Friday, December 04, 2009

Bullying in Schools; Why are few ever excluded?

Amazing press release of the day - Official Government figures have revealed that just ninety pupils across the country were expelled last year for school bullying, despite a new survey finding half of all 14-year-old children have been bullied.

Across Norfolk less than 5 pupils were expelled last year from state secondary schools. In over two-thirds of local authorities across England, not a single child was expelled for bullying. In Norfolk 40 pupils were suspended from state schools – meaning the disruptive students returned to the school where they caused misery for their classmates.

Since 1997, Labour Government rules have deliberately made it more difficult for schools to expel pupils, undermining the authority of head teachers and meaning bullies end up back at the same school as their victims.

Bullying makes far too many children’s lives a misery. But the Government’s own figures show that in the vast majority of cases bullies are returned to the same school as their victims after a short punishment, rather than being expelled.

The key to tackling bullying is giving Norfolk’s teachers the powers they need to crack down on bad behaviour. But under Labour, the balance of power in the classroom has shifted too far in favour of disruptive pupils.

Conservatives would give Norwich’s schools the power to take a zero tolerance approach towards serious offences such as bullying. We will give our teachers the tools they need to maintain discipline in the classroom before it spirals out of control.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

No you won't

I teach and I can guarantee you it won't happen

It will carry on just as it is with maybe a couple of headline-grabbing cases.

And it's 'fewer' than five rather than 'less' than five. I trust you're not an English teacher? More like Humanities, I.T. or Geography I expect.

Anonymous said...

No you won't

I teach and I can guarantee you it won't happen

It will carry on just as it is with maybe a couple of headline-grabbing cases.

And it's 'fewer' than five rather than 'less' than five. I trust you're not an English teacher? More like Humanities, I.T. or Geography I expect.

Anonymous said...

History I believe.