The Citizen (Gauteng)

School violence on deadly upward spiral

EXPERT: DOMESTIC ABUSE IN 16% OF HOUSEHOLDS

- Brian Sokutu – brians@citizen.co.za

Exposure to family and community violence breeds brutality in pupils – psychologi­st.

Brutal incidents in some communitie­s is another negative influence on young children and youths.

Exposure to violence in families and communitie­s, which is stressful for anyone who comes in contact with it, breeds a generation of violent pupils, University of Cape Town psychology professor Catherine Ward says.

This is in the wake of the death last week of Ramotshere Secondary School teacher Gadimang Mokolobate in Zeerust in North West. He was stabbed in class by a pupil.

In Gauteng, a teacher was threatened with a gun by a pupil at Eldorado Park Secondary School, south of Johannesbu­rg.

Living in an environmen­t where there is intimate partner violence involving two adults in about 16% households and more than 30% of parents either spank or beat their children, pupils, according to Ward, “are provided with bad role models on how to solve problems.

“We have a situation where children are surrounded by violence. They are anxious, stressed and learn this as a way to solve problems. What they do not see is adults working together to find constructi­ve solutions.”

Adding drugs and alcohol to the mix makes the situation “more volatile”. Gang activities “make it worse because in some schools there are gangs and a lot of bullying”.

Despite the department of basic education’s national school safety framework, a guide for how to address violence in schools, classroom management was “a real problem.

“Not many teachers are taught this,” said Ward. “It is a constructi­ve way to address the challenge of homework not done, by asking the pupil to do it during lunch. There is a gap in teacher education on how to deal with violence.

“Also compoundin­g the situation is that teachers work in under-resourced environmen­ts.

“Big classrooms breed chaos in schools – an environmen­t which does not help them.”

She said principals had to “make schools violence-free zones”.

“Teachers need to learn alternativ­es to address difficult behaviour other than corporal punishment,” she added.

Ward said parents could help by learning positive discipline techniques and “giving children an environmen­t in which violence is not used”.

To get to grips with what lay behind the Zeerust and Eldorado Park incidents would require a psychiatri­c examinatio­n of the two pupils, she added.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa