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Pupils treated in hospital as 25 are crushed in freak accident at school



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Published Date: 15 February 2008
TWENTY-FIVE children were injured in a pile-up in a school corridor triggered when a first-year pupil stopped to pick up her shoe.
Paramedics were called to the school to treat pupils for crush injuries, including ankle sprains, bruising and sore heads.

All the children were sent home following the incident, several were taken to hospital and five were kept off school the fo
llowing day.

Stephen Miller, headteacher at Denny High School in Falkirk, said that investigations were ongoing into the incident, which happened outside the school library after morning break on Tuesday.

He insisted the corridors were supervised by both staff and senior pupils who had rushed to give immediate assistance.

He said: "It would appear that the cause of the crush was an innocent and accidental trip by a pupil, who paused to retrieve a shoe but was overtaken by the mass of following pupils unaware that there was a problem ahead.

"In the main, the injuries were soft-tissue damage, ankle sprains, dizziness and sore heads," said Mr Miller.

He added that all the injured were assessed by either a paramedic or a doctor who attended the incident.

"Parents and carers were then immediately notified and the majority of pupils were taken home as a result," the headteacher said. "A few were advised to attend hospital to check the extent of bruises and sprains."

A spokeswoman for Falkirk District council confirmed that the corridor had been supervised at the time and the crush was a freak accident.

A senior pupil at the school, which has 1,250 students, said: "The corridor was really busy, and people just kept walking, and they started to pile up.

"It was just a horrible accident, but I think the worst thing was the shock.

"We were helping the people who had been injured, and at one point it was like the scene in The Wizard of Oz when the witch is trapped underneath the house."

Denny High School is housed in a 1960s building, but staff and pupils are expected to relocate next year to a new building, which is currently under construction.

A council spokeswoman said that there was no design fault with the existing building and that the corridors are not particularly narrow.

Judith Gillespie, development manager of the Scottish Parent Teacher, said: "You don't expect it. Parents would be amazed, but these freak accidents do happen.

"And I would imagine there was some jostling at the back.

"It is very bizarre, and you can't ever legislate for the bizarre."

A spokesman for the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents said: "This was a significant incident in which children were injured.

"It is a timely reminder that a culture of safe thinking and safe behaviour in schools should be encouraged and subject to regular reminders.

"Young people in particular can be overcome with the excitement of the moment, and the consequences of such an event as this arising can be disproportionate to what started it."

A building project which is costing £115 million will replace the existing St Mungo's, Grangemouth, Denny and Falkirk High schools.

Denny High's new building is expected to be completed by February 2009.





The full article contains 544 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 15 February 2008 1:12 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Rulesbutnotrulers,

Federation, not separation 15/02/2008 07:18:43
I expect they'll all soon be claiming millions in damages. Learning about life today, hey?
2

fife runner,

15/02/2008 07:39:57
this is why to some parents it might seem petty having rules about how corridors are used by their kids. Even if the teachers had seen it coming and tried to lay hands on some kids to pull them back the teachers would have been subject to discipline issues over physical handling over the little darlings. If you think I kidding, ask my wife who teaches how bad it has become.
3

MCA.Ald,

alderney 15/02/2008 08:30:27
When I was at school we used to do this deliberately, but out on the playing field. It was called a rugby football scrum. By and large the 'Parents and carers' didn't need to be 'informed', because they were standing on the touchline screaming at us to murder the opposition.
4

Douglas,

Bathgate 15/02/2008 08:33:36
The next time Judith Gillespie is interviewed on such a serious matter perhaps she could be given some time to compose coherent sentences.
It's also unhelpful to describe students as freaks. :o)
5

donald,

glasgow 15/02/2008 08:57:06
Sounds like the Bash St Kids tripping over a banana.
6

MWM,

Argyll 15/02/2008 09:24:18
Another slow news day then!

7

OscarMacApfel,

Dumfries 15/02/2008 09:38:46
Hilarious, hope there's CCTV footage of it.
8

Gothic Rose,

15/02/2008 09:41:56
Oh Oscar!!!!
9

Tracy C,

Aberdeen 15/02/2008 09:52:15
We had a big problem at the last school I worked at with crushing when a corridor was out of bounds due to refurbishment and so you had one stairwell for everyone to move up/down in rather that it being spread over a couple of stairwells.

It was scary when you had literally a couple of hundred pupils trying to do up/down the stairs at the same time.

If someone were to have fell you would have had a serious accident as there would have been no way to have stopped yourself from falling forward down the stairs due to the sheer number of bodies.
10

moira,

cairo 15/02/2008 09:52:15
you are right no 2. Because there is no order any more,or "discipline" if you like, every fire drill in a dangerous experience - especially out here in the EAst.
11

JayDeeTee,

15/02/2008 10:04:37
Wise words from Judith Gillespie. That's cleared that up then.
12

Andrew,

CUMBERNAULD 15/02/2008 10:07:51
This could easily have been another Paisley Glen Cinema/Ibrox tragedy!
13

Filosofo,

Kirkcaldy 15/02/2008 10:15:03
Gosh
14

Crank Parent,

Livingston 15/02/2008 10:43:27
"Judith Gillespie, development manager of the Scottish Parent Teacher, said: "You don't expect it. Parents would be amazed, but these freak accidents do happen."

