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Knives
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I can't believe this! It's one thing having the knives in the school and the pupils learning how to use them responsibly but as for carrying them around all day........I'm not suggesting they are going to stab each other, it could be somthing as simple as a child tripping over with a knife in their bag or reaching into the bag to get something else.
I agree - let the local police/schools liaison officer know
Absolutely awful ~ my kids have food tech (I can't get used to calling it that..it used to be home economics!) and they have never had to take utensils in to school, let alone knives!
A pupil at my sons school was recently expelled for having a flick knife in his bag. They have a zero tolerance policy which obviously means they aren't ever asked to take knives in for food tech.
I would certainly make a stand ~ I understand that teachers are in a no-win situation an awful lot of the time, but this is madness.
If an average 14 year old can't be trusted with a kitchen knife then there really is something wrong.
Yes, there may be accidents and there may be someone who uses it inappropriately. But guess what? Most kids at some point will behave inappropriately and hurt themselves or someone else. They should be dealt with and punished appropriately. However, kids also need to be taught responsibility and (seeing as more and more kids are getting obese and obviously not learning how to cook by their parents) how to cook.
I thought it was just the media and government who blow things out of proportion - looks like its parents as well.
Vic, I don't think this has been blown up out of all proportion. It is totally irresponsible for a school to request that sharp knives should be brought into school. It wouldn't have been allowed in my school and it was over 40 years ago that I went there. All sorts of things can cause accidents, I would agree and I would never suggest that conkers, marbles, cricket balls, etc. etc. should be banned, but sharp knives are a completely different matter and knife crime is very much on the increase.
I would certainly take it up with the School Governors, but wouldn't take it to the press.
ALL violent crime levels are up - not just knife attacks. And am not sure (and haven't really got the time to check at the moment -) but I am guessing that the majority of knife attacks are the 16-25 year age group.
So should a 16 year old attending college not be able to take his knives with him? What about a trainee chef working as a temp in a restaurant. Believe me - if you leave a nice set of knives in a restaurant or at college they have a high chance of going missing.
Maybe we should start arranging armed police officers to escort these people............or maybe we could have a sense of proportion.............nah - lets just have mob mentality and call it an outrage that 16 year olds can legally buy kitchen knives!
"The school is just trying to save money." - yes there you have it in a nutshell. How disgusting that is. Lets get children to bring in knives from their own home and not spend extra money which can go on something else!
"13 year old took great delight in slashing all the clothes in the kid's cloakroom with a knife smuggled in from home." - so if he had smuggled the knife out of a cooking class it would have been different how exactly?
Do kids carry scissors anymore? I know I certainly had one of those when I was at school.