Yolande Beckles: Little Miss Know-all

ItÕs not only the kids who have suffered in the BBCÕs new show Ð the star has taken a beating too

News in pictures
News in pictures
On Facebook
From the blogs

More than half of Afghanistan’s families live in extreme poverty

Leila is watching her baby intently, as his mouth moves trying to swallow the small blob of yellow p...

Time for a new approach to alcohol

Ambulances were called and three drunk teenagers were brought to my care. One was so drunk we had to...

Bahrain: One year on

I am used to endless lies and criticism from the BNP and its favourite blogster, as well as Islamist...

Paul Volcker stands tall against the banking lobby

Why is Europe, which likes to present itself as an opponent of speculative "Anglo-Saxon" finance, li...

In a purple battle dress with matching accessories and glinting hair extensions, Yolande Beckles, the self-styled educational motivator, stood in front of a London comprehensive and announced to television viewers that she was going to "kick butt". Several weeks later, it appears that there is now a considerable queue of people wishing to kick Miss Beckles's own mauve behind, but with entirely different motives.

The star of BBC2's Don't Mess With Miss Beckles cruised up to Muswell Hill's Fortismere School in her Mercedes with the intention of getting lazy middle-class pupils to do their homework, which their parents had failed to make them do. An advocate of an hour's reading at night after homework, and no television during the week, she was bound to meet resistance, if not incredulity.

It comes as no surprise that some of the parents from the series have subsequently expressed their horror at her methods. Things deteriorated so badly between Carolyn and her 16-year-old son, Luke, that the exasperated mother ended up by throwing him out of the house. Beckles had failed to challenge Luke's calling his mother a "stubborn bitch" and by the end of term he had only made a "slight improvement".

Carolyn called the Beckles experience "destructive". "The programme was atrocious and a total fix," she said. "When I saw it, everything I had objected to they left in. Yo was terrible and her behaviour was wholly inappropriate." During one argument, Beckles, a warm, affectionate woman, kept her hand on Luke's thigh. He is still living with his uncle.

One mother, Jane, claimed it was the production team, rather than Beckles, who ended up helping Josh, her 15-year-old son, with his homework. "They, not Yolande, helped him study. If his grades did improve slightly that term, it was because of the help behind the camera, rather than in front of it."

Tom, whom Beckles banned from seeing his girlfriend for five days, dropped out on film, backed up by his parents. "I don't want to speak to Yo again. Never. I don't want to have anything to do with her," he said.

There were calls to pull the subsequent episodes in the series, which ends on Tuesday. "The programme was dangerous and Beckles's behaviour completely inappropriate," Mary Jenkin, president of the Association of Educational Psychologists, told one newspaper. "She was treading on dangerous ground. She confused boundary-setting with bullying. She seemed to have little skill for mediation or conciliation, and no understanding of the cultural issues she was trying to control."

But one must, of course, give Beckles her due. The demands of TV for instant solutions meant that she was only given a term to get results. Given the difficulties that some of these children faced at home, it would take more than a highly passionate "motivator" to turn them around with the same astonishing results as a decorating makeover show.

While Beckles's intentions are clearly noble, she has not always been able to articulate her message. At the beginning of the first programme, she gabbled: "Nothing comes easy, yeah? You have to work, if you want things, very, very, very hard. And you know it's not a lottery-ticket life. So you will put in what you receive." She later admitted to having "lost the plot" during filming.

Deeply spiritual and a member of the New Testament Church of God, she is highly critical of Middle England. "For a long time the middle classes have been empowering themselves, not their children, doing their own thing, not being there for their kids," she has said.

But not only do "liberal" parents get her goat, so too do some white teachers. "There is also an issue that needs to be discussed - and I think the Government is trying to tackle that right now - in the way that white teachers are not performing well for our black children."

Her parents, Gloria and Seaford, arrived in Britain from Trinidad in 1960. Born in London two years later, Beckles was raised in the East End. She and her younger siblings, Brian and Hermione, had a strict upbringing. Gloria worked in a shoe shop and Seaford on the railways, and every evening one of them went through the children's homework. Once, when Beckles came second in a race, her father told her that no one remembered the person in second place. Such an attitude failed to have a positive outcome for Brian, who drifted into crime. "It's too late to save Brian," Yolande once admitted.