We can always live in hope that one will happen to her :-D
15

Geraldine Firequeen,

15/02/2008 11:02:30
I expect they were running. Children have no discipline today, and will not accept any. At our school we were never allowed to run anywhere within the school. Serve the brats right anyway, I have no sympathy with any of them.
16

JayDeeTee,

15/02/2008 11:06:39
#15 That's the spirit Geraldine.
17

Exileskin,

Windsor 15/02/2008 11:50:03
EXCELLENT! - I am sure when we were at school we would laughed all the way home - even if we were the ones at the bottom - maybe they don't play rugby in Denny though!
18

Richard P.,

Brechin. 15/02/2008 12:03:46
#17 Nice one.
19

ex-labour,

15/02/2008 16:00:14
In my former school there was no such thing as 'crushing'. It was single file, or else!

And what's happened to the school nurse who used to hand out plasters and skelps as and when?

I don't blame the kids. Kids are kids - they were having a laugh. Now, the poor wee sods will be guarded and protected even more - the last thing they want.
20

WKKB,

15/02/2008 16:23:16
#15 Geraldine: It was a busy corridor, one student stopped unexpectedly and probably quickly in front of another student; I can easily see how this accident happened. I've been tripped up at least once in a busy mall when someone in front of me stopped abruptly and I would suspect if you think about it you've bumped into some one who stopped quickly in front of you but because we're 'adults' here (and in some cases I may have to use that term loosly), we can usually balance ourselves before causing a pile up. How many motorway accidents are considered pile ups because someone went into someone else and so on and so on. It happens and not necessarily because primary school kids were running. How many primary kids watch where they're going? They're usually talking and laughing and showing off pictures or whatever. Get a grip girl!
21

mr angry,

ayrshire 15/02/2008 17:19:41
#20 Get a life saddo, have you no sense of humour , she was being sardonic.
22

Slasher McGurk,

15/02/2008 18:16:29
If the kids were not so obese they would have all comfortably passed the person picking up the shoe. Maybe they should get better fitting shoes
23

OscarMacApfel,

Dumfries 15/02/2008 18:24:02
Now if they were walking two by two, holding hands, with their digit finger of their spare hand covering their lips then this wouldn't have happened. I blame the shoelaces.
24

xxLilyxx,

Bonnybridge 15/02/2008 19:12:22
My daughter used to attend this school and these incidents were a regular occurrence....Hmmmm thing is I personally know the person who "lost the shoe"!! It actually made me smile to read of this happening - it's one of the reasons we moved my daughters' school, amongst others of course. What the article doesn't mention though is the child that caused this is a bully, is always shoving other kids around and this was the MAIN reason we moved our child to a more disciplined school in the area. Strange how this story has hit the press when it's happened before at this school. I read a comment earlier about the witch and the Wizard of Oz....oh how true in this case; I have no sympathy whatsoever for this little prima donna who caused it all! Or maybe it's true what they say "what goes round comes round honey" :-)
25

Nellie,

Liverpool 15/02/2008 20:00:37
#2 Too damned right! I know there are some schools in England (may be Scotland, too) where the schools are so afraid of "abuse" claims that they don't allow staff to touch children at all, even when there is an emergency like the child being sick, wet themselves or pooed in their pants. The child has to wait until a parent or guardian arrives to change them - the school staff are not allowed to do a thing for a child in these circumstances! To my mind, leaving a child with sick all down their clothes or with wet pants and trousers/skirt, or with the pants full of sh#t, now that IS child abuse!! Psychological abuse. If it ever happened to a child of mine I'd call the Police and demand prosecution or, failing that, bring a private prosecution.
26

Enster Buddy,

Anstruther 15/02/2008 20:13:03
21 yup just like the kids in a corridor, eh
27

amckeon,

Michigan 15/02/2008 22:26:02
While sad, this story reminds me of when I was in high school more that fifty years ago. Our halls were so congested during class changes that we used to joke that we only needed to hold on to our books, step into the hall and call out our next room and we would be tossed out at the correct door. Sounds like things haven't changed much. I hope no one was hurt too badly, because I can't help but chuckle.
28

Evia,

15/02/2008 23:44:04
We had to walk through the corridors when I went to school. If we were caught running we could get lines.
29

,

16/02/2008 21:27:15
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
30

Denny High Pupil,

Denny 17/02/2008 00:18:10
I am currently a 6th year pupil at Denny High and, having read your comments, feel I ought to clear a few things up.

#15& 28 should note that, to my knowledge, there was no running involved. It was merely an unfortunate quirk of circumstance.

#15 should also note that the term “brats” is wholly inappropriate as the pupils involved were, for the most part, nice kids that happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. Somehow I fail to see how simply making their way to class through what is normally a perfectly safe corridor merits such injuries.

#22 should note that one’s BMI has no bearing in whether or not you get caught in a crush. The corridor in which this took place is narrow so a one way system is operational, however, as one of the school’s busiest corridors, I cannot think of a worse place to lose a shoe.

As for #3& 17, to clarify, the school has a wide array of sporting activities on offer including a prosperous rugby team.

Finally, I have always felt safe in school and as devastating as this was, the following day, the attitude adopted by staff and pupils alike was “business as usual”. Prefects have been put on high alert until the initial worry is over and personally, I cannot see how the school or council could have dealt any better with the events of last Tuesday morning.
31

datdamwuf,

USA 18/02/2008 19:57:41
This made me LOL. The fact it happened was slightly funny, the comments are priceless. If your schools are so over crowded the kids couldn't stop that's just amazing.

 

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