I Would be Happy to Have CCTV Cameras in My Classroom

April 2, 2013

cross

As a male teacher I believe that CCTV cameras would protect me and would reassure parents that I am a professional and trustworthy teacher . I would also be in favour of steaming footage live from my classroom to the parents of my students to give them insights into their child, the style in which I teach and the standard of learning inside the classroom.

I can understand why a falsely accused teacher would be in favour on cameras in the classroom. I just feel that the benefits for teachers are quite compelling:

A Falklands hero told yesterday how his life had been turned upside down by a girl who falsely claimed he sexually attacked her to appear “cool” to her schoolmates.

Ex-para Richard Cross, 51, who retrained as a teacher, said: “One minute I was sitting in school marking books the next I was in the back of a police van.

“That was in December 2011 and I haven’t been allowed back in school since. It’s been absolutely horrific.”

Richard, a dad of two, was cleared of all 10 charges against him after a two-week trial.

A 16-year-old girl, who cannot be named for legal reasons, had accused him of kissing her in a cupboard, putting his hands down her trousers and groping her breasts.

But the design and technology teacher said she had invented the story.

He told Lincoln court: “The girls she wanted to be with were quite a promiscuous bunch. I believe she wanted to be a part of the team.”

Richard, of Welton, Lincs, who is still suspended from his Lincoln school pending a disciplinary hearing, said .

He added: “It is the only way that you can give protection to staff.”

 

Click on the link to read Should Classrooms Be Fitted With Surveillance Cameras?

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Teacher Gave Razors to Student as Part of Sanctioned “Self-Harm” Supervision

March 31, 2013

hurt

How on earth is this in the ‘best interests’ of the child?

A school in Surrey, England for students with Asperger’s syndrome and higher functioning autism is under investigation regarding a policy that allowed teachers to give a student supervised access to razors, despite a history of self-harm.

The student at Unsted Park School was provided sterilized blade kits and escorted to the bathroom to “carry out self-harm in safe and controlled manner,” getSurrey.co.uk reported. The teachers would check on the student periodically and then staff would clean and bandage the wounds.

The policy was allegedly coordinated between the school and the student’s mother, according to the Telegraph.

BBC News reported that the incident occurred in January 2012. The Department of Education became fully aware in December that year, and an emergency inspection was carried out.

The Priory Group, which runs the school, confirmed that the policy did exist but said it was short-lived.

“This was a short-term, local procedure introduced by the head teacher and school principal who genuinely believed it was in the best interests of the pupil,” a Priory Group spokesperson said.

According to getSurrey, several faculty members protested the policy, and it was abandoned after only six days.

Now, the school’s principal, Steve Dempsey, and head teacher, Laura Blair, could be brought before England’s Department of Education’s Teaching Agency to address allegations of unacceptable professional conduct.

The Surrey police were notified by Social Services when the incident first began to happen, the Daily Mail reported, but decided there were no criminal offenses to investigate.

“A senior strategy meeting, which was attended by Surrey Police, was held on January 19, 2012, to ensure that safeguarding practices were put in place,” a police spokesperson said. “This was done to ensure that the practice did not continue at the school and was not put into practice at any other school.”

 

Click on the link to read Children as Young as 5 are Self Harming

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My Heart Bleeds for Children Who Are Exploited

March 28, 2013

seven

These pictures of a seven-year-old child in Syria say it all. I am so relieved that I can bring up my children in a country where this would never be allowed to happen.

smoke

 

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Sickening Video of Girl Being Bullied for Having Ginger Hair

March 27, 2013

Without knowing the school, I venture to say that this story is more than the work of a few bullies and a student who distributed a video online – this is about a culture which tells students that it is alright to persecute another on the basis of the colour of their hair. These bullies were more than likely getting away with all kinds of abuse without any sanction.

Do we really need to wait until viral videos and hospitalisations occur before a school begins to understand the extent of the bullying prevailing in their corridors?

Shocking footage of a schoolgirl being repeatedly kicked in the face by playground bullies ‘because she was ginger’ has appeared on the internet.

