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Parenting

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Anyone been bullied by a head teacher?!

81 replies

raeraekathleen · 11/06/2024 15:14

Has anyone else ever felt bullied by their child's headteacher? Our experience began shortly after the new headteacher joined our lovely village primary school. My eldest son, who is much shorter than his classmates, faced relentless bullying about his height. The school’s response was non-existent. Despite my numerous complaints to the teachers and the headteacher, nothing was done.

When an Ofsted survey was conducted, I was honest about my disappointment with the school’s handling of bullying. My comments were significant given my passion for the school—I volunteer a lot of time to the school helping children read and running the garden club. Although the survey was supposed to be anonymous, my comments were read out, making me identifiable. From that moment, the headteacher began giving me hostile looks. He even punished my son after he was kicked by a bully, claiming my son lied despite eyewitness accounts to the contrary.

This pattern continued. My two boys were unjustly punished, often missing lunch, break, and PE. Recently, my younger son has been repeatedly hurt by another boy in his class—stabbed with pens, jabbed in the neck, kicked, and had objects thrown at him. On April 30th, this boy violently attacked my son, jumping on him repeatedly. This boy is considerably large for his age, even bigger than me as an adult. The school did nothing in response. The same boy threatened to 'punch his head in.' Two days later, the boy knocked my son unconscious. The school spoke to both boys, but the aggressor claimed my son "made a face at him." My son cried for three hours, left alone in a room, without any head injury checks. I wasn't informed until school pick-up when the headteacher took me into his office and accused my son of bullying the other child.

After this incident, I was reluctant to send my son back to school without reassurance of his safety. The headteacher threatened me with a fine, despite the issue being under review by the Governors. I explained that my son had a concussion and increased anxiety post-incident. The school demanded a doctor's note, which I provided, yet I still received a fine. (Also just to note, our school doesn't issue fines ordinarily, many of the class have been on holidays and these have not been fined, yet ours was due to a safety concern.)

As part of the action plan to return my son to school, the school promised closer supervision of the two boys during lunch and breaks and assured me my son wouldn't be left crying for hours. However, the headteacher sent over a "risk assessment" which included inappropriate comments such as:

  1. Parents should impose consequences at home if our son hesitates coming into school due to anxiety, he only has anxiety because of school so this is an extraordinarily harsh suggestion.
  2. Disregarding parental accounts of the events that happen at school shared via WhatsApp.
  3. Criticising our decision to let our son attend a friend’s party to maintain his social activity, based on second-hand information from children—precisely what we were told not to rely on.
  4. Told that my son will be added to a behaviour record plan, something he's never been on. We were not told this at the time, only 15 days after the events, in which time my son had not set foot in the building?!

I feel utterly helpless. My son was bullied for months, seriously hurt, and then labeled as the bully. Now, we are being bullied by the headteacher, who is abusing his power. We were even advised to look for another school, which headteachers are not allowed to suggest.

Does anyone have any advice? I've contacted the council but told it has to be handled by the Church as it's Church of England Voluntary Aided or Governors (but the Governors have demonstrated clear bias, which is understandable as they're associated with the head teacher and protecting their school). I've started gathering evidence for Ofsted, it just feels like a constant unnecessary battle! All because I would like school to be a safe and fair place for my son. And in my plea to make this happen I'm being fined and my son being added to a behaviour record plan.

OP posts:
raeraekathleen · 12/06/2024 20:32

IncompleteSenten · 11/06/2024 19:37

My sons both have sn and over the years I had to fight and fight and fight - fight schools, fight the la, fight the NHS, fight everyone.

If I was in this situation I would first withdraw him from school and homeschool for the rest of the school year. I'd liaise with the secondary school so he would have a smooth transition there. See if he could have visits.

I'd keep in close contact with his friends parents and arrange lots of things to do with them after school and at weekends, even if that meant me hosting everything! Because of the importance of him not losing touch with his friends.

Finally I'd carry forwards through all the complaints procedure until I got it as high as possible.

I'd also completely ignore being told by the school who I may and may not talk to about it. I'd get statements from the parents and get them to get accounts from the kids and frankly the headteacher could lick my log cutter.

Thank you so much. I've been feeling as though I'm going insane. And wondered if anyone else has every experienced it. And can't believe I'm being told to not speak to people / give consequences to my son if he becomes anxious etc.

OP posts:
raeraekathleen · 12/06/2024 20:32

Unexpecteddrivinginstructor · 11/06/2024 19:52

Have you appealed for a place in the schools which are full? I would withdraw your ds from the school now and then either home ed or appeal for a space in a different school.

I am going through this process at the moment.

OP posts:
CarolineFields · 12/06/2024 20:43

BusyMummy001 · 11/06/2024 18:51

It was a single school at the time, but HT has since taken over management of several other local schools and runs them in a multi-academy trust.

that is not how MATs are set up

Doghairdoishare · 12/06/2024 20:48

What a stressful time for you all. The bottom line is that your son is not safe in that school. The physical and emotional damage of having to go somewhere every day where you do not feel safe and respected is huge.

I work in a primary school and ALL head bumps, no matter how minor, are a phonecall home to the parent. The fact you weren't contacted is a huge worry on its own.

Someone has mentioned contacting LADO but I'm pretty sure parents and members of the public cannot make reports to them.

Are you able to home school your son for year 6 or until a place at another school becomes available? I know it's not ideal. If he joined sports clubs on the evenings then he can still get to socialise during the week.

BusyMummy001 · 12/06/2024 20:53

CarolineFields · 12/06/2024 20:43

that is not how MATs are set up

I made no reference to how it was set up, so no need to be facetious.

When my children were there it was a single school; now it’s part of a multi academy trust incorporating 8 schools in total and where the former head master is CEO. Personally, I couldn’t give a flying f-ck about the administrative details of a school my child left 12 years ago and where her life was a misery… and it’s irrelevant to this thread anyway.

CubaWooba · 12/06/2024 20:55

Is this school in Gloucestershire by any chance? The head sounds similar ..

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