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Violent attacks in schools on the rise

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Published Date: 25 October 2008
THE number of attacks on teachers and pupils in Scottish schools is rising, according to new statistics.
Total recorded incidents, including verbal abuse, rose by 4.3 per cent last year, figures obtained from councils using the Freedom of Information Act revealed.

Physical attacks on teachers and pupils rose by 2.2 per cent between 2005-6 and 2
006-7. The highest number of violent acts was in Aberdeen, with 485 incidents last year.

Other areas seeing a sharp rise were Highland, with 149 incidences of physical violence reported last year against 79 in 2005-6, and Borders, which saw a rise from 19 incidents in 2005-6 to 164 last year.

A spokesman for Scotland's biggest teaching union, the EIS,

said: "The Scottish Government and local authorities must acknowledge this serious problem and take urgent action.

"There must always be a policy of zero tolerance against the perpetrators of violent incidents, and they should be removed from classes for the safety of both pupils and teachers."

But he added: "A far greater everyday problem for schools and teachers is persistent, low-level indiscipline by pupils.

"This is immensely frustrating for both teachers and pupils, with many hours of teaching time lost dealing with incidents of petty misbehaviour."

Aberdeenshire had the second-highest number of attacks last year, with 411, though was a reduction on the 475 incidents reported in 2005-6.

Overall attacks including verbal abuse put Glasgow highest with 1,221 instances, and Aberdeen second with 761. The total number of violent attacks in Scottish schools went up from 4,508 to 4,608.

However, not every area saw a rise. Glasgow reported just eight last year compared with 64 the previous year, although that figure does not record incidents that did not result in exclusion. Edinburgh reported 190 incidents of physical violence in 2006-7 compared with 321 the previous year.

Elizabeth Smith, the Conservative schools spokeswoman, said more powers had to be given to headteachers to tackle the problem.

She said: "There has to be a much stronger line. It simply isn't acceptable that these pupils are allowed to remain in mainstream classes disrupting the education of the well-behaved majority and making life a misery for their teachers."

A Scottish Government spokeswoman said any violence against teachers or pupils was unacceptable.

She added: "We want the best, most up-to-date and comprehensive evidence base on behaviour in schools.

"The next national behaviour-in-schools survey, which we have already started to commission, will be more extensive and provide results by 2009."

A spokesman for Aberdeen City Council attributed the city's high incident rate to the "scrupulous reporting" by teachers of any attacks, however minor.

Similarly, a spokeswoman from Glasgow City Council said its low incident rate could be due to teachers not reporting every minor attack.





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  • Last Updated: 24 October 2008 9:52 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Steven M.,

This would never happen if the SNP were in charge. 25/10/2008 00:47:14
Typical labour lies. If Scotland was independent everything would be great.
2

Incandescent,

25/10/2008 03:53:25
Steven M - GIRUY!
3

fife runner,

25/10/2008 08:16:06
Glasgow City Council said its low incident rate could be due to teachers not reporting every minor attack.

Attacks are not seen as minor on NHS staff so why does it become minor when teachers are assaulted. At least Firefighters and NHS staff are covered by statute so why not schools staff having a perticular law making it an aggravation of the crime. My wife has been assaulted twice and the last time she was off 6 weeks and the boy is still at the school having been given three days suspension ad my wife being told she shoud not have got in his way. I have the form signed off by the head to this effect still in my possession
4

fife runner,

25/10/2008 08:17:42
reason not all attacks are reported is because nothing is done unless the teacher is carried out on a stretcher
5

Helter Skelter,

25/10/2008 08:33:40
The UK is a horribly violent place, where childhood is treated with contempt and family life given almost no value.

Now the government wants to start giving sex education to 5 year olds which is part of a trend to destroy childhood.

The UK is a great place for adults without children, plenty of excitement and thrills to be had.

As a place to raise children it is an absolute nightmare...there is nowhere significantly worse.
6

Pocket Dictionary,

25/10/2008 08:59:32
Another reason is the headteacher will not allow staff to make reports because it shows their schools in a bad light. And they don't want it to reflect on them either.

Yesterday at 3.30 pm about a dozen 14 - 15 year olds staggered aroung a local primary school drunk and carrying the remainder of their carry-out. A local parent challenged them for smashing their bottles all around the playground. She went back in her house because of the menacing threats and verbal abuse she was getting from them. Forget the police, it would take them at least an hour to respond to this.
7

Boy Wonder,

25/10/2008 09:12:39
Bring back the belt for Secondary schools!
8

Scythia,

Alba 25/10/2008 10:11:55
Nulabs broken society . The fruits of 11 years of destructive social policies and welfarism. I can hear the "moonbats" blaming poverty, social exclusion etc when the real reason is bad parenting and the blame everyone- but- yoursself culture. Queue another social worker employment drive.
9

,

25/10/2008 18:07:56
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
10

sam the god,

26/10/2008 15:29:37
#7 & #9

I agree with you both the school system went down the toilet when they took the belt away thank you the PC brigade what an AR*E you lot have made of this country.
If you so much as look the wrong way at them you get the line "i will report you to childline" In my day if you did something wrong and were caught the person would give you a good belting and usully by the time you got home your parents had found out about it and you got another belting you soon learned to behave.

 

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