Greenman wrote: ↑Thu Nov 02, 2023 10:56 am
Just out of curiosity, if you were a teacher in a pupil referral unit and a student called you the N word daily, would you except that is just part of their job? Or if you got told to fuck off numerous times a day by a 13 year old child, is that ok, or is it just the police that you support?
I only ask as i know loads of teachers that get this kind of abuse daily, every single day, little of them moan about it, you don't hear about it on the news and lot's of them have been in the job for decades!
I have been abused in such settings too, i have wanted to kill some of the kids tbh, but i haven't as i am professional and have always just seen it as part of the job, if you are to be putting yourself in front of abusive, abused and disadvantaged people, you need to accept shit like this happens.
That's a bit of a distorted comparison, as kids in referral have, in my experience of talking with teachers and school employees, SEN and/or mental health issues. Your average goon in the street spitting on coppers is probably just a cunt in most cases.
Is abuse against teaching staff justified? Of course not, and much of the blame, IMO, stems from the parents who have a scant sense of morals and wouldn't know right from wrong if it was tattooed on their eyelids. Cunty apples don't fall far from cunty trees, IMO.
(Does it make the news? Sure as shit does:
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-wales-65905403 https://www.bbc.com/news/education-56625920 , as indeed it should. Unfortunately, parents seem to be working against the school in terms of discipline, whereas it should be a joined-up effort).
Going into a job with your eyes open to the challenges is one thing, normalising it and accepting it as 'part of the job' isn't. If we allow the cunty kids to do as want, they grow into cunty adults spitting on coppers.
BTW, I'm not here for a barney. You have your views, I have mine. S'all good.