Mam, from the September following Child’s 5th birthday I no longer consider you fit to raise him. For six hours a day, five-days-a-week-term-time-only Teacher can help. Unfortunately Teacher takes time off. She needs a break from your little monster- so during the holiday she gives Child back. Try not to undo the good work that’s been done. (…Won’t you?…) If you want to bother Teacher with (daft) questions go ahead. She’ll rearrange her face into a listening position- And respond with jargon designed to make you feel thick. Concerns? Child often exaggerates. O, I see. 2 adults, 30 children and a bundle of paperwork? She’s qualified. You’re not. (…are you? Thought not. And you don’t live in Big House or sound T’s and H’s… So where were we?…) Nightmares? Bruises? Cuts, scrapes, a black-eye? Low self esteem? (…so you’re a psychologist now?…) Child cries? Is unhappy in class? His fault. Or yours! Don’t worry. Teacher keeps her eyes open for signs of trouble at home. Child skips school? Down to you. (…There will be various consequences, of course. And implications……c-o-n…s-e-qu-e…nce-s…,….i-m-p…l-i-c…a-t…i-on-s… It’s been made clear already: You’re not fit to raise him…) Pressured? Bored? Judged and ignored? Humiliated? Belittled? Frustrated? It will lead to what, exactly? O, when he leaves School! For just a moment there I was worried. No, no. Not a problem. Not a problem at all. Maybe he’ll run with a bad crowd, break a few laws, end up in the gutter? Yes. Maybe. But it’s out of my hands.
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I'm a fan of trauma informed practice, unfortunately zero-tolerance is all the rage. Zero-tolerance is a means to keeping grades up in "good" schools. It's passing the buck, and it's a **** way to treat kids who've been through hell already.