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UK schools: Teachers out, troops in
11-14-2011, 02:44 PM
Post: #1
UK schools: Teachers out, troops in
Quote:A UK government still reeling from major riots is planning to get tough on gang culture by deploying soldiers in the nation’s schools. While the plan’s authors believe discipline is key, critics say the boot camps will only alienate kids further.

­When the going gets tough, the tough get going – and army boot-camps are not the place to step out of line.

It is this culture of military self-control the government now wants to bring into schools to cure the lack of discipline it blames for the recent riots. So it is calling on the cavalry – well, retired soldiers – to swap the frontline for the front of a classroom.

The government is fast-tracking troops into teaching as a way, it says, to restore adult authority in the wake of last summer’s riots. It wants to provide more male role models, even giving teachers new powers to use physical force as a way to control disruptive pupils.

“It is not a bad thing for children to know where they stand,” says Affan Burki, an army captain and future headmaster of the Phoenix School. “If they step to the wrong side of the line, they will be punished accordingly. If they stay on the right side of the line, within the confines of the law, they will not be punished.”

It is a line few might dare cross with a teacher like Burki at the helm. He has been appointed headmaster at a new academy where every teacher will be a former soldier. Uniform inspections and military-style roll-calls will provide the polish on a strict routine.

“When you can maintain discipline in a theater of war, which is the most high-pressured situation, you can maintain discipline in a classroom in Oldham,” says Burki.

With corporal punishment now a step closer to being sanctioned, many fear it will push already alienated youth further away.

“I think they would start building their own gang, as they have done towards the police,” explains Mena Mawson from the Youth Education Support Services. “I have seen how the police behave towards our kids. It is two gangs, isn’t it? You could say the police are a gang. It would be the army against the kids. I think they would become more unruly.”

The Youth Education Support Services charity takes in problem pupils the state system chucks out and turns their lives around. According to teachers here, it is about finding the right kind of stimulation rather than simply cracking a whip.

“They become unruly because they are bored,” says Mawson. “Putting discipline in isn’t the answer just on its own. Discipline yes, but actually making sure they’ve got something at their own level.”

RT’s Ivor Bennet talked with a 16-year-old who is still too afraid to be identified. He was expelled from school after what he will only refer to as “an incident”. Back then, he was on course to fail all his exams, but after just a year with the charity he passed 14 of them – a far cry from someone supposedly too disruptive to be taught.

The boy says that the idea of bringing in more discipline would not have worked for him. Individual attention was the only thing that turned his education around.

But with the government touting an education system that prides itself on conformity, the battle could be only just beginning.

http://rt.com/news/uk-schools-army-discipline-233/

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11-14-2011, 06:27 PM
Post: #2
RE: UK schools: Teachers out, troops in
This may be the tip of the iceberg in a program in development but the article fails to cite references for their claim of a government program for fast tracking of retired military as teachers but I suppose all education (save for private) has government involvement.

The examples provided are of one student and two schools, one that hasn't even been founded yet, with a total (potential) 2013 population of 410 students.

Quote:Youth Education Support Services (Y.E.S.S) is a charity based in Camberwell providing GCE, GCSE and City and Guilds courses. Since being formed in 2003 the YESS centre has had over 350 students attend the centre.
http://www.yesslondon.org.uk/

YESS is a discipline based school but is not run by military contrary to the article's tone and context.

However the Phoenix School is something of a test balloon that should be taken more seriously since it does employ former military and plans on being quite aggressive in its obedience school. That said it is only in the prototype phase.

It would be nice to know who, or what committee, has decided to go ahead with the Phoenix school.

Quote:If given the go-ahead, the school would open in 2013 with one group of Year Seven pupils. It will be expanded each subsequent year.

Mr Burkard said they needed a minimum of 60 pupils for the school to be viable but said they had been overwhelmed by the response so far.
http://www.oldham-chronicle.co.uk/news-f...local-base
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-man...r-14754069

"Overwhelmed" is a relative term that can be taken widely out of context.

Not saying there is nothing to worry about, and people should be wary of it's emergence, but this is a clear case of more sensationalist (and omissive) reporting by Russia Today and other media, probably to provoke a polarized emotional response.

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11-15-2011, 02:15 AM
Post: #3
RE: UK schools: Teachers out, troops in
Oh, I'm keeping a close eye on this one, if only for its sheer humour value.

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