administrative court in Stockholm County decided that the school would be re-opened on 9 September 2013.[5]

2013 closure

On 28 August 2013, the Swedish School Inspectorate, Skolinspektionen, closed the school after recurring problems concerning abuse and bullying. The closure applies for at least six months.[3][4] In the evening of 28 August 2013, the boarding school announced that headmaster Staffan Hörnberg had been dismissed and that the governing board has offered their resignations.[6] The specific allegations were of older boys burning younger boys with hot irons during an hazing.[3] When one was taken to a hospital for treatment police were informed and the schools inspectorate notified.[2] The schools inspectorate's recommendation to discontinue continued funding of the school by the government was reported to be under review.[3] The schools inspectorate completed a lengthy investigation of bullying at the school in April 2013, but, after threatening a fine of half a million dollars, a decision was made to continue to allow the school to operate based on its apparent success in overcoming bullying. The decision to close the school was due to the threat of imminent danger to students. Students were required to leave, but special arrangements had to be made for the 17 students whose parents were out of the country.[3]

Public allegations of bullying emerged in 2011 with a spate of anonymous calls to media and to the schools inspectorate.[2] An investigation by The Guardian revealed evidence of a long standing pattern of bullying. Petter Sandgren, a researcher at the European University Institute in Florence advanced a theory that the children of new entrants to Sweden's elite, nouveau riches, had broken ranks with the old boy network which had previously suppressed reports of abuse.[2] According to an elderly lady who had worked in the kitchens in the school in the 1950s:

It's like time has stood still since I worked there – there is exactly the same spirit now as it was then, the school still lets the older pupils harass the younger ones and be cruel to them.[2]
I am so relieved that eyes have been opened and people see it for what it is. I never saw class society revealed so obviously as at Lundsberg – and it is still the same, like Upstairs Downstairs[2]

On September 6 Lundsberg was opened again.[7]

Alumni

Famous Alumni include:

External links

References

Coordinates: 59°29′54″N 14°09′46″E / 59.4982°N 14.1627°E