Donate SIGN UP

Answers

1 to 20 of 23rss feed

1 2 Next Last

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by Bobbisox1. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
Good grief, the mind boggles.

:-(
How awful
Dreadful. I hope the teacher isn't too badly injured & recovers fully.
I always said there would be a generation of kids who have grown up desensitized to violence and it looks like it's come to fruition.
Society is just becoming more feral as time goes by.
I sincerely hope the teacher makes a full recovery and the wound is not life threatening. Another example of the so-called civilised society I am told I live in.
What next? Stab vests issued to teaching staff and airport security scanners and searches for students.
The perpetrator should get a custodial no matter what age.
Until knife crime is dealt with in the courts with very stiff penalties for even carrying it is only going to get worse.

I hope this teacher is ok.
Question Author
I believe the teacher is receiving hospital treatment and a teenage boy has been arrested
Hopefully it is not life threatening treatment.

Now what really counts is what happens to the assaulter. Anything less than being locked up will send the wrong message.
Question Author
I’m currently watching Talk TV ( normally never have tv on during the day) apparently a law was proposed re the punishment for knife crime ,it was passed that if a person carrying a knife and using it…..for the second time!!! They should receive a custodial sentence but judges are using loopholes not to adhere to this !
I bet there is no cane or birch to be found in that school as a result of our so-called civil society. it would appear that discipline in school is ignored so they ride rough shod over those who are supposed to uphold it and it comes back to bite them.
It wont bite thise making the decisions though. They are safely tucked behind their faceless desks.
The level of violence is getting worse. I've been assaulted a couple of times over the 30 yr. period from 1972/2001.

The first time (Buttershaw Comp.) a big 15 yr. old thug who didn't like me standing behind him to ensure he got on with his work, suddenly threw his chair back and smashed me across the shins with the crossbar on the legs - agony and bleeding legs. He was removed from class and caned.

Other two times were more minor, but no caning was permitted by then and it was a long drawn-out process to get parents in, child suspended for a couple of days etc..

Threats - they tended to be ignored as time went by. I once had a 15 yr-old girl, high as a kite after sniffing glue, who stood in front of me crouching and waving an open pair of scissors at me. That was scary.
No, nothing happened to her apart from Head's detention.

I eventually left teaching after having a gun pulled on me in a playground as I was escorting a form of 11 yr. old girls across it. The kid waving the pistol was about 15 and a son of a family known to be involved in the drugs route into Bradford (we eventually gathered enough evidence for the police to swoop). It turned out that it was a replica - but I didn't know that. This happened on a Friday - I had a dreadful weekend and went in on Monday prepared to give evidence etc.. Nothing needed, the Dep. Head had taken the gun off the kid, decided it was obviously a replica and case filed.

There is, of course, little the school can do except suspend a pupil - and L.A's. are very very reluctant to do that, as is Senior Management because it reflects badly on the school.

It's got a lot worse since caning was abolished. The hardcore weren't particularly cowed by it - but everyone else toed the line. Now of course societal pressure is full of 'me, me' me', 'rights' and so on.
I loved teaching and was a good teacher. Still help kids when possible.
^^^^^^^^Needless to say, I'm hoping and praying that the teacher will be OK. There was a female teacher in Leeds killed a few years ago, remember?
Faceless desks?
This is the result of parents making excuses for their children.
“It wasn’t my lad, he was here all the time!” Then when the proverbial hits the fan and their little darling does something serious, it is the school/police/ social media’s fault.
Question Author
Jourdain how awful for you, young people aren’t scared of any kind of authority now, happily the majority are good people , I think if a policeman spoke to me when I was growing up, I’d have been very worried he’d come to my house and I’d face the wrath of my parents , I’m afraid now it’s a case of they reap what they’ve sown by allowing kids too much leeway where authority is concerned
I was rather a specialist in 'difficult schools' Bobbi, although my last school (Bradford Comp, 2,000pupils) had been good when I started there - Oxbridge places etc.. Then the L.A. changed the intake boundaries and flooded us with Manningham - mainly male inner-city Muslims. That made twice I'd joined a school which turned over from excellent to failing in a few years....... and 'No!' I was not the common factor! It was heartbreaking to watch this lovely school turn and fail its pupils and all of us. We were such a committed staff. :)
I'm sure Gary Lineker would have something to say if we fired shotsv

1 to 20 of 23rss feed

1 2 Next Last

Do you know the answer?

Awful Breaking News

Answer Question >>