Wednesday 29 July 2009

EXCITING FORTHCOMING MUSICAL EVENTS



Concert Programme

Dillington House organises a series of public concerts throughout the year. These take place in the Mews Theatre which can seat up to 160 persons. The acoustics are excellent as are the sightlines.


Guitar Festival - Pro Arte Guitar Trio with Guests
Sunday, August 02, 2009
Guitar Festival - HiddenTango
Monday, August 03, 2009
Guitar Festival - Bach, Ballads & Blues
Tuesday, August 04, 2009
Guitar Festival - Groningen Guitar Duo
Wednesday, August 05, 2009
Guitar Festival - Vida Guitar Quartet
Thursday, August 06, 2009
Concert with the Alberni String Quartet
Saturday, September 19, 2009
Piano Recital with Mark Bebbington
Saturday, October 24, 2009
Concert with the Badke Quartet
Sunday, November 22, 2009
Concert Party with Miss Sylvia Griffin & Friends
Saturday, December 12, 2009
Concert with 'The Quartetto di Cremona'
Sunday, January 31, 2010
Two Harpsichords in Concert:Purcell & His World: A Musical Exploration
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Concert with The Navarra String Quartet
Sunday, April 25, 2010
Beethoven – The Complete String Quartets with The Alberni String Quartet
Sunday, May 30, 2010
Jazz Concert with John Law Trio
Saturday, June 19, 2010

Tickets Enquiry – daborer@somerset.gov.uk

Wednesday 22 July 2009

WAYNE BENNETT AND VALERIE SINGLETON JOIN FORCES ON LIFELONG LEARNING


Lifelong Learning Is Good For Your Health - Official


by Wayne Bennett, Director of Dillington House, Somerset - a premier lifelong learning and business conferencing centre.


A GOVERNMENT think-tank recently produced a wide-ranging

study concerning mental health and wellbeing. Sir John Beddington –

the Government’s Chief Scientific Advisor – said that the most important single thing we can do help to maintain a quality of life in older age is

to keep learning. The conclusions were astonishing in claiming that one of the most powerful activities any individual could do to stave off the misery of depression and anxiety – especially in older age - was to keep learning.

Learning allows for an engagement with the world and the great issues that confront us all. It obviously improves our knowledge and widens our horizons in the process. It brings us into contact with other like-minded people and it challenges our own beliefs and opinions. Learning can also give us a deep sense of achievement and this improves our self-esteem and sense of wellbeing.

On July 17, Mr Bennett was at The Retirement Show at London's Olympia to join forces with TV presenter and writer Valerie Singleton, in a seminars organized by Discount-Age on the benefits of continued learning for the over 50s. Valerie, who is a director with Discount-Age, was introduced to a myriad of fascinating educational topics offered by Dillington House when she moved to the West country.

"I couldn't believe this was being offered by a county council-run facility and neither could I believe how beautiful Dillington House was.

"I have signed up for dozens of courses which have opened my eyes to so many news subjects in such a fresh and refreshing way. I'm a convert.

"And the courses were so well attended. I had to make sure I booked early and still missed out on some, which shows the huge demand."

While many similar educational centres are facing cuts backs or even closure, Somerset County Council has backed five-star Dillington's ability to deliver both in learning and business conferencing, by recently investing £2.3 million in a high-tech arts and ecologically-friendly accommodation facility. The Hyde, which, features boutique-style bedrooms and lecture studios overlooking the Somerset countryside is also fully accessible for disabled people.


For further information, interviews or photographs, please call:

Wayne Bennett, Dillington House : 01460 258 648

email: wbennett@somerset.gov.uk


Note for editors: Dillington House is Somerset County Council’s residential centre for professional development, adult education and the arts. Founded in 1949, it has been offering lifelong learning opportunities for nearly sixty years. The arts play an important role in creating the unique ambience which is Dillington. Although Dillington House is wholly part of Somerset County Council it operates without public subsidy and is responsible for meeting all of its costs. The Main House dates back to the 16th century and is one of the most beautiful houses in Somerset and features in Simon Jenkins’ book England’s 1000 Best Houses.