After leaving school at 18, Beckles worked for Sainsbury's for 15 years and became head of management development. She set herself up as a diversity consultant. Despite no formal teaching qualifications, in 1998 she set up Global Graduates, a motivational programme for children from inner city areas.

The BBC asked Beckles to star in the programme after seeing her being interviewed on GMTV about her work with children. Riete Oord, the series producer, said she had in no way selected her as an expert and neither did she endorse her methods. "She's a character in the documentary, one who comes with skills, but I'm not holding her up as a guru," she said pointedly.

"She's got strong and provocative opinions about education, which makes her controversial and interesting to follow. At the same time, she's passionate about what she does and she's not afraid of voicing her opinions. She genuinely wants to help kids. She can laugh at herself and is relaxed. Sometimes people say her behaviour is inappropriate; that's just her Caribbean background. She likes to hug and kiss people. She sees [that some of her methods don't work] but she won't accept it. She thinks that her method is the right one. Because she's controversial, people react to her in the same manner. Some people absolutely love her and some people hate her."

Separated from the father of her two children, home is a detached property in Chislehurst, Kent. Her children attend private school, there's a nanny and holidays in the Caribbean. Yet Beckles has a string of failed companies and bad debts behind her, totalling more than £125,000. At least 19 county court judgments have been made against her companies in the past four years.

Global Graduates, based in London, collapsed in 2003, leaving wages unpaid. Teacher Jo Allen, from Erdington, who worked for Beckles and claims she is £825 out of pocket, said: "The people on the show are warming to her, but there is another side to her. She has done the dirty on a lot of people and has a bare-faced cheek to go on national television."

Gloria, her mother, is listed as director of Global Graduates Education, set up in June 2004, just after Global Graduates became insolvent. The BBC stated that her business dealings "were not relevant" to the main purpose of the series. "Some of her work has been funded by public money so there is a genuine public interest in seeing how she does it and if her methods work."

Beckles says she is ready for a second series, but the BBC has yet to decide whether to offer her any more behinds to kick.

Independent Comment
blog comments powered by Disqus
Career Services

Day In a Page

Picture preview: Portrait of London

Portrait of London

Picture preview
No secularism please, we're British

No secularism please, we're British

Arguments about the role of religion in national life have recently acquired a new urgency
Harold Tillman: 'Chinese tourists can save the high street – if we let them'

Harold Tillman interview

'Chinese tourists can save the high street – if we let them'
Working as a jail torturer ruined my life

Working as a jail torturer ruined my life

Meet the former soldier who has joined the political prisoners he tortured in Turkey's Mamak prison by suing the generals who led a regime of terror
The local high street jet shop

The local high street jet shop

Got a spare $50m and can't stand the queues at Heathrow? Get yourself down to London's first private plane dealership
Do you like your doctor? It could be the death of you

Do you like your doctor?

It could be the death of you...
The mysterious affair of how Agatha Christie is teaching foreigners English

How Agatha Christie is teaching foreigners English

Twenty of the author's novels have been adapted and presented with learning notes and a CD
Six Grammys, five years off: Adele puts love before career

Six Grammys, five years off

Adele puts love before career
The 10 Best binoculars

The 10 Best binoculars

From no-frills to bins with digital cameras
Milan for £300

Milan for £300?

A cultural family holiday - on a budget - to Italy's most stylish city
'Black-hole' resorts: Turn up, tune out, log off

'Black-hole' resorts

Turn up, tune out, log off
New Arsenal face an old question of credibility in San Siro

New Arsenal face an old question of credibility in San Siro

Remodelled since winning in Milan in 2008, for all their consistency – and prize-money – Wenger's side are yet to claim a European title
James Lawton: This prodigal son deserves no forgiveness

James Lawton: This prodigal son deserves no forgiveness

City would be putting their desire to win title ahead of morals if Tevez plays for them
Mark Cavendish: Is Olympic gold at end of the rainbow?

Mark Cavendish interview

Is Olympic gold at end of the rainbow?
Apple admits it has a human rights problem

Apple admits it has a human rights problem

After years of complaints and workers' suicides in China the technology giant faces up to the human cost of its gadgets