By Gavin Mackintosh-
Damien Hinds must hold pupils responsible for their school exclusions. The education secretary needs to find a way to address exclusions in schools without making it the responsibility of the school to make pupils behave.
School exclusions has been a bother for the education secretary who has pumped plenty of money into primary and secondary schools in the last few years. School exclusions are widespread in many of our British schools, but this is because of the poor behaviour of teenagers who have no proper measure of good behavioural standards. Hinds has recently expressed concerns about the number of exclusions in secondary schools, but the real issue has to be the cause of the exclusions.
Difficult children to manage who refuse to be submit to the authority of their teachers and cause a nuisance, are a problem to several schools in the uK.
Teachers are becoming increasingly fed up of some of the challenges posed by students who are committing acts of nuisance. School pupils can be very rude and disruptive, swearing at teachers and sometimes even attacking them. No teacher should have to put up with such behaviour. Exclusions should always be a last resort, but schools must be afforded the deserved right to expel pupils they find burdensome to teach. The education minister has expressed a desire to see pupils in alternative education receive the same standard of education as pupils in mainstream schools
This is a worthy goal, but can only happen if the pupils will listen to authority. Schools that consists of naughty pupils who have been expelled from a previous school are less likely to receive a op education in that school if they are prone to bad behaviour.