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Teachers discouraging bullying. Spin off from pink zebra shoe story
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13/12/2012, 11:26 AM
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Posts: 1,347
Joined: 7-June 12
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Advanced Member
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When DD was in Year 7, one awkward boy in the class liked to tuck his polo shirt into his shorts. (govt school) The teachers gave him one point for his faction for every day he wore his shirt out, as they reasoned that he would cop sh*t next year in high school for wearing his polo shirt like that. The kid was socially awkward as I said, not a brazen type who could deal with the outcome. Do you think the teachers did the right thing? As it happened the boy still only let his shirt out about once a week, despite even the kids in his faction begging him to wear the shirt untucked. I don't mean to be an ASW by doing my own thread but I am just interested in the responses since teachers got involved in this one to prevent bullying down the track. ETA: It was in response to Justbeiges comment in the other thread- QUOTE My first thought was "Of course I would" but when I actually thought in true terms and not what should happen.
honestly, no I probably wouldnt. I have no problem with them personally - my son had lots of pink stuff as a younger child and still has a pink teddy - but I think its my job to keep them safe and one of those ways is to not knowingly make them the target of ridicule. I think this is a time and place thing.
*not saying its OK the way society is, just saying that we need to live within this society and children are in no way equiped to deal with bullying and ridicule at this age - hell at any age*
This post has been edited by LindsayMK: 13/12/2012, 11:36 AM
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13/12/2012, 11:49 AM
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Posts: 12,988
Joined: 9-May 03
From: Newcastle, NSW, Australia
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Julie
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I can see why the teacher did it.
But i don't think the teacher went about it the right way. I think making kids aware that some things might make them more of a target is one thing. Suggestions to help them fit in isn't a bad thing.
I do think trying to FORCE that a child to change like that is wrong. The teacher might have been trying to prevent bullying in the future, but instead put him in a position where he was getting pressured from his current classmates to change. It's also encouraging the other kids to think that how you wear your clothes affects who you are. Putting it out there to other kids that if someone bullies you, you are the one at fault. Wrong wrong wrong.
Much better approach is stop any of the bullying, teach the kids in the class to accpet people the way they are. And teach them to stand up to bullying - not just if someone targets, but if they see it happening to anyone. I'm guessing since the class had probably gone through school with this boy, they were accepting of how he wore his shirt, wouldn't have been a big deal. At high school the following year, it's quite likely a few of them at least would have been going to the same schools. They will go to high school and think nothing of the way the kid wears his shirt - which sets an example to the other kids who don't know him.
As I said, good intentions, but I think they went the wrong way about it.
This post has been edited by Julie3Girls: 13/12/2012, 11:56 AM
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13/12/2012, 11:52 AM
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Posts: 1,347
Joined: 7-June 12
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Advanced Member
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Thanks for the responses.The school was actually a great school and the teachers were lovely. It think it was done from a place of protecting the boy when he entered high school. Seems I am alone so far, and that is fine  good discussion.
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