John attended
King's College, Cambridge, and gained a degree in modern languages, but through his contacts became interested in anthropology. In 1914 he accompanied
W. H. R. Rivers, one of the leading anthropologists of the day, on an expedition to the
New Hebrides (what is today
Vanuatu). Layard travelled with his mentor Rivers. They were accompanied by Professor A. C. Haddon and his students,
A. R. Radcliffe-Brown and
Bronisław Malinowski. Layard and Rivers travelled through the New Hebrides before stopping at
Atchin, a small islet off the northeastern shore of
Malekula. The indigenous inhabitants gave them a rather cold reception at first, and Rivers decided to continue travelling while Layard stayed for a year immersing himself in the culture, learning and documenting the vernacular language, and recording myths, legends and oral history. This was a society in which monoliths and standing stones formed part of the cultural material, and Layard's interest clearly had some roots in his aunt's investigations. Prior to this time, anthropologists tended to survey many cultures over the course of expeditions and did not spend long periods of time staying in one place and learning about a single culture. Layard in Atchin and his contemporary Bronisław Malinowski in the
Trobriand Islands of New Guinea were the first modern anthropologists to use what is today called
participant observation methods in ethnographic research. == Introduction to psychotherapy ==