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Harsh Times at Yarmouth High. New Head introduces new rules including sick buckets in classrooms.

266 replies

HelenaDove · 11/09/2017 23:29

Posted this on another thread but i think it deserves a thread of its own.

HelenaDove Mon 11-Sep-17 21:06:41
www.edp24.co.uk/news/education/phones-confiscated-for-weeks-and-sick-buckets-in-the-classroom-tough-new-rules-at-norfolk-school-1-5188326
Add message | Report | Message poster HelenaDove Mon 11-Sep-17 21:08:44
“You never lie and make excuses like, ‘I just wanted to put something in the bin’. We all know children say things like that to get out of work. You never pretend to be ill to get out of work because we expect you to work through it. If you feel sick we will give you a bucket. If you vomit - no problem! You’ve got your bucket. That’s probably all your body wanted - to vomit. If you are really ill we will make sure you get all the attention you need."

JESUS WEPT.

OP posts:
hiphopcat · 11/09/2017 23:31
Confused
HelloPossums · 11/09/2017 23:32

Jeez that's crazy. Will be interesting to hear how the school gets on.

MrsHathaway · 11/09/2017 23:32

I just saw that article too.

Sounds like the new head has an uphill struggle. Something in the article about how most of the children in the failing school this replaces don't pass even English or Maths so maybe the HT is making a firm stand so he can retreat to normalish rules later? Sounds like it was Bedlam.

One-way corridors isn't a unique rule, nor are some of the others.

OP posts:
HelenaDove · 11/09/2017 23:34

EDUCATION
ECONOMY
INFO
Home Education Academy Head blames parents for awful GCSE results and then introduces ridiculous...
EDUCATION
Academy Head blames parents for awful GCSE results and then introduces ridiculous new rules for kids
By Matteo Everett - 11th September 2017
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Photo Credit: Metro/Archant/Lancashire Telegraph
Great Yarmouth High School was the worst-performing school in Norfolk, with only 30% of its pupils so much as passing their Maths and English GCSEs this summer.

And now, according to an alarming letter sent by its new headteacher to parents of the school, Great Yarmouth High School no longer exists. It is now Great Yarmouth Charter Academy, having been taken over by the Inspiration Trust, who immediately installed a brand-new headteacher.

The new head is Barry Smith, formerly the deputy principal and co-founder of the Michaela Community School in Wembley – a school with a reputation for being one of the strictest in the country.

Now he is doing everything possible to improve the prospects of Great Yarmouth High – attempting to crack down on children’s behaviour both in and outside the classroom.

Mr Smith’s new rules include supplying buckets for children who are sick instead of letting them leave the classroom and, extraordinarily, demanding parents send their children to bed by 9:00PM at the very latest.

Laughable

A public group for concerned parents has been created on Facebook, calling the school’s policies “army like”.

The group, “Yarmouth High Worried Parents”, was set up after parents of children at the school received letters from Mr Smith, outlining his extreme expectations and a new set of Academy standards, such as “you never get out of your chair without permission at Charter.”

The Inspiration Trust’s spokesperson James Goffin believes that these outlandish measures are justified, stating that “Children can’t learn in unruly classrooms”. However, certain other rules – such as the fact that traditional black leather or leather-like shoes must be worn and the banning of phones even outside of lessons – show that making classrooms less “unruly” is not the Academy’s only concern.

Indeed, Mr. Smith’s letter even blamed parents for the school’s incompetence, stating that “pupil indiscipline was commonplace and many parents simply did not support the school.”

Students who fail to obey any of the new rules – which include a total ban on chewing-gum – will be immediately sent to isolation.

A Spreading Concern

Great Yarmouth High isn’t the only school in the county stepping up its strictness in attempt to improve its reputation. Tim Gibbs, headteacher of Reepham High, hopes the school’s new ban on mobile phones will allow teachers to focus on learning.

While it cannot be doubted that the use of mobile phones in classrooms can be distracting (and if you do have any doubt, a report by the Centre for Economic Performance proves it), there is also evidence to suggest that playing games on phones during breaktimes can improve pupils’ concentration and boost results in class.