The accommodation is in a range of bedrooms, most of which are en-suite, that are located in the House, the Mews or the Hyde. Dillington House is neither an hotel, college nor simple conference centre. It is uniquely something special at which everything and anything is possible. Standards of service and accommodation are very high and Dillington remains the only establishment to have been awarded 5-stars by the English Tourism Council under their “Campus” quality assessment scheme.


Friday 3 July 2009

IT'S OFFICIAL; LEARNING IS SERIOUSLY GOOD FOR YOUR HEALTH


Education, education, education...

By Wayne Bennett, Director, Dillington House.

Towards the end of last year, a government think-tank produced a report concerning mental health and wellbeing. It was a wide-ranging study that pulled together evidence from a large number of sources.
The conclusions were astonishing in claiming that one of the most powerful activities any individual could do to stave off the misery of depression and anxiety – especially in older age - was to keep learning.
Indeed, learning throughout life is wonderfully good for us in all sorts of ways. Learning allows for an engagement with the world and the great issues that confront us all.
It obviously improves our knowledge and widens our horizons in the process. It brings us into contact with other like-minded people and it challenges our own beliefs and opinions.
Learning can also give us a deep sense of achievement and this improves our self-esteem and sense of well-being.
When interviewed on the BBC Radio 4 Today programme, Sir John Beddington – the Government’s Chief Scientific Advisor – said that the most important single thing we can do to maintain a quality of life in older age is to keep learning. Wow!
If this is the case, then the news comes very late as the provision of government supported adult education programmes across the country are in a state of collapse.
Local councils, universities and colleges, driven by the need to follow the money, have abandoned much of what they use to do in favour of delivering courses in basic skills – literacy and numeracy etc. – as well as in courses leading to recognised qualifications.
Of course, nobody is staying that these are not important too. It is undoubtedly critical that we have a well-educated and qualified working population.
But why did we have to close down a great tradition of courses in village halls and local schools in the process? The provision of adult education programmes was a simple public service that had the means of transforming individual lives and families. Above all though, learning for learning’s sake is a deeply civilising concept and one that ultimately adds value to communities and society in general.
Now we hear that it is also good for our mental health as well. The decline in provision and the opportunities on offer has to be reversed and a renaissance in adult education begun.
The irony of the present state of affairs is that New Labour came to power on the mantra of ‘education, education, education’ and David Blunkett had a visionary mission of creating a culture of lifelong learning!
Of course, the loss of adult education classes is only part of a larger picture in which the notion of public service and collective responsibility is replaced by private provision and narrow economic objectives.
That said, there are still some organisations doing their best to keep things going. Notable among them are the Women’s Institute, the WEA and the U3A – a voluntary self-help learning network for older people.
There is also a scattering of residential colleges offering weekend courses in a social setting; and we mustn’t forget art centres, museums, clubs and societies who often provide a vibrant programme of talks and activities.
The Open University remains open although this involves academic study at a high level and at a price which many people may find off-putting. If you have the money then certain private providers such as Warner Leisure also offer study and activity breaks in hotels.
So what’s to be done? Well, the government have been stung by public criticism of what has happened to adult education and the recently moved former Secretary of State, John Denham, indicated that something had to be done.
The big problem is that, thanks to the disgraceful behaviour of the banks, the financial cupboard is bare and a general election will probably make no difference – adult education has never been high on the political agenda.
The reality is that we are probably on our own. Don’t despair, let’s get down to the library (if we still have one) or online and search out the opportunities that do exist and sign up now. Find out what is going on in your area and take those tentative first steps…the science says that it will be seriously good for us.

Wayne's column appears in the current edition of Mature Times, which is freely available at Dillington and many other reputable outlets. (www.maturetimes.co.uk)