Physical Restraint Rules Remove Common Sense & Safety
Physical Restraint Rules Remove Common Sense & Safety
Family First NZ says that school staff are wasting hours of valuable time having to complete documentation on the physical restraint of disruptive and unruly students in primary schools. Official documents from the Ministry of Education show that more than 1,000 reports of physical restraint have had to be lodged by schools since new rules were introduced for schools in August 2017. 75% of the incidences occurred in primary schools with children as young as five. 85% of the incidences involved boys.
This also means that more than 5,000 forms or reports will have had to be completed by school staff.
“The Ministry suggests that the number of reported incidents is “a small percentage” but the real issue is whether teachers are ignoring or unable to deal with unruly and unacceptable behaviour in very young children because teachers are now no longer confident or unsure of their right to restrain students. This then places all students at risk. It seems ironic that as we are saying no to violence within families and our community, schools are expected to tolerate an unacceptable level of violence and unruly behaviour, Teachers also say that they are scared to even break up schoolyard fights or are standing back while a student trashes the classroom,” says Bob McCoskrie, National Director of Family First NZ.
Ministry Guidelines argue that “physical
restraint is a serious intervention” and that the
“emotional and physical impact on the student being
restrained” can be significant. They say that school
staff should not use physical restraint in a number of
situations including:
• to respond to behaviour that
is disrupting the classroom but not putting anyone in danger
of being hurt
• for refusal to comply with an
adult’s request
• to stop a student who is
trying to leave the classroom or school without
permission
• to stop a student who is damaging
or removing property, unless there is a risk to
safety.
They also say that “if escalation
occurs, move further away”.
For any acts of physical restraint on a student, five forms must be completed – an incident report, information for the Ministry, staff reflection form, debriefing form with the Principal, and a debriefing with the parents.
“Teachers are right to be concerned about the potential harms and hassles of handling unruly and violent students and the possible effect on their professional status. Common sense has been expelled from schools, and no amount of ‘guidelines’ and ‘professional development courses’ can make up for teachers being able to respond quickly and instinctively in the most effective way in often very stressful and exceptional circumstances. Parents also want assurance that their children will be kept safe from violent or unruly students,” says Bob McCoskrie, National Director of Family First NZ.
“Combined with the ‘chilling’ effect of the anti-smacking law, this is all having the adverse effect of parents and teachers becoming too afraid to administer any physical control or restraint of children. Children have received the message that adults can not touch them or even tell them what to do. This seriously undermines the authority of parents, teachers, and even the police themselves – hence the increasing violence and disrespect towards parents, teachers and police.”
“We are quickly creating an unsafe environment where children know their rights, but not their wrongs. Restoring authority will make our children happier and our communities and schools safer.”
“Student
behaviour and bullying will continue to deteriorate for as
long as we tell them that their rights are more important
than their responsibilities, proper parental authority is
undermined by politicians and subject to the rights of their
children, and that there will be no consequences of any
significance when they ‘cross the
line’.”
ENDS