Zingari Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 I'd like detention with that head mistress. She once went out with the son of one of the Chuckle Brothers , that 's a tough act to follow !
21st Century Fox Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 She once went out with the son of one of the Chuckle Brothers , that 's a tough act to follow ! Unless you're Ian Rush.....
Guest Col city fan Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 Isn't this the sort of thing Daily Mail readers would advocate anyway? Putting unruly kids in their place, fixing broken Britain with some discipline. So is this only a story because it's easy to sensationalise or because there's a woman at the centre of it? I'm a Daily Mail reader and I make no apology to you or anyone else for that. And yes I do feel discipline in schools sunk to its lowest depths over recent years. When any kid can smack a teacher around its game over. I was at a pretty rough school, back in the 80's and I remember the first kid to ever punch a teacher at the school. He was immediately expelled. I can even remember his name. There was a massive cuffuffle about it at the time. As far as I can remember, this was the only such incident in all 5 years I was there. However, discipline/respect/rules/regs has to be balanced. It seems to me like this woman has gone in with an agenda and is probably trying to impose too much too quickly. In my experience unless she's a very tough personality that won't work. Rome wasnt built in a day. Some of the moral values and codes in this great ol country of ours have gone downhill IMO. I'm glad this woman seems to want to reverse some of this but she's better off to do it gradually and by balancing respect with discipline. Without the former, the latter may well die in the water. As a parent I know what I'd rather have for my son. Smaller classes, kids that dont mouth off at each other and the teachers and an ethos in which kids feel that hard work and achievement actually means something. However, as a parent what I don't want is a headmistress going ridiculously over the top with this either.
Guest Col city fan Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 Makes you wonder what lengths you should go to as a head teacher when kids are leaving the class room every 3 minutes to go to the toilet (or rather send a text) and phones cause issues as they are valuable and end up nicked or smashed which leads to complaints. Shoes too - trainers cause division and are often nicked and taken......... Not saying this head teacher is going about things the right way, I just maybe understand what has led to why she has made the decisions she has........ I fully agree. A ridiculous situation calls for ridiculous measures in this case or so it would seem.
MooseBreath Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 For valuables like phones, how about lockers? They work during PE, so I'm sure they would work during other classes as well.
Guest Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 She once went out with the son of one of the Chuckle Brothers , that 's a tough act to follow ! She'd do more than chuckle if ...
Guest Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 For valuables like phones, how about lockers? They work during PE, so I'm sure they would work during other classes as well. I've been to schools where the lockers are regularly broken into. I've seen kids as young as 4 and 5 playing the "toilet" game with teachers, and phones are the latest headache for every teacher from age 10 to uni and beyond. None of them should be a problem. With some students it's never a problem, yes some (many) teachers are crap and poorly trained but the bottom line is usually the student and his "moral" upbringing. If they listened to parents who told them to turn off their phones in lessons and to do some work in class - there wouldn't be a problem at all. And that fat kid should do some laps and then tuck his shirt in.
Charl91 Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 I remember the first kid to ever punch a teacher at the school. He was immediately expelled. I'm pretty sure that's what still happens at most (if not all) schools, with maybe the exception of primary.
Guest Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 I've known secondary school kids to pin teachers to walls in England without expulsion.
purpleronnie Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 I'm a Daily Mail reader and I make no apology to you or anyone else for that. And yes I do feel discipline in schools sunk to its lowest depths over recent years. When any kid can smack a teacher around its game over. I was at a pretty rough school, back in the 80's and I remember the first kid to ever punch a teacher at the school. He was immediately expelled. I can even remember his name. There was a massive cuffuffle about it at the time. As far as I can remember, this was the only such incident in all 5 years I was there. However, discipline/respect/rules/regs has to be balanced. It seems to me like this woman has gone in with an agenda and is probably trying to impose too much too quickly. In my experience unless she's a very tough personality that won't work. Rome wasnt built in a day. Some of the moral values and codes in this great ol country of ours have gone downhill IMO. I'm glad this woman seems to want to reverse some of this but she's better off to do it gradually and by balancing respect with discipline. Without the former, the latter may well die in the water. As a parent I know what I'd rather have for my son. Smaller classes, kids that dont mouth off at each other and the teachers and an ethos in which kids feel that hard work and achievement actually means something. However, as a parent what I don't want is a headmistress going ridiculously over the top with this either. thats because you read the daily hate.
