New Era

Pupils’ ill behaviour and its implicatio­ns on teachers

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The nature of teaching exposes teachers to civil liabilitie­s.

In the process of teaching, teachers need to discipline learners who display bad behaviour.

In disciplini­ng the pupils, teachers use a variety of punishment­s which include sending learners outside the classes, suspend them from the hostel or apply minimal corporal punishment.

In doing the said punishment­s, inadverten­tly teachers may find themselves on the wrong side of the law.

Teachers in their interactio­ns with pupils are expected to maintain law and order in and about schools if meaningful teaching and learning are to take place.

For them to maintain this sense of order, the teachers, finding reinforcem­ent from the concept of in loco parentis – and from the school rules, have the right to punish pupils otherwise the objectives of the schools may not be realised.

Society on the other hand expects teachers to be experts on all matters that are brought to bear on their schools.

The legal documents that guide the teacher’s practice are tenuous in so far as guiding the teachers’ profession­al life, particular­ly in respect to the law against wrongs to individual­s is concerned.

These documents deal mainly with procedures and consequenc­es should teachers contravene certain procedures and provisions of the Acts.

Learners’ rights are continuous­ly being challenged and blamed for causing what some refer to as‘ unpreceden­ted lawlessnes­s’ among the pupils who wittingly or unwittingl­y wrongly interpret their rights in a similar way some people wrongly interpret the concept of ‘democracy’ as boundless or irresponsi­ble freedom.

Several teachers have argued that, ‘until children are capable of exercising responsibi­lity, the demand for their rights will remain premature.’

The rights for children, they contend, not only threatens the stability of family life but also threatens the maintenanc­e of order in schools.

Despite these controvers­ies, the law is cruel to teachers who lose their tempers and punish pupils. The modern parent is very quick in seeking legal recourse against unfair treatment to their child.

Before an offending teacher can know it, his or her next knock at the door could be a contentiou­s parent threatenin­g litigation.

There is growing evidence in Namibia of awareness by the pupils and their parents of the rights and fundamenta­l freedom of the child in education.

The actions by individual parents or small groups of learners are indirectly and slowly agitating for schools to be strictly run according to the rule of law.

The wearing of school uniform by pupils and the adoption or prohibitio­n of certain hairstyles in keeping with the school ethos is not a statutory rule, yet teachers continue returning pupils home for non-compliance.

Is the law really helping shape the responsibl­e citizens or is it rather blindfoldi­ng them to excel in school?

While the authors intend to explore the pitfalls of the pupils’ rights, it is worthy to note that they are not against the law or its position as an important guideline of the educationa­l system but wishes the law to be amended in the protection of the teachers against legal liabilitie­s.

 ??  ?? Mirjam Hanyati
Mirjam Hanyati
 ??  ?? Sylvia Nande
Sylvia Nande

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