debih wrote:I agree with staff having to give the child with a serious digestion problem his/her medication and being trained to do so. Without them that child probably wouldn't be able to go to school and I strongly believe that schooling should be available to all. Schools should be inclusive - a child should not be penalised because of illness, disability or their social background.
I think schooling should be available for all too. But the danger with the inclusive approach is that imo it dilutes what school should be about, which is education. Teachers and staff now have to deal with many difficult and disturbed children. This means not only dealing with the fallout, such as disturbed children attacking other children and members of staff, but having to restrain these children and having to provide a room for them to be taken to after each outburst. Additionally staff have to be taught how to administer medicine and what to do if one child has a seizure.
Staff also have to attend many, many multi-agency meetings; not only because of children but because of their parents.
All of this has placed a largely unacknowledged extra burden on schools, not least in the demands on staff time. I don't believe that it is possible to accommodate all of these extra responsibilities without the quality of education suffering.
debih wrote:It is a sorry state of affairs that children so young are so violent but we do have to ask ourselves what society has done to them to make them this way. I don't think the blame should be put on the child - we should be looking at the reasons behind it (which are more than likely from bad parenting).
I don't think society has done anything to them, I would say that you are right about the bad parenting.
debih wrote:I find it so shocking that children who start school often have no social skills at all - they live on a diet of tv's and computers and don't know how to play. Four year olds are very often not toilet trained, they don't know how to use a knife and fork, nor do they know how to behave in a classroom. They don't have attention spans anymore- they are so used to fast moving computer screens, they don't need to learn how to concentrate on a task. But the child can't be blamed for that - its the parents fault.
Yes, it is the parents fault, but they are not the ones expected to put it right. As you know, the school has to do that. Again, they have to spend time teaching the children not only how to do their laces or put their coats on, but to use their knife and fork and in some cases even how to speak.
Schools seem increasingly where the problems of society are parked and where teachers are now part of the social services and this has to have an effect on the quality of education.