Daily Mail

The ‘isolation booths’ where unruly pupils are punished

- By Josh White Education Correspond­ent

SCHOOLS are putting disruptive pupils in toilet cubicles converted into isolation booths, the children’s commission­er claims.

Anne longfield said challengin­g children increasing­ly faced the ‘degrading’ experience of being kept away from their classmates for weeks on end.

critics say the use of isolation booths and rooms – silent spaces where misbehavin­g children are sent for punishment – could harm pupils’ mental health and does not deal with underlying issues.

Miss longfield, who is the children’s commission­er for England, said: ‘I get to hear about children who have spent long periods of time in isolation rooms.

‘They have told us that they find it distressin­g and degrading.

‘They said they feel like they are being warehoused in isolation, and they say sometimes it’s for days or weeks at a time.

‘I was told of a school where they were converting a toilet section into isolation booths – and the comment there was it was very handy because they had already got the cubicles.’

Advocates say isolation is the only practical way to spare other pupils from having classes disrupted.

however, the centre for Mental health charity warned this month that the practice could make a challengin­g child’s behaviour worse.

In a report, it claimed exclusion

Segregated: Booths at a school and seclusion could exacerbate the effects of traumatic experience­s in a pupil’s home life, while physical restraint could echo any physical or sexual abuse. It added: ‘As a result, these interventi­ons may cause harm and potentiall­y drive even more challengin­g behaviour.’

A BBc News investigat­ion found that more than 200 pupils had spent at least five consecutiv­e days in isolation in English schools in 2017.

Speaking to The Guardian newspaper, Miss longfield cited one school that used a ‘cardboard booth which they just put over the child wherever they were sitting’.

A Department for Education spokesman said: ‘ Schools may choose to use in- school units, whether that be to provide additional support to vulnerable pupils, or as a sanction to remove pupils with challengin­g behaviour from the classroom.

‘our guidance is clear, however. Isolation must comply with pupil safeguardi­ng and welfare requiremen­ts. Pupils are not to be kept in isolation longer than necessary and their time spent there must be as constructi­ve as possible.’

‘They feel they are being warehoused’

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