You all thought we were dead - well we are. But something
was sent our way by your mum that was just too good to ignore, so we’ve gone
full Michael Jackson in Thriller (although just like most of the jokes in this
article, we probably shouldn’t make that one anymore).
A recent edition of the Camden New Journal came out with a headline that
stated that a “Headteacher who excluded hundreds of pupils defends ‘robust response to transgressions’”. No points for guessing which authoritarian Head
was the focus of the article...
Yes, the piece revealed that Mr. Szhapeofyoukowski (for it
is he) had defended the fact that “the school approved 815 […] temporary
exclusions over five years” from the academic year 2012-13 to 2016-17. This
puts Hampstead above any other school in the borough for exclusions.
Mr. Szhakeitoffkowski defended such a staggering statistic
by claiming that “transgressions” would not be tolerated at Hampstead School, and
would lead to a “robust response”, obviously having recently read Running a 1940s Boarding School for Dummies.
Next, he’ll be lobbying for the reintroduction of the cane, a ruler across the
knuckles and other strategies for conformity (although you could cane me at any
time, daddy).
And, guess which infamous anarchist gets a mention? Sadly
not by name this time, but that’s also probably a good thing, as we all need
jobs and Google not to grass on us. The Head’s past with the Trash still a persistent
thorn in his side demonstrating the resolve of a man blinded by his own
self-worth. But we do get one of our favourite phrases thrown up too – ‘mad
writings’ – sadly without its natural bedfellow ‘fruity language’.
Seeing as we’re bringing back all the old hits, let’s tick
all the boxes in Trash Bingo. Mr Szlapmybitchupkowski says the level of
exclusions is below the normal level for a school with “comparable levels of
deprivation”, according to the CNJ.
What that means for Hampstead students, we don’t have a clue. But these
statistic about Hampstead in particular speak to several things wrong with the
education system in general.
Firstly, the moronic boomer mindset of “kids have it easy
these days, it was harder in mine!!!” This starts with exclusions at the drop
of a hat and moaning about millennials eating avocado on toast, and ends in
people wanting to bring back the cane and the gallows; any means by which order
can be restored (History students should know who coined that line). As we’ve
said a ludicrous amount of times, school should be a place primarily of
learning, of exploration and discovery, not a place where the primary objective
is to churn out mediocre, anodyne adults. If you enforce an environment where
any creativity and contrarian behaviour is reprimanded (see Trash passim ad nauseum ad infinitum), any
flourishing will be quashed with it.
Secondly, the jury’s out on whether temporary exclusions
actually do any good. Whilst they may remove any problem children from the school
environment, it does nothing to help the student themselves, and only kicks the
problem down the road. In fact, a report by the House of Commons Education Committee
suggests in no uncertain terms the opposite of the Head’s view: “Schools should
not rush to exclude pupils: schools should be inclusive.”
“The evidence we have seen suggests that the rise in so
called ‘zero-tolerance’ behaviour policies is creating school environments
where pupils are punished and ultimately excluded for incidents that could and
should be managed within the mainstream school environment.”
By far the starkest indictment of the report is this line,
that “too many pupils are failed by the system and they are not receiving the
education that they deserve.” It is something oft-said but seldom acted upon by
the Head, that the school has a duty of care to every student, not just the ones behaving; after all, “every minute
is a learning minute”. Taking them out of school absolves the school of that
responsibility, but does nothing to resolve the underlying issues of why they
misbehave.
Whilst the above report comes from a cross-party committee of
MPs, there is little doubt that the lack of funding in the Education system plays
a key factor. We’ve banged on about this forever, through four Tory Education
Secretaries now, and it just seems to be the same s**t, different arsehole.
Privatisation via the back door – in the case of schools the academisation of as
much as possible. Or, as Hampstead did, avoid becoming a de jure academy by
becoming a de facto academy – an academy in practice, and in virtually all but
name. And this exclusion and expulsion policy is straight out of the academy
playbook as a way of dealing with a problem without having to pay to fix it.
Also, I know we must have said this tonnes of times, but
there’s literally nothing wrong with being an anarchist (apart from it being
ideologically incorrect – the correct ideology, of course, being Posadism). This
was in the days before Prevent, with its ridiculous definition of what
extremism is, was ramped up too – I hope the Head has been as quick to call up
the police about potential Islamists or Neo Nazis.
PS Keen-eyed readers will notice that the period of high
exclusions coincides with the heyday of the Trash. We leave it to readers to
decide what prompted what.
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