Bullying

If a school wants to improve their results, first and foremost it must improve their facilities and, more than anything else, the standard of teaching. Unfortunately, this is unlikely to be achieved alongside a Tory government who have been constantly slashing school budgets for years.

While James Goffin asserts that pupils need “the right environment to learn and succeed“, an oppressive environment which forces students to wear a specific type of shoe will in no way improve learning.

Parents of students at Great Yarmouth High have hit back at the headtacher’s demands, with Steven Holmes saying his daughter came home in tears after her first day of high school. “This isn’t about discipline”, he said. “It’s bullying.”

The Academy will hold a meeting for all parents “so they can hear first hand what Great Yarmouth Charter Academy is really all about.

OP posts:
GirlOnATrainToShite · 11/09/2017 23:37

Is your child at the school OP?

HelenaDove · 11/09/2017 23:40

Im childfree by choice and i live in Essex. I was just gobsmacked at these ideas.

Banning chewing gum seems fair but the other stuff.........Hmm

OP posts:
HelloPossums · 11/09/2017 23:40

I've just read the article, where they republished the letter that the Head sent out to parents:

My job, as Headmaster of Charter Academy, is to ensure that teachers and pupils have a safe environment free from abuse, in which they can excel.

Your children’s job is to attend every day on time, follow all instructions first time every time, treat everyone they meet politely, and get the top grades they possibly can in everything they do.

Your job is to support their school and their education. By supporting us you support your children. This could be the beginning of a whole new life full of possibilities for your children. To make that happen we need your 100% support.

I really, really respect him for what he has written here.

Interestingly, in the article, it also says that he co-founded the Michaela School, a school in London which I hugely support but which has been fairly controversial.

I wish the school the best of luck. It looks like it will be very challenging to get the school on track, but it sounds like he is the right person to take that on.

DancingLedge · 11/09/2017 23:41

So depressing.

HelenaDove · 11/09/2017 23:43

Wonder how hes going to implement some of these without falling foul of the Equality Act.

OP posts:
ginghambox · 11/09/2017 23:52

Can't see a problem with any of this

Logans · 11/09/2017 23:56

All sounds fine to me except for the sick bucket, which I think is appalling.

MoonfaceAndSilky · 11/09/2017 23:57

Good on him. Wish he'd come to my twins' school and sort it out.

CalmanOnSpeeddial · 12/09/2017 00:07

The results were so appalling, even by the standards of English seaside towns, which generally get dreadful exam results.

MrsOverTheRoad · 12/09/2017 00:08

"Harsh Times at Yarmouth High" Grin That made me lol OP!

cheezy · 12/09/2017 00:09

sounds great! not sure I believe the sick bucket thing

CaretakerToNuns · 12/09/2017 00:12

Don't see what all the fuss is about myself. Children need to learn discipline.

AlexanderHamilton · 12/09/2017 00:14

Perhaps the full policy might change the minds of those of you who think this is a good thing.

chikdren with an SEN are set to fail straight away

www.dropbox.com/s/tmr7cxzgwjli9d8/greatyarmouthcharterrules090917.pdf?dl=0

Solo · 12/09/2017 00:14

Even if the sick bucket thing is true; it'll just stop kids from leaving class for no reason (I'm going to be sick Miss = I want to get out of English); good on the new HT I really hope he turns it around.

TheFallenMadonna · 12/09/2017 00:15

The progress 8 figure was not appalling. The school has a very high proportion of low attainers on entry, and they make reasonable progress. As in fact do the high attainers on entry, of which there were only 12 out of 167 in 2016.

HelloPossums · 12/09/2017 00:17

Alexander thanks for posting the link to the school's policy. Is there any chance that it could be posted in a different format please, as I can't seem to open it on my phone.

HelloPossums · 12/09/2017 00:19

Sorry Alexander the Dropbox link works now! :)

AlexanderHamilton · 12/09/2017 00:19

I'm sorry I'm only on my phone too. It's a Dropbox link another poster on a different thread found.

HarveySchlumpfenburger · 12/09/2017 00:21

I can't imagine encouraging children to be sick in the classroom rather than leave is going to do much for attendance. Are they attempting to find the quickest way to spread a gastro bug round the school?

CalmanOnSpeeddial · 12/09/2017 00:24

Maybe he needs to head up a primary school instead then...