The schoolgirl had to be taken to hospital after being dragged to the floor by her hair and kicked in the face four times by playground bullies.

Footage of the brutal assault – which appeared on video site YouTube just hours after it happened –  shows a crowd of pupils at The Deanes School in Thundersley, Essex, encouraging the bullies to attack.

During the assault children can be heard goading the bullies with one boy screaming ‘Let her have it’ as the young girl is thrown to the floor by her hair.The disturbing footage – recorded on a mobile phone camera by a fellow pupil, then shows one attacker brutally kicking the girl in the face.The appalling attack comes just days after leading child abuse campaigner Shy Keenan claimed her 14-year-old son, Ayden, had been ‘bullied to death’ after he was tragically found dead at their family home in nearby Colchester, Essex.

The brave victim returned to school on Tuesday in a show of defiance against the bullies after suffering bruising from the brutal assault.

Jan Atkinson, headteacher of The Deanes School, said: ‘The school is treating this incident very seriously and is taking action against those involved.

‘The students concerned, including the student who uploaded the video, will not be returning to the school.

‘The incident happened during break time and was dealt with by a senior member of staff.

‘The victim was taken to hospital to be checked out. She had some bruising but is fine and has since returned to school.

‘I have spoken to the parents of the students involved and they are confident the school will deal with the situation in the right way.’

Classroom Management is Getting Harder

March 24, 2013

manage

Teacher training really falls flat when it comes to providing new teachers the practical tools to deal with the increasing difficulties of managing a class:

Teachers have warned that disruptive behaviour in classrooms has escalated sharply in recent years, as funding cuts to local services have left schools struggling to cope.

A survey by the Association of Teachers and Lecturers (ATL) found that the vast majority of staff had recorded a rise in the number of children with emotional, behavioural or mental health problems.

The union collated numerous examples of challenging behaviour, ranging from violent assault to defamatory campaigns on social media.

Suggested reasons for the deteriorating behaviour include a lack of boundaries at home, attention-seeking, an absence of positive role models at home, low self-esteem and family breakdown.

The ATL, which has 160,000 members across the UK, said aggressive cuts to the traditional safety net of local services have left schools dealing with complex behavioural and mental health problems on their own.

Earlier this month it emerged that two-thirds of local authorities have cut their budgets for children and young people’s mental health services since the coalition government came to power in 2010. A freedom of information request by the YoungMinds charity found that 34 out of 51 local authorities which responded said their budgets for children’s and young people’s mental health services had been cut, one by 76%.

Alison Ryan, the union’s educational policy adviser, said: “Services are struggling for survival or operating with a skeleton staff, so there’s now a huge pressure on schools to almost go it alone. Schools are absolutely on the front line of dealing with these children and young people and trying to provide a service that means they don’t fall through the cracks.”

, general secretary of the ATL, said: “The huge funding cuts to local services mean schools often have to deal with children’s problems without any help.”

The survey of 844 staff found that 62% felt there were more children with emotional, behavioural and mental health problems than two years ago, with 56% saying there were more than five years ago. Nearly 90% of support staff, teachers, lecturers, school heads and college leaders revealed that they had dealt with a challenging or disruptive student during this school year. One primary school teacher in Cheshire said: “I have been kicked in the head, spat at, called disgusting names, told to eff off, had the classroom trashed regularly and items thrown. We accept children who are excluded from other schools so they come to us with extreme behaviour issues.”

A teacher in a West Midlands secondary school said: “One colleague had a Twitter account set up in front of him on a mobile called Paedo ****** [their name], which invited others to comment on him and his sexual orientation.”

Another teacher in a secondary school in Dudley added: “I’ve been sworn at, argued with, shouted at, had books thrown at me, threatened with physical abuse and had things stolen and broken.”

Bousted added: “Regrettably, teachers and support staff are suffering the backlash from deteriorating standards of behaviour. They are frequently on the receiving end of children’s frustration and unhappiness and have to deal with the fallout from parents failing to set boundaries and family breakdowns.”

On the positive side, most of the disruptive behaviour facing staff was categorised as fairly low level, with 79% of staff complaining that students talked in class, did not pay attention and messed around.

Some 68% added that students were disrespectful and ignored their instructions, 55% said they had dealt with verbally aggressive students, and a fifth with a physically aggressive student. Among secondary and sixth-form students, smoking was considered a significant problem.

On most occasions challenging behaviour was deemed an irritation which disrupted class work, according to 74% of staff, but 42% revealed that they suffered stress and almost a quarter said they had lost confidence at work. Forty of those questioned said they had been physically hurt by a student.

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The People Who “Liked” This Should be Struck Off Facebook

March 23, 2013

child

Aside from the fact that this material should never have found its way onto Facebook in the first place (where posting innocent pictures of breast feeding can get you banned), what kind of sick individual would press “like” to a video containing a girl being sexually abused?

Facebook has sparked fury after a graphic child abuse video went viral on the social network, reportedly being ‘shared’ over 16,000 times.

Thousands of users logged onto their accounts last night to find the horrifying footage appear on their personal news feed and instantly took to Twitter to vent their disgust.

According to users who saw the clip, apparently of a young girl being abused by a grown man, it had already been shared over 16,000 times and received almost 4,000 ‘likes’.

Even more disturbingly, users then began uploading and sharing screen grabs of the video on Twitter in an apparent bid to alert fellow Twitterati of the horrifying content.

Of course the people that “shared” this video are even worse. They should get the same treatment from the law as any other who disseminates child porn on the web.

 

Click on the link to read How Giving Your Children a Bath Can Get You on a Sex Offender Registry

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Teachers, Get Your Hands Off Your Students

March 22, 2013

molest

I am sick and tired of reading daily news stories of teachers having affairs or raping their students. Many will find those 2 scenarios worlds apart (especially if the student is over 16), but to me they are both a form of abuse and are completely abhorrent.

Teachers have been bestowed with great trust by parents. It is beyond unacceptable for teachers to exploit this trust in any way.

When I was a student my classroom teacher and the school security guard where pedophiles. It was not known at the time, but many years later both were arrested for their crimes. These crimes involved the molestation of my friends.

As a treat for good behaviour, our teacher once organised a swim party where he got in the water with us and encouraged us not to be shy about dressing and undressing together.

As much as I don’t enjoy the mistrust of being a male primary teacher and the extra precautions I have to take in order to avoid any doubt of impropriety, I understand and accept it. If the stigma helps weed out any potential pedophiles or unprofessioanl teachers, it’s more than worth it.

The punishment for a teacher found to be having consensual or non-consensual relations with their students should be much more severe than for other members of the community.

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Inviting the KKK to Your Classroom is Irresponsible

March 20, 2013

Ku Klux Klan Holds Annual Gathering In Tennessee

The KKK do not need to be given a platform to speak to impressionable children . Whilst I agree that students should form their own political and philosophical views, inviting hatemongers into the classroom is not the role of a teacher,

I don’t understand how some teachers feel that by inviting KKK members and neo-Nazis, they are achieving anything constructive. Surely they should invite inspirational people who embody respect and tolerance instead:

Popular knowledge suggests that hate is learned, like writing or reading. So who is the most effective teacher, and what happens when professors and teachers invite hate groups like the Ku Klux Klan, neo-Nazis and the Westboro Baptist Church into the classroom?

The answer, of course, isn’t simple. An engrossing piece from the Washington Times’ Tim Devaney describes the rise of this teaching tactic in some schools.

Randy Blazak, a sociology professor at Portland State University in Oregon, told Devaney that he brings neo-Nazis into class because they humanize a hatred so extreme that students often consider it separate from humanity’s capacity — like a relic of some past time that’s carried to this day by people who no longer understand it. This lesson is a big day in a syllabus that considers the role of extremism in broader society.

“It’s a good idea to know what’s out there,” Blazak said. “They’re not monsters. They’re human beings, wrestling with their own issues.”

It’s this passion that may scare students into grasping a lesson that otherwise wasn’t considered so close at hand.

