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Punishment is no answer to unruly
pupils, says UK adviser
The leader of a new task force charged with taming
unruly pupils warned the Government yesterday against “demonising”
children.
Sir Alan Steer was appointed yesterday by Ruth Kelly, the Education
Secretary, to chair a committee of heads and teachers with proven
records in tackling poor behaviour.
She said they would be expected to recommend three or four key proposals
for enforcing a “culture of respect” in every school through zero
tolerance of poor behaviour.
But Sir Alan told The Times that he saw no simple solution to the issue
and did not recognise “zero tolerance”. He said: “I can understand that
Government and Opposition wants the magic button, but the truth is it
probably does not exist.
“We have to be careful that we do not spend all our
time talking about whether we should punish children this way or that
way. It is a pretty sterile discussion.
“The real skill is making sure you don’t have to punish them at all by
having a focus on consistency of good lessons and good teaching.”
Sir Alan, who was knighted last year for his success as head of Seven
Kings High School in Ilford, Essex, continued: “We must not demonise
young people. At the moment, we are in danger of whipping discussions up
into a frenzy, which will make it very difficult to assess the real
issues. Nobody is denying there are problems but not all young people
are horrible. Zero tolerance is not a phrase I would use and I don’t
know quite what it means.”
Ms Kelly said the group would report by October on whether there should
be a national code of behaviour in schools, improved teacher training to
deal with unruly pupils, and extra disciplinary powers for heads. It
would also consider more protection for teachers and review the
operation of appeals panels.
“If this group can come up with three or four
programmes that clearly work ... in a range of schools, then I think
that would be a very valuable contribution,” the Education Secretary
told the Today programme on BBC Radio 4. “Then we can say to schools,
you should adopt one of these programmes and there is no excuse any more
for poor behaviour in the classroom.”
Sir Alan, a head for 20 years, said that much disruption was also linked
to a failure in schools to deal effectively with children who had
special educational needs. “If we put the message out to children that
we don’t value them and don’t make efforts to look after them, it is
hardly surprising that we get misbehaviour,” he said.
“Many secondary schools are also quite unattractive places. If we want
children to behave, we want schools to be reasonably civilised, with
carpets on the floors, pictures on the walls and to be clean.”
He would be unhappy if a zero tolerance policy
translated into large numbers of children being kicked out of schools.
Parents could not expel children for having a tantrum and teachers had
to be equally willing to “go the extra mile”.
Tony Halpin
21 May 2005
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-1621548,00.html
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