Round Square is an international network of schools, based on the educational concepts of
Kurt Hahn, and named after a distinctive building at
Gordonstoun. Founded by a group of seven schools in the late 1960s, by 1996 it had grown to 20 member schools worldwide, and has since expanded to over 200 schools. Round Square is incorporated in England as a Company Limited by Guarantee, and is a registered charity.
History
Between 1962 and 1963
Jocelin Winthrop Young and
Roy McComish listed all the schools which they considered to have adopted the educational ideas of
Kurt Hahn or had included them at their foundation.
These schools were: in Scotland, Rannoch School and Dunrobin School; in England,
Abbotsholme School, Battisborough and
Milton Abbey; in Germany
Louisenlund; in Switzerland
Aiglon College, in Ghana
Achimota School; in India
The Doon School
The Doon School (informally Doon School or Doon) is a Selective school, selective all-boys Private school, private boarding school in Dehradun, Uttarakhand, India, which was established in 1935. It was envisioned by Satish Ranjan Das, a lawyer ...
; and the soon to open
Athenian School in California.
Salem,
Gordonstoun,
Anavryta and
Box Hill were 'taken for granted' as the already established and pre-eminent Hahnian schools.
On 5 June 1966, Kurt Hahn's 80th birthday was celebrated at Schule Schloss Salem, and as the headmaster of the school Winthrop Young invited the headmasters of Box Hill School, Gordonstoun, Louisenlund, Anavryta, Battisborough, the Athenian School, and the recently opened
Atlantic College, to discuss the establishment of a Hahn schools conference.
[The muscles of friendship - Speech by Jocelin Winthrop Young on the occasion of his retirement in October 1992 - Accessible https://www.jocelinwinthropyoung.com/work/round-square/] This meeting was chaired by
King Constantine and during its course an agreement was reached on naming the conference "The Hahn Schools", it was then decided that the first conference would be held at Gordonstoun in 1967.
At this first conference at Hahn's insistence the name "The Hahn Schools" was dropped in favour of a new name "The Round Square" after an iconic building at Gordounstoun.
Six of the schools that attended this first conference and were the founding members of the Round Square:
Box Hill School,
Gordonstoun,
Anavryta Experimental Lyceum,
Schule Schloss Salem,
Aiglon College and
Abbotsholme School. At the 2nd Round Square conference held at Box Hill the principles of the association were established and
co-education was the first of the sequence of conference themes that were discussed.
At a later conference held at Box Hill in 1980 the R.S.I.S. (Round Square International Service) was created to promote and organise overseas voluntary service projects in much the same way as the project in Cephalonia.
Winthrop Young retired as headmaster of Salem in 1974 but continued to run the Round Square association as Honorary Secretary and later as Director until he retired from that position in 1992.
Activities

Round Square schools encourage students to take part in a range of community service activities both locally and internationally. Many projects are run through the school and further opportunities are available via the Round Square Region, Network and Worldwide Organisation. Notable events including the Round Square International Conference (RSIC), where as the most recent 2024 conference took place in
Brookhouse School,
Nairobi
Nairobi is the Capital city, capital and largest city of Kenya. The city lies in the south-central part of Kenya, at an elevation of . The name is derived from the Maasai language, Maasai phrase , which translates to 'place of cool waters', a ...
.
Round Square IDEALS
Round Square schools are characterised by a shared belief in an approach to education built around six themes, our IDEALS, drawn from the theories of the educationalist Kurt Hahn.
Member schools
References
{{Member Schools of Round Square
Educational institutions established in 1966
Associations of schools