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Brown joins campaign to beat the school bullies

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Published Date: 25 May 2007
GORDON BROWN was today calling for tougher action by teachers and other professionals to tackle bullying in and around schools.
As part of his Labour leadership campaign, the Prime Minister-in-waiting wants to give teachers new powers to intervene physically to restrain aggressive pupils without fear of court action.

He also wants heads to have new powers to deal with bad
ly-behaved pupils, including those who target other children on their way to and from school.

Mr Brown was backing a campaign by the Beatbullying charity calling for everyone involved - parents, pupils and teachers - to take a stand against bullies.

Mr Brown was also calling for all schools in the UK to have clear authority to enforce detentions and suspensions on badly behaved pupils.

The move follows a recent survey that showed that 40 per cent of secondary school children have been the victim of violence.

Meanwhile, deputy leadership contender and Education Secretary Alan Johnson has accused Industry Minister Margaret Hodge of using the language of the far right BNP over housing.

Ms Hodge had said British families had a "legitimate sense of entitlement" to priority over immigrant families when it came to social housing.

Speaking on BBC TV's Question Time, the Education Secretary said: "My problem with that is that it is the kind of language of the BNP."



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  • Last Updated: 25 May 2007 8:37 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Bullying at school
 
1

Peter - very disappointed/concerned,

Edinburgh 25/05/2007 12:02:07

"enforce detentions and suspensions on badly behaved pupils."

What a complete waste of time (and money).

Society will be forced to restore corporal punishment for bullying and crimes of violence, not only in schools, but accross the board.

Pain and fear are the only things neds/nedettes can understand.

2

Mrs Slocombe,

25/05/2007 12:32:41

How disapointing is that headline! A good beating is what they need.

3

Biker,

Ayr 25/05/2007 12:47:11

Bit rich this is. Hes a big bully himself!!

4

Peter - very disappointed/concerned,

Edinburgh 25/05/2007 14:00:59

Why does bullying in schools seem to be largely the preserve of Council schools? Bullying does not seem to be anything like as serious in the private sector.

"the Prime Minister-in-waiting wants to give teachers new powers to intervene physically to restrain aggressive pupils without fear of court action."

While this is long overdue, I can only see this as being likely to be the cause of many more physical assaults by pupils against teaching staff.

Perhaps 'Bouncers' should be employed in those schools exhibiting the most cases of bullying and violence.

5

alex paterson,

embra 25/05/2007 14:56:35

If the kids were brought up properly by there parents,There would be no need for any action by the Teachers.

6

john montgomery,

26/05/2007 07:04:19

my wife is off sick at the moment having been shoved through a set of doors. as she fell she grabbed the boy to help her balance. the school will not do anything as the boy made a complaint which has since been found malicious. he is at school and she is off. he was just back after a three day exclusion. Head said my wife should not have got in the way!!

anyway, union now dealing with the head.

7

john montgomery,

26/05/2007 07:07:37

head is one of those high fliers having completed a course for accelerated promotion. says a lot for our system. means pupils and staff are not protected against bullies etc.

8

Toast,

26/05/2007 08:17:48

#3 so right,Browns one claim to fame is the fear of god he puts into his fellow MP's,to scared to even nominate a token challenge to his leadership.

9

james 1st,

nz 26/05/2007 09:51:58

bullies only understand a beating, i was ever so happy when i realised that i was as strong as the person bullying me and when i belted him it didnt happen again

10

Keren, It's time,

26/05/2007 10:51:00

Labour is a party of bullies anyhow.

11

Brian Hill,

Brian Hill 26/05/2007 16:11:26

I'm afraid Gordon is headline grabbing again. Despite the fact that bullying is top of any list of surveys on children's fears virtually nothing is being done to prevent it. And why?

Bullies are often very unhappy people who need friendship and guidance in their lives. But teachers are no longer allowed to be friendly with their students, never mind taking them into a quiet room for a chat about their behaviour.

Outside of school adult males generally do not interfere with rowdy youths for fear of their actions being 'misinterpreted'. Society has effectively made a rod for its own back and is now suffering at the hands of its offspring, whose bad behaviour is not confined to the school.

Only a few days ago a Teacher's Union leader called for teachers to be given special vests to protect them from stabbings and this from one of the most cosseted generations of kids in history. Driven everywhere they go and pampered at home with the latest video games and satellite TV, anything but have them set foot in the real world.

No wonder so many of them are socially inadequate, turning them into bullies or victims of bullies, victims in the real sense of the word.

Society will need more than sound bites from the PM in waiting if we are to solve the ever growing problem of not only bullying but juvenile inadequacy which originates from social inadequacy arising from kids today being stifled by over protective parents who have been terrorised for 3 decades by politicians on the make and an avaricious press keen to sensationalise everything in order to keep their journals afloat.

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27/05/2007 07:32:44
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