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‘Pupils out of class going to the toilet is a safeguarding issue’

48 replies

Tobermory · 06/12/2019 12:23

Secondary teachers- you share your opinion about this ?
My DD y8, has periods most month 😕 and I’ve queried toilet passes with school. School sometimes use toilet passes but mainly discourage chn going to the loo mid lesson. I do understand this.
Her form teacher has emailed me back and used safeguarding as a reason for the schools reluctance to use toilet passes.
“It can lead to safeguarding issues around school “

Surely really what they’re talking about is stopping bad behaviour. Reducing oppprtunities for this... but would you describe this as safeguarding?

I’m not complaining about school, her form teacher is great and suggested an alternative solution. I’m just pondering this use of the phrase

OP posts:
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TheReluctantCountess · 06/12/2019 12:25

Yes, it can be a safeguarding issue.

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hen10 · 07/12/2019 10:18

Because the children are unsupervised until they choose to come back to the classroom.

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Cohle · 07/12/2019 10:21

Yes, it's not just about stopping bad behaviour, it's about making sure the school are aware of the location of all children and that the pupils are receiving adequate supervision.

That said, in the circumstances you describe they should be able to make adequate accommodation for your DD.

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0blio · 07/12/2019 10:26

You mentioned on another thread that you are a teacher OP, surely you are aware of what safeguarding is?!

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Mysterian · 07/12/2019 10:28

Yup. Safeguarding alright. There are risks. Some you have to take because they're unavoidable, but they're still risks.

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iriscornflowerblue · 07/12/2019 10:30

Most women have periods most months, OP.

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Selfsettling3 · 07/12/2019 10:33

For some teenagers it is a greater risk than others. Toilet passes are normally issues for continuous use for medical issues by pastoral staff eg IBS or for a couple of days at form tutors at individual discretions.

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LaserShark · 07/12/2019 10:35

It is a safeguarding issue. When I was teaching there were children who would leave a lesson for the toilet and self harm, smoke, meet other students (in one case, a vulnerable girl meeting older boys at prearranged times mid-lesson to have sex in the toilets), truant, try to leave the premises... yes, unsupervised children around the school site are definitely a safeguarding issue!

We also had some students with serious health issues who could not be left unsupervised as well in case of seizures etc.

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0blio · 07/12/2019 10:38

My DD y8, has periods most month
HmmConfused

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snowybaubles · 07/12/2019 10:49

Unless she has a medical problem then periods are perfectly manageable within available toilet times.

I'm a bit baffled that you can't see why safeguarding could possibly be an issue with kids out of class

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Tobermory · 07/12/2019 15:45

Thanks for sensible, polite responses ... much appreciated. some really helpful responses which gave me pause for thought.

Yes @0blio, I am a teacher. Thanks for checking up though. I work in primary and have never set a teaching toe in secondary and as I’m sure you’ll understand safeguarding issues can be very different in these settings. Not quite sure the snarky faces were required.

@iriscornflowerblue, yes most women have periods every month, but she’s only had them since the summer so they are, understandably, irregular.

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CuckooCuckooClock · 07/12/2019 17:18

I think any situation in which students are unsupervised and unlocatable could be a safeguarding issue.

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Fraggling · 07/12/2019 17:24

I do think that the lack of accommodation for the different needs girls have around menstruation is a bit shit tbh.

Periods are unpredictable and can be v heavy, come on suddenly etc.

Threads on here where even in primary schools a hard line has been taken around this.

Periods are a fact of life and can be hard to get to grips with. Saying girls should just get on with it and if they eg start unexpectedly bleeding all over the shop they haven't managed it properly ie it's their own fault is grim.

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CuckooCuckooClock · 07/12/2019 17:25

I personally think students should be allowed to use the loo in most cases but I know lots of teachers who disagree. Last year I got a bollocking from my head because I let a year 11 girl go to the loo during a lesson. She was a really good kid and her period had leaked through her trousers. Apparently it was a safeguarding risk because ‘nobody knew where she was’ ffs

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Fraggling · 07/12/2019 17:25

Mine both started periods Yr 5.

Luckily the school were understanding (and they weren't the only ones).

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Fraggling · 07/12/2019 17:26

Yy cuckoo

Needs of femsle students around their biology are their own fault and to manage quietly etc

It makes me quite angry tbh

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Grasspigeons · 07/12/2019 17:34

I cant see the safeguarding side of this either. They do know where she is, shes gone to the loo. It isnt any different than going to the loo in lunch, between lessons or break except some actuslly knows you have gone and expects you back. Is it thst the loos are quieter in lessons so more able to self harm in someway than during busy times.

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Fraggling · 07/12/2019 17:47

There's got to be a balance between safeguarding and allowing female students to attend to their biological needs.

Not allowing them to do this also has plenty of potential negative consequences.

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likeafishneedsabike · 07/12/2019 18:39

@Grasspigeons look at @LaserShark’s with the examples there. Shagging in the loo would not be a possibility during break time or between lessons. During lessons there is no one around and no staff to supervise.

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Fraggling · 07/12/2019 18:49

It's not either or.

It's not a choice between fucking in the bogs and bleeding through your clothes.

The dismissal of the embarrassment, difficulty and sometimes distress for especially younger girls around periods is so depressing.

I've read on here of primary schools who won't let the girls out to deal with it. Presumably on the basis they'll be off fucking in the toilets as well.

Better embarrassed and bloody than a slag? Funny tone to some of these posts...

Where are the boys in this.

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ValancyRedfern · 07/12/2019 18:52

I can see the safeguarding implications but as someone with vey heavy periods myself I hate the idea that girls should all be able to manage their periods only at break and lunchtimes. Unfortunately it doesn't always work that way. I've leaked through onto clothes during lessons but luckily I can choose the clothes I wear to school to hide this and can even ask a fellow teacher to supervise for a minute while I run to the toilet. I would never stop a girl who may be menstruating from going to the toilet in lesson (unless she clas to be on her period every week in which case I would smell a rat and act accordingly).

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CuckooCuckooClock · 07/12/2019 18:53

The thing with those examples from lasershark is there are other ways to deal.
Self-harm - if people need to use self harm to cope they will find a way even if they can’t go to the loo in lessons. They will just get more and more distressed until they have a chance.
Smoking - detectors are available plus you can smell when they return to lesson.
The vulnerable girl needs protection outside of lessons. Stopping her going in lessons won’t save her from abuse. You could argue that only girls should be allowed to use the loo in lessons- then no one gets raped.
I really do have a bee in my bonnet about this.

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Tobermory · 07/12/2019 18:56

@Grasspigeons, that was exactly my initial reactions

But at her school, pupils are sometimes used as office runners. She did this last week, spent a number of hours, shuttling between reception and different classrooms. So she was out of class, unsupervised and only reception knew where she was .
So how is going to the toilet a safeguarding issue but being an office runner is not?

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Cohle · 07/12/2019 19:02

It does seem really odd that as a primary school teacher these aren't issues you've encountered, or are at least conscious of, yourself Confused

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HarrietTheFly · 07/12/2019 19:03

Unless she has a medical problem then periods are perfectly manageable within available toilet times.

I don't know how you can say that so confidently. Surely we are all different. My periods have always been heavy but especially when I was a teenager I'd flood through pads really quickly at times. It has settled down a lot since I had my DD but even now still happens occasionally. I have no medical issues as far as I'm aware.. just bad (heavy, painful) periods. It happens when it happens... I couldn't schedule it to happen only during break times.

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