| A Biography of Phyllis Wallbank MBE |
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Mrs. Phyllis Wallbank in 1948 founded the first Montessori school in England where adults learned with children: what eventually became known as the Gatehouse Learning Centre. It was described by Buckminster Fuller in the following terms:
In 1964, the Phyllis Wallbank Educational Trust, the PWET, was established by friends and family in order to advance the character of Phyllis’s work in education. Currently Phyllis serves as the director of the Trust. Phyllis began her life’s work as a Froebel-trained teacher who later studied psychology at the University of London. However, working in juvenile courts as a Children’s Officer in Buckinghamshire, England, she realized that they have first to appreciate themselves and get to know their own worth so that then they use their own character's talents and contribute to society through those talents. Far fewer children would become delinquent if they could be educated to assume their own personal responsibilities and so take their rightful place in society. To do this, she trained under Dr. Maria Montessori and became, for many years, a close personal friend. Phyllis often visited her in Holland. In Dr. Montessori’s later years, she served as her examiner for both the ordinary and the advanced courses, jointly examining with Dr. Montessori. She also served as Chairman of the Montessori Association in England and, for many years, Vice President of the International Montessori Association. Phyllis also organized the last International Montessori Congress, which met in London shortly before Dr. Montessori’s death. In 1980, Phyllis gained a diploma in Theology at Maynooth, Ireland. When walking along the Thames Embankment in 1985, with her sister after seeing a play, Phyllis encountered a homeless elderly lady whom she tried to help, later, that same night with a gift of food and clothing. The encounter led Phyllis to return every week on Monday nights with gifts of food and clothing. A new ministry emerged dedicated to helping homeless and destitute people who live by the Thames Embankment: the London Run. Volunteers gather every Monday night at Our Lady of Peace Church on Britwell Road, Burnham and, from there, drive into inner London in cars stuffed with food and clothing. These goods are then distributed to the poor and needy. In 1990, a new charity was established based on this work: the London Run Charitable Trust although the regular Monday night visits to the poor and destitute continue as a separate activity among volunteers “who gather out of care, out of love.” In recent years, regular Monday night visits are also made to Slough to help persons there. In 1996, Phyllis was created a member of the Order of the British Empire, an honor given her by H. M. Queen Elizabeth II. In the same year, Pope John Paul II decorated her with the Benemerenti Medal. She continues to be used by Eton College when needed to give specialist assistance to individual students. Besides this work, Phyllis also serves on the Parliamentary Issues Committee of the Catholic Union of Great Britain (addressing matters to be discussed before upcoming sessions of Parliament). Phyllis had been invited to become a member after having been voted recently as “Catholic Woman of the Year.” Despite their deep love for each other, their external interests couldn’t have been more diverse. Phyllis remarks, “A dating agency would never have put us together! I loved riding and dancing and he was miserable the one time I got him on a horse and he couldn’t dance! He was so knowledgeable about music and I only knew what I liked. He was so disciplined in his approach to life and I just lived. Yet our love for each other was our rock.” Phyllis has lectured at a wide variety of colleges and conferences. Some include: Oxford University, Lady Margaret Hall; Cambridge; London; Harvard; Yale; Seattle University; Washington State University; Purdue University; Chicago University; Boston College, Lonergan Workshop; Columbia University in British Columbia; and Vancouver. She has also given teacher training courses and lectures in France, Italy, Holland, Ireland, Canada, and the US: at the United Nations Church Center, New York; US Air Base, Mildenhall, England; Fenham, Newcastle, England; Bishop Otter, Chichester, England; Avery Hill, London; Strawberry Hill, England; College of Preceptors, London; North London Polytechnic; Staffordshire County Teacher’s Conference; Enfield Teachers’ Association; the Royal Overseas League; Association of Pediatric Chartered Physiotherapists’ Conference, London; National Association for Gifted Children; British Epilepsy Association, London; International Cerebral Palsy Society; Guest Speaker, Purdue Annual Education Lunch; “Women of the Year Lunch,” London; and Digby Stuart Training College. In addition, Phyllis has given university courses and lectures under the following titles:
Many of these lectures and talks have been published. Some published titles include “The Vocation of Teaching,” “Moral teaching through Shakespeare’s Tragedies,” and “The Way We Learn” which have all appeared in various editions of The Sower: A Quarterly Magazine on Christian Formation. |





