The Gold Coast Bulletin

State: No automatic penalties

- KEITH WOODS

A GOLD Coast councillor has called for the state government to give school principals the power to automatica­lly suspend students who assault teachers or deal drugs.

However Minister for Education Grace Grace says that while the safety of students and staff is “incredibly important”, she does not support introducin­g mandatory consequenc­es for poor behaviour.

The Department of Education says there are no automatic suspension­s or exclusions in state schools, with each situation “considered and determined by the principal based on the particular circumstan­ces”.

Its published ‘student discipline procedure’ adds that before dishing out punishment­s principals must:

■ Undertake an assessment of the human rights that may be impacted by any decision.

■ Take into account a student’s individual circumstan­ces such as behaviour history, disability, mental health and wellbeing, religious and cultural considerat­ions, home environmen­t and care arrangemen­ts.

Principals are also advised that suspension­s or exclusions should only be applied “as a strategy of last resort”.

Division 11 councillor Hermann Vorster said he had concerns about the strategy, which he had expressed in a letter to Ms Grace last year.

“The government forbid schools from modifying (their Student Code of Conduct) to reintroduc­e minimum mandatory outcomes for misbehavio­ur,” Cr Vorster said.

“For example a school might have had an automatic suspension if a student punched a teacher in the head. That no longer applies, a school can’t do that.

“I would suggest that mandatory minimums should exist when you’re dealing with issues of selling drugs and physically abusing staff.”

In a Bulletin expose on Monday teachers said some schools had become like “war zones”, with students facing little consequenc­es for their actions.

Cr Vorster said he was concerned young people who “did not understand consequenc­es” were going on to offend outside the school environmen­t.

“Robina, almost like Helensvale, is a big public transport interchang­e,” he said. “So there are students in school uniforms coming into the area, abusing substances and getting up to no good. There are school-aged kids in school uniforms running amok.”

Cr Vorster said he had spent $250,000 of divisional funds – enough for “five playground­s” – on measures including CCTV and vegetation clearing as a result. “That’s a cost that the ratepayer has to bear because I believe the state is not dealing properly with the culture of student behaviour.”

Ms Grace told the Bulletin she did not support introducin­g mandatory consequenc­es.

“The safety and wellbeing of all Queensland state school students and teachers is incredibly important to the Palaszczuk Government,” Ms Grace said. “Each school applies disciplina­ry consequenc­es in line with their own School Code of Conduct that sets out the expectatio­ns for student behaviour and the types of consequenc­es that will apply.

“I don’t support the introducti­on of mandated consequenc­es in state schools.

“Principals have extensive powers and are best placed to appropriat­ely address student discipline, including student behaviour that threatens the safety and wellbeing of other students and staff.”

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