The Northern Advocate

Classroom chaos — schools restrain kids as young as 4

- Simon Collins

Schools are using force to control escalating student “chaos” on average 13 times a day — in some cases with children as young as 4.

New rules requiring schools to file reports every time they physically restrain a child show that children were restrained 3309 times in the first 15 months after the rules came into force, an average of 13 times on every school day.

Special Education Principals’ Associatio­n president Judith Nel said unruly students were a tiny minority of New Zealand’s school student population, but the level of violence was on the rise.

A total 1695 individual students have been restrained since the rules took effect — about 0.2 per cent, or one in 500, of the country’s 809,000 school students.

“We need to address that population because really it’s a small number of children across the schooling sector that is creating this chaos,” she said.

But Nel, who needed 23 stitches in her head after a student pushed her into a doorway in 2016, said violence was rising due to weaker parental control, poorly trained teachers, more students on the autistic spectrum and a push for large, noisy multi-teacher spaces.

“Children need different support structures when they get to school because at home they are not given guidelines the way we were,” she said.

“You also have the children and young people for example on the autistic spectrum, and the structures in schools are no longer in place that used to be there that could moderate such behaviours, particular­ly now that we have open classrooms, the new learning environmen­ts. For a young person on the spectrum, that is extremely challengin­g.” Details provided under the Official Informatio­n Act show that the country’s 37 special schools, which have only 0.5 per cent of all students, accounted for 22 per cent of the physical restraints reported in the 15 months up to November.

Almost all other cases were in primary schools, with only 4 per cent in secondary schools where many students were too strong to be restrained.

About three-quarters involved children aged 5 to 10, spread evenly across each year of that age group. But two involved 4-year-olds who must have started school before they turned 5.

Boys were 5.5 times more likely to be restrained than girls, and Ma¯ori were 1.4 times as likely to be restrained as European students. Pacific and Asian students were restrained at below-average rates.

Staff or students were injured in a third of the restraint incidents, but the Ministry of Education said: “Typically the reported injuries are physical and appear to be fairly minor (e.g. bruises and scratches).”

Two-thirds of the incidents involved students who already had individual behaviour plans, and just over two-thirds of the staff who restrained the children had been trained in how to restrain them safely.

Principals’ Federation president Whetu Cormick wants the law changed to let teachers restrain children when they threaten to damage property, not just when there is “serious and imminent risk” to a person which the current law requires.

 ??  ?? Special Education Principals’ Associatio­n president Judith Nel.
Special Education Principals’ Associatio­n president Judith Nel.

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