Zingari Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 She'd do more than chuckle if ... I wonder if she shouts " to me to you, to me to you " while she's being poked ?
21st Century Fox Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 I've known secondary school kids to pin teachers to walls in England without expulsion. Pffffttt Modern Art is overrated.
Zingari Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 Pffffttt Modern Art is overrated. ft poster Foxy PV often pinned his teacher against the wall , i think he he still does but not as often now he's married to her
Guest Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 I wonder if she shouts " to me to you, to me to you " while she's being poked ? Only when she's cum swapping I'd imagine.
Guest Col city fan Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 thats because you read the daily hate. Not that's because of what I think and see.
Bryn Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 Seems harsh, but if you're teaching the progeny of people who deem buying £25 black shoes for school to be outrageous then perhaps needs must.
Mike Oxlong Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 Jeez. That head looks RAF And the scruffy bint ought to buy a blouse that fits before kicking off about dress standards And as for the tubby kid - handcuffs and a treadmill will sort the little porker out. Gotta be cruel to be kind and all that
General Smuts Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 I would give her the most unfulfilled 20 seconds of her life.
Legend_in_blue Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 The only reason all this is being done is to please ofsted. For example, the head of ofsted has said schools need to ban mobile phones. He doesn't state how this should be done, but it's what is expected. Just do it, regardless of how to do it. This school's rule on mobiles is an interpretation of this.
Captain... Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 Seems harsh, but if you're teaching the progeny of people who deem buying £25 black shoes for school to be outrageous then perhaps needs must. Or the fact that it resulted in eggs being thrown at teachers, it doesn't specify that the eggs were thrown by the angry parents, but it would have been seen and wasn't stopped by them. It basically looks a whole cloud of stupid just rained over them all. First of all send your kids to school in the correct school uniform, secondly if they turn up with the wrong foot wear, don't send them home, just ensure the parents are made aware of the violation and ask them to fix it the earliest opportunity, allowing a weekend for those who aren't able to drop everything and go shopping in the middle of the week. Thirdly, if you have a problem with the school's actions, don't gather at the gates shouting and throwing eggs, behave like adults and go and talk to the head. Is any of the above that difficult?
TheUltimateWinner Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 Surely its against the law to do that kind of stuff? Isn't it restricting a student's human rights? The school don't have consent to search any belongings let alone constrict them from going toilet. Hate to say it but if I had used the pass already once before i'd just wet myself, Showing them what else can I do? And I thought my school was harsh for not letting us wear Polo shirts without the logo on.
Leicfox Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 This kind of thing is happening at the school my daughter attends She's currently just started year 10 but last year she was sent home as her hair had a slight hint of red in it when sunlight hit it from a chestnut Brown hair dye her mum had applied during the school holidays...crazy. This school year the teachers are standing at the gates armed with baby wipes and nail vanish remover while the pupils are asked to show their nails and be inspected for uniform/footwear before they enter the gates. What annoys me is some of the teachers have bright pink and blue hair and have facial piercings
Guest Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 I'd want to know why I was being asked to do that if I were a teacher.
lavrentis Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 I really don't envy teachers, from what I saw on secondary school some go through a very hard time with kids (one time i thought one of my history teachers was going to have a heart attack) and for the trouble don't they get about 29k a year?
whoareyaaa Posted 10 September 2012 Posted 10 September 2012 I thought this was a joke untill I seen the picture of the head, typical power struck women.
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