We are delighted to welcome Heather Peachey from Barrow-upon-Humber, in Lincolnshire, to the ART Tutor team. Heather has shared this interesting biog with us…
A couple of girls on the school bus told an 11-year old Heather that they did something called “bellringing” in her village, Bishop’s Waltham in Hampshire. She told her mum she was going to meet friends and secretly went to have a look. She was intrigued, got parental permission to learn and was quickly hooked!
At university in the mid-70s, Heather took advantage of the fantastic ringing opportunities in Birmingham, then began her working life in computer programming in Huntingdon. Marriage and children followed and she turned to teaching in FE, later qualifying as a school teacher. In the 1990s, with a move to northern Lincolnshire, life took a different direction, and she undertook training to formalise her knowledge of British Sign Language and still works part time as a freelance BSL interpreter. Oh, and through taking a part-time temporary job at a flying school, she undertook some training from the owner and got as far as solo circuits.
Heather has rung over 550 peals, conducting 9 of them, however her real passion has always been in sharing her love of the life-long learning that ringing offers. Keen to share good practice in ringing teaching, she spent a good number of years on the CCCBR Education Committee, working on the ITTS, the forerunner of ART’s teacher training programme. When the ART was founded, she was utterly delighted to be one of its earliest tutors.
A firm believer that one size does not fit all, Heather tries to mould ringing teaching to the needs of the individual and is always keen to pick up new tips as well as share hers. “Every day’s a school day”, she says. Many of the 1000+ quarter peals she’s rung have been to develop ringers’ skills, explaining to novices that in a busy practice night they will get perhaps only 5-10 minutes to focus on something, but attempting a quarter offers them a personally tailored 40 minute session.
Empathy with the frustrations of being a learner has been a highlight in recent years through skill development in change-ringing on handbells. Heather had long been able to ring Plain Bob Minor and Major in hand, but beyond that faced an impenetrable wall. During Covid restrictions, she discovered the superb HandBell Stadium and is most grateful to have had patient online coaching and practice. Thereafter, with the Hull Handbells Project, she has continued to progress, often painfully slowly, but can now manage 7-8 to Yorkshire Surprise Major. A proud achievement was recently completing the Learn to Ring Level 5 in Handbell change ringing by conducting a quarter peal of Kent Treble Bob.