The Mail on Sunday

Sacked teacher’s welfare fear for girl aged 8 in ‘wrong body’

- By Ian Gallagher CHIEF REPORTER

A TEACHER sacked for refusing to treat an eight-year-old girl as a boy will tell an employment tribunal this week of her serious concerns for the child’s welfare.

She was ordered by the headteache­r before the start of term to go along with the wishes of the pupil to ‘socially transition’ under the guidance of controvers­ial LGBT charity Stonewall.

It meant calling her by a boy’s name and using male pronouns, and also involved an ultimately futile attempt to keep her gender change a secret from classmates.

The child, backed by her parents, was allowed to wear a boy’s uniform and to use the boys’ lavatories and changing rooms. Troubled by the situation, the teacher, referred to as ‘Hannah’ for legal reasons, raised the matter as a safeguardi­ng issue, believing it endangered the child and other pupils in the short and long-term.

‘We hear a lot about protected characteri­stics – what about the right of a child to grow up?’ Hannah told The Mail on Sunday. ‘It is heartbreak­ing.’

She added that children are being supported by teachers and schools to believe that they are in the ‘wrong body’. She is bringing a case against the primary school and Nottingham­shire County Council, claiming she was victimised for whistleblo­wing and unfairly dismissed in 2022.

The case begins in Nottingham on Tuesday. She said her sacking, for wanting to protect vulnerable children from harm, has torn her life apart and left her with the prospect of never being able to teach again. She had enjoyed five happy years at the school and her record was unblemishe­d. But she noted with dismay how ‘education became increasing­ly politicise­d’.

In 2021 the school adopted training methods devised by Stonewall, which urges teachers to ‘remove any unnecessar­ily gendered language’ from the classroom.

Hannah believes the toxicity surroundin­g the transgende­r debate has created a climate of fear in schools. ‘Nobody is prepared to speak out or challenge decisions made without discussion,’ she said. She now works in a sandwich shop ‘where we are more freely able to discuss these issues’.

She added: ‘Teachers are being bullied into not questionin­g transaffir­ming policies when evidence shows that the actual result of the approach is to put the welfare of children at serious risk. I am determined to pursue justice.’

Andrea Williams, chief executive of the Christian Legal Centre, which is supporting Hannah, said: ‘For years, parents and teachers who have raised safeguardi­ng concerns over these issues have been ignored and disbelieve­d.’

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