“We can agree that Nazis are the bad guys in history, but how much are you like that Nazi in your biases?” Blazak said.

The teaching technique exposes a raw nerve in a country where students are suspended for eating a gun-shaped Pop-Tart, tweeting about a teacher’s car, writing about an attraction to a theoretical teacher in a creative writing assignment or simply trolling on YouTube.

A teacher was placed on administrative leave in 2010 when she allowed four students to dress in Ku Klux Klan costumes for a class presentation on American history. Students complained to their parents and a national scandal ensued. A similar story unfolded last year in Las Vegas, except that the teacher wasn’t punished.

What do you think? Should teachers animate members of hate groups to show students up close an ugly dimension of human behavior? Or should schools create greater distance between their students and these ideas? Are students and schools mature enough to adopt such teaching methods into a larger curriculum?

 

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Monitoring Children’s Social Networking Activities Proving too Difficult for Parents

March 20, 2013

social

It is very easy to advise a parent to take an active interest in their children’s online activities. It is much harder to put that advice into action:

After Friendster came MySpace. By the time Facebook dominated social media, parents had joined the party, too.

But the online scene has changed – dramatically, as it turns out – and these days even if you’re friends with your own kids on Facebook, it doesn’t mean you know what they’re doing.

Thousands of software programs now offer cool new ways to chat and swap pictures. The most popular apps turn a hum-drum snapshot into artistic photography or broadcast your location to friends in case they want to meet you.

Kids who use them don’t need a credit card or even a cellphone, just an Internet connection and device such as an iPod Touch or Kindle Fire.

Parents who want to keep up with the curve should stop thinking in terms of imposing time limits or banning social media services, which are stopgap measures.

Experts say it’s time to talk frankly to kids about privacy controls and remind them – again – how nothing in cyberspace every really goes away, even when software companies promise it does.

‘What sex education used to be, it’s now the “technology talk” we have to have with our kids,’ said Rebecca Levey, a mother of 10-year-old twin daughters who runs a tween video review site called KidzVuz.com and blogs about technology and educations issues.

More than three-fourths of teenagers have a cellphone and use online social networking sites such as Facebook, according to the Pew Research Center’s Internet and American Life Project.

But Facebook for teens has become a bit like a school-sanctioned prom – a rite of passage with plenty of adult chaperones – while newer apps such as Snapchat and Kik Messenger are the much cooler after-party.

Even Facebook acknowledged in a recent regulatory filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission that it was losing younger users: ‘We believe that some of our users, particularly our younger users, are aware of and actively engaging with other products and services similar to, or as a substitute for, Facebook,’ the company warned investors in February.

Educators say they have seen kids using their mobile devices to circulate videos of school drug searches to students sending nude images to girlfriends or boyfriends. Most parents, they say, have no idea.

Respect For Authority is Alive After All

March 18, 2013

Isn’t is wonderful to see a child respecting authority? Most 12-year-olds would have created a stink if they spelled a word during a spelling bee correctly only to be told by a judge that it was incorrect. But this young girl showed dignity and respect by accepting the verdict of the judge:

Spelling savvy runs in Sierra Shoemaker’s family — the 12-year-old’s mom competed in spelling bees as a girl, according to Fox News. But Friday’s bee at Sierra’s California school district almost put the youngster out of the running this year, all due to a judging gaffe.

As KMPH reports, when Sierra spelled “braille,” she knew she had it right. The judges, however, claimed the word only had one “l” in it because that incorrect spelling appeared on their answer sheet at the Selma School District spelling bee.

Sierra said even the audience caught the error, but she knew better than to make a stink about it in competition, even if it meant elimination.

“I didn’t want to say anything, because… if the word master tells you [that] you got a word wrong, you don’t really argue with him,” Sierra told KMPH.

Fortunately, the school community got behind her. ABC News reports that an initial appeal on Sierra’s behalf was rejected by the county, but her school “appealed the appeal” and won.

Sierra will compete at the 2013 Fresno County Spelling Bee, which takes place March 21.

 

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