Click here for the Home PageHome:

Our materials will help
your pupils
THINK
and choose to
behave better

Click to play
Age 8 - 11
Age 11 - 16

Professional Organisations:

National Association of Head Teachers Partner
Social, Emotional and Behavioural Difficulties Association
British Educational Communications and Technology Agency
BehaviourOnline has a 5*rating from schoolzone webguide Community
News, Events, Articles...
Click to Order Now

Behaviour Materials
Search Panel









Search

“I have been using BehaviourOnline with students throughout the term with great success. It gets across important points about their behaviour and attitudes.”

Francis Johnson,
Gladesmore School,
London (8th Dec 2018)

Testimonials
08 Apr 2008

Tories Outline Rowdy Pupils Plan


The Conservatives have outlined plans to ban classroom troublemakers and give powers to protect teachers in England.

Mr Cameron says schools have a "severe discipline problem"

Party leader David Cameron said schools would not have to be "penalised" financially for removing persistently badly behaved children.

Good schools would not have to take pupils from bad ones and parents of excluded children would lose the right to appeal to an independent panel.

Schools Minister Jim Knight dismissed the ideas as "gimmicks".

The Tories also want an end to the "fines" imposed by some local authorities on schools that expel pupils.

Party leader David Cameron said money should "follow the pupil" - such as where excluded children's education continues in specialist units - and that schools would not be "penalised" for banning troublemakers.

Teachers shouldn't have to be looking over their shoulders while they are teaching

At present, he added, many schools were using temporary exclusions to keep short-term control, rather than sorting out the situation permanently.

Further Conservative measures would abolish the obligation for schools to provide teaching for excluded pupils after the sixth day of exclusion.

Shadow schools secretary Michael Gove said the Conservatives would make it easier for teachers to confiscate mobile phones used in classrooms.

He added: "Teachers shouldn't have to be looking over their shoulders while they are teaching and schools need to ensure they are places where the majority of pupils are able to learn."

But Schools Minister Jim Knight said the Conservatives' proposals had not been adequately thought through.

He said: "Head teachers have the clear power to exclude disruptive pupils, but they tell us they do not want the appeals process to be abolished as that would see them being dragged through the courts to defend their decisions.

"If head teachers keep the funding for a pupil after they've been excluded, how will the Tories afford to give excluded kids the help and education they need to get back on track?"

John Dunford, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, welcomed the Conservatives' focus on classroom discipline.

But he continued: "There are elements in today's announcement that would, if enacted, cause some problems.

"Ending the right of parents to appeal to an independent panel against exclusion would, as I have said consistently in the past, lead to more parents going to the courts in an attempt to overturn their child's exclusion.

"This would be more stressful, time consuming and costly for heads. Natural justice dictates that some appeal mechanism should be in place and it is far better that this should not be in the courts."

With thanks to BBC News: bbc.co.uk/news for this news item.