Allie Theiss Psychic Advice with GypsyAdvice.com

Search GypsyAdvice & Gypsy Girl Press
Ask an Expert - Visit my Virtual Office at LivePerson

Services

Psychic Advice
Sex Advice

Coaching Services

Gypsy Spells

Healing And Attunements

Empowerment Classes

The Passion Zone
(adult toy store)
The Bookshelf
Gift Certificates

Gypsy Information

Gypsy Lore
Gypsy News
Gypsy Magic

Scam Information

Ethics/Scams

Biz Information

Affiliate/Syndication
Guest Book
Feedback

Eternal Gratitude

To the everlasting wisdom of my Angels, Elementals, Guides and Ascended Masters for making my life abundant, prosperous and fulfilling.

Gypsy News

News about the Rom/Roma/Gypsy along with environmental, wildlife and animal news and alerts.

Friday, July 31, 2009

Schools exclude pupils less often

The number of exclusions from England's schools went down last year, latest figures show.

There were 8,130 permanent exclusions from primary, secondary and special schools in 2007-08, 6.4% less than the year before.

There were 383,830 fixed period exclusions, down 9.8%. Boys featured in three times as many cases as girls.

The number of appeals lodged by parents dropped a quarter to 780. Of these 26% succeeded, up 1.3 percentage points.

Appeal panels ordered children to be reinstated in their school in just over a third of the successful cases (35%), down five percentage points on the previous year.

Pupils from black Caribbean backgrounds were three times as likely as all children to be permanently excluded and twice as likely to be suspended (given a fixed period exclusion).

The exclusion rate was highest for Gypsy/Roma children, though they accounted for fewer than 2,000 cases in total nationally.

'Myth'

Shadow Schools Minister Nick Gibb said: "There is a serious problem with discipline and poor behaviour in English schools.

"The fact that nearly 500 children a day return to school after assaulting an adult or a classmate shows that teachers do not have sufficient powers to keep control."

The statistics show there were 71,330 fixed period exclusions for assaulting another pupil and 17,870 for attacking an adult - though both sets of figures were lower than last year.

But Children's Minister Dawn Primarolo said: "It is time to put to bed the myth that behaviour is deteriorating with teachers powerless to act.

"The truth is that we have given teachers the powers they asked for to tackle bad discipline and today's figures, as well as the trend over the last several years, show that the action we have taken is working in improving discipline in schools."

'Fiddling'

She said programmes such as Social and Emotional Aspects of Learning (Seal), which ensures that young people understand the consequences of their actions and are taught how to respond to situations responsibly, had had a positive impact on discipline.

"But we can always do more and that is why we have strengthened home-school agreements to make sure the worst behaved children have clear expectations of behaviour and schools can force parents to take action if they do not live up to these expectations."

Liberal Democrat spokesman David Laws said: "Although permanent exclusions are down, there is a strong suspicion that the government is fiddling the figures by not declaring the transfer from one school to another of children who have effectively been excluded.

"Yet again, we can see a divide between rich and poor in our education system, with those children entitled to free school meals being far more likely to be excluded."

Poverty

It was this aspect that most concerned a charity that works with excluded youngsters, UK Youth.

Children entitled to free school meals were three times as likely as the average to be excluded, and secondary schools in the most deprived areas had more exclusions than those in the least deprived areas, it noted.

UK Youth chief executive John Bateman said: "Young people who are at risk of exclusion need access to a personalised curriculum that motivates them together with support from teachers, youth workers and mentors who can provide appropriate support and guidance."

He said they responded well to being given access to vocational subjects which allowed them to gain skills and qualifications and to have a clear sense of how to manage their lives when they left school.

Labels: , , , , ,

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

 

Newsletter

Numerscope

Allie Theiss

Allie's Two Cents
Out Of Body Ecstasy
About Allie
Contact Allie
Events/ Appearances

Free Advice

Ask Allie Podcast
Submit Your Question
FREE Tarot Reading

Links

Resource Center

Free Web e-mail

Email Login
Password
New users sign up!!

yourname

@gypsyadvice.com

Legal: **You must be 18 years of age or older to place an order for any service/product - this includes "Ask Allie".**

Disclaimer: The intent of Allie and Gypsyadvice.com is only to offer advice, practices, techniques and formulas to help you in your quest for emotional, mental, spiritual and physical empowerment. They should not be used as an alternative to professional medical, legal, mental, financial treatment and/or advice. Nor should it be used as an alternative to common sense. In the event you use any of the information from Gypsyadvice.com or Allie for yourself or another, which is your Divinely inspired right, Allie and Gypsyadvice.com assume no responsibility for your actions. 

Privacy Policy: Email address collected on this web site are for Gypsyadvice.com use ONLY and are not shared or sold.  By giving us your email, you may receive promotional material from time to time.  

© 2000-2010 Gypsyadvice.com.  All Rights Reserved.
Site maintained by a webmistress