studio150
Well-known member
School's out for summer, school's out for ever....
Now remind me, when was that a number one hit record.
1972 was it really that long ago
School's out for summer, school's out for ever....
Now remind me, when was that a number one hit record.
were you beaten as a kid then
regards
DR
where's it all leading to in LIFE OUT OF SCHOOL some of these kids work in shops and haven't got a clue in basic manners when dealing with people, I've seen it for myselfI suppose a lot has to do with the schools having a hand tied behind the back so to speak,fear of discipline for risk of running into a lawsuit may come into it too,also general standards have fallen across the board,i mean even the F word is getting more common place on normal TV these days.
fair play, at least you knew the punishment was thereI had the cane three times at school, six strokes each time. Once for smoking, once for defrauding the school dinner money ticket system, and once forlaughing at a teacher who slipped over.
The school of hard knocks, indeed
fair play, at least you knew the punishment was there
regards
DR
where's it all leading to in LIFE OUT OF SCHOOL some of these kids work in shops and haven't got a clue in basic manners when dealing with people, I've seen it for myself
regards
DR
what about parents coming into the school calling the shots ,I coach kids from Paca, Patcham, Hove Park, Blatch, Shoreham Academy, PCS, Stringer, Cardinal Newman and Downlands both boys and girls. Aged 12-15...all from different backgrounds- there are kids who have issues and some of their friends do as well.
However, despite some having more issues than others I see nothing in any of those lads or girls that makes me think there are any different issues than there were when I was growing up in the 80s.
Teenage kids are often demonised because of the way they look or dress as they are perceived in the media to be threatening. The whole "hug a hoodie" attitude by Cameron a few years back was patronising and lacked respect and this is all that most kids want.
Granted life is very very different in Sussex than it is in inner city London and that is more to do with a lack of things to do. We are fortunate that many kids have grassroots football or other sports and activities to take a sense of pride in, whereas those who don't are usually the ones who struggle. That said I do believe that consoles are generally a good thing as they encourage social play amongst friends- often my youngest plays online with 10-15 of his friends - something that wasn't possible 20 years ago and that's amazing.
If teachers believe they need to wear cameras in schools because they feel threatened then I'd suggest it's because there is a huge disconnect in respect between the pupil population and the staff where one feels the other is trying to undermine the other.
I don't profess to know the answers but what I've found with the lads in particular is that if you respect them, don't patronise them, let them know there's a line but be relaxed enough to have a laugh and a banter with them then you will get so much reward back in return.
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some of these kids work in shops and haven't got a clue in basic manners when dealing with people
TAKES ONE TO KNOW ONE I GUESSHave you met the general public though? They're more often than not a bunch of knobs with a sense of entitlement. You only need to go to the AMEX to see how rude punters are.
I appreciate that , but I bet it's a hard core of parents causing the problems , which then affects discipline on a larger scale with in the school ?
regards
DR
spot onAny teacher worth their salt can find ways to discipline children without the use of violence. We have made great strides in these areas and know far more about effective teaching than we did in the 'good old days'.
Sadly, as has been evidenced on this thread there are too many parents who back their children against the school making it nigh on impossible to action the discipline and consequences that the children need. If your parents back you and beleive your side of the story their is no reason at all to accept responsibility for your actions.
Some schools get it right, some fail spectacularly. I took my son out of high school in BTN due to bullying that went unchecked. They had 'safe spaces' for him, and others that felt unsafe to go at breaks. I argued that the school should be a 'safe space' and violent and aggressive pupils should be the ones excluded from break, not the ones getting bullied. I might as well have been speaking Chinese. Maybe if the 'exclusion' of disruptive/violent kids went as far as schools saying to parents 'if your child does not respect teachers and the rights of other children to learn then you will have to home educate them, here is the web-site/curriculum, good luck', the situation may change?
Any teacher worth their salt can find ways to discipline children without the use of violence. We have made great strides in these areas and know far more about effective teaching than we did in the 'good old days'.
Sadly, as has been evidenced on this thread there are too many parents who back their children against the school making it nigh on impossible to action the discipline and consequences that the children need. If your parents back you and beleive your side of the story their is no reason at all to accept responsibility for your actions.
heard on the news that teachers in some areas will be wearing body cams to record behaviour in the class room
, also to many parents coming into schools telling staff how to treat their kids ,kids damaging school property , where's all the discipline gone FFS
regards
DR