Glasgow Times

City pupils excluded

- BY EDDIE HARBINSON Local Government Reporter

NEARLY 90 children were excluded from one school alone in Glasgow.

New figures show secondary schools across the city excluded 834 pupils last year, and 310 were excluded from primaries.

HOLYROOD Secondary School excluded the most pupils in all of Glasgow last year.

New figures have shown that 88 kids were told to stay at home after being involved in incidents including fighting, substance misuse and verbal abuse of staff.

And Rosshall Academy had the second highest exclusion rate, with 70 students suspended for fire-raising, assault with improvised weapons and persistent disobedien­ce.

Secondary schools across the city suspended 834 pupils last year, while primaries excluded 310 children.

Aultmore Park Primary ordered 21 kids to stay away from class – the most in Glasgow – for reasons such as substance misuse, spitting and physical attacks on staff.

Award-winning charity Includem, which works to reduce exclusions in schools, has claimed that kicking children out of class isn’t always the best solution.

Chief executive Martin Dorchester said: “We recognise there may be instances where exclusion is necessary and appropriat­e but this in isolation won’t change behaviour in the long term.

“In Glasgow we work in partnershi­p with the city council and schools to identify those young people who are likely to be excluded.

“The aim is both to prevent exclusion and to close the attainment gap by engaging them positively in school.

“Early interventi­on and preventati­ve services are vital to tackle the root causes of problems before they escalate to the level where exclusion becomes the only option left for schools.”

The latest statistics were uncovered after a Freedom of Informatio­n request to Glasgow City Council.

It was found that Hillhead High School had the third highest exclusion rate, with 57, followed by Bannerman High School at 54.

At one school, in the north of the city, at least one pupil was suspended for making a threat of sexual violence against another student.

Glasgow’s Gaelic School temporaril­y excluded students for attacking their peers, while at Notre Dame all-girls high school, pupils were taken out of class for incidents such as slander and libel against staff, verbal abuse of staff and malicious communicat­ions against staff.

At St Michael’s Primary School pupils were caught fire-raising, as well as physically assaulting staff and classmates with weapons.

And at Knightswoo­d Primary School, pupils were suspended for “excluding a peer for a sustained period for the purpose of causing distress”.

Scotland’s largest teachers union, the Educationa­l Institute for Scotland, said that discipline was a major issue for teachers, parents and pupils.

An EIS spokeswoma­n said: “Whilst the majority of pupils in our schools are normally well behaved and eager to learn, there is a persistent minority of pupils who often fail to behave to an appropriat­e standard. It is essential that in all schools effective strategies are in place to support teachers in dealing with pupil indiscipli­ne.”

A Glasgow City Council spokeswoma­n said: “Since 2006, exclusions across the city have reduced by 74 per cent – if children are not in school they are not learning and our schools work very hard to find alternativ­e ways in which to meet the individual needs of our young people.

“Excluding a young person is always the last resort and we have developed a range of initiative­s – including our very successful school mentoring programme – to help support our most vulnerable pupils to help them reach their full potential.”

 ??  ?? Holyrood School in Glasgow excluded 88 children last year
Holyrood School in Glasgow excluded 88 children last year

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