Britain's Challenging Children | Only Human

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  • čas přidán 15. 03. 2020
  • With primary schools across the country being stretched by the violent and disruptive behaviour of a small minority of pupils, an in-depth survey of teachers reveals the impact on their ability to teach. Five primary schools in Glasgow, Wigan and Luton are filmed as innovative methods are used to tackle the problem.
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Komentáře • 1K

  • @cstrad5862
    @cstrad5862 Před 4 lety +827

    I feel so bad for the teachers. Their hearts are in the right place, but they don't get paid enough to deal with this.

    • @Neonthunder23
      @Neonthunder23 Před 4 lety +4

      So truee

    • @chepecho
      @chepecho Před 4 lety +24

      Teachers work hard and they don't get the recognition they deserve.

    • @darkshadow2502
      @darkshadow2502 Před 4 lety +5

      C Strad that’s because we never hear it all we hear is teachers abused my child or other bad things we hardly ever see that some teachers do care for the children

    • @terrorgaming459
      @terrorgaming459 Před 3 lety +1

      Hope they all die

    • @terrorgaming459
      @terrorgaming459 Před 3 lety +1

      @@chepecho 🤡

  • @oreoboo8704
    @oreoboo8704 Před 4 lety +385

    There needs to be an anger management class for kids. Find out what they are angry about and help them let it out. These poor damage kids. God bless the teachers showing the children they have value.

    • @paigeemma9175
      @paigeemma9175 Před 3 lety +8

      I got put in one and it’s just playing a board game

    • @Lifewiththee
      @Lifewiththee Před 3 lety +3

      Yea but then they probably couldn’t get him to actually go to the class.

    • @coolkitty2075
      @coolkitty2075 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Maybe they should be in care?

    • @hannahcallow6374
      @hannahcallow6374 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Is it the child's anger or someone else's. Kids are sponges when it comes to learning

    • @Raven-nx8dr
      @Raven-nx8dr Před 8 měsíci +2

      If you can't fix their home, you won't fix the problem

  • @tanyaansley3992
    @tanyaansley3992 Před 8 měsíci +39

    As a teacher of 27 years please allow me to ask- when a child is out of control- why place him back into the regular education class to take from others. We spend so much time and money for the few who will behave like this for years.

  • @laurawhittaker4614
    @laurawhittaker4614 Před 8 měsíci +79

    Discipline starts in the home not at school, kids need boundaries.

    • @cayk9444
      @cayk9444 Před 8 měsíci +6

      Exactly, most of these kids run the show at home

    • @naomi5893
      @naomi5893 Před 8 měsíci +3

      ​@cayk9444 Lack of good father figures unfortunately.

    • @chanyphilly8266
      @chanyphilly8266 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I reckon a lot of parents are scared of their kids these days. Kids know they can't be smacked these days, so they push the parents to the limits, whilst saying, "what are you going to do about it?!"

    • @janishayes7366
      @janishayes7366 Před měsícem

      Well said 👏

  • @rocknrollrat2344
    @rocknrollrat2344 Před 4 lety +371

    My aunt's a teacher and she said the same thing - recently more and more children are relying on her to "raise" them (be a consistent role model, teach them right from wrong , discipline effectively, etc.).

    • @terrorgaming459
      @terrorgaming459 Před 3 lety +4

      I can tell u the reason were starting to fight back because we dont want to be teachers slaves so we fight back abolish school

    • @tosinoparinde9563
      @tosinoparinde9563 Před 3 lety +3

      I hate work

    • @jrtheg1235
      @jrtheg1235 Před 3 lety +6

      @@terrorgaming459 your not being oppressed wth

    • @honeybunch5765
      @honeybunch5765 Před 3 lety +8

      @@terrorgaming459 yeah and this is why you should stop gaming and get a life.😐

    • @anonymousone7448
      @anonymousone7448 Před 3 lety +1

      @@terrorgaming459 pathetic

  • @xhe1915
    @xhe1915 Před rokem +96

    As a special needs teacher that has had kids with massive behavioural issues, one thing we learn quickly is that sometimes these issues stem from lack of control and lack of agency in their environments. They're always being shouted at, being told what NOT to do, but a lot of the times, these standard methods of punishment and reward don't make sense to the kids who are so overwhelmed with anger and anxiety and lack of control. So giving them binary choices (and sometimes, forced choices e.g. do you want to work on worksheet A or worksheet B with both worksheets being on the same subject, at a similar difficulty level) is the first step to building a good relationship with the child and guiding them to make good choices without doing what they see adults around them doing to them most of the time, which is admonishing, yelling, scolding, and pushing them into corners. It teaches the kids that they have someone fighting their corner and that someone believes in them, and it can do absolute wonders when you start setting down the harder boundaries of more general class rules.

  • @thecook8964
    @thecook8964 Před 8 měsíci +54

    Levi certainly gets a lot of attention. Incredible reinforcement for his behavior😳

    • @PunkLoch
      @PunkLoch Před 6 měsíci +7

      He deserves to be left alone when he storms off. Instead of the teachers following him around like a lost dog. Maybe then he'll learn.

  • @swampophelia2098
    @swampophelia2098 Před 3 lety +217

    I can’t stand parents blaming the others for their own lack of parenting

    • @marclabrie6027
      @marclabrie6027 Před 3 lety +11

      They all need discipline

    • @Kris-2
      @Kris-2 Před 8 měsíci +13

      Many of these children could have mental illnesses (AD/HD or Autism), raising a child with a mental illness is much harder and not just a "lack of parenting."

    • @nobodyyou_know7836
      @nobodyyou_know7836 Před 8 měsíci

      @@Kris-2 youre right to say that most fo these children have undiagnosed ADHD /autism, but neither adhd or autism are mental illnesses. autistic people arent mentally ill

    • @DahDestroya
      @DahDestroya Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@Kris-2you are completely correct, people often blame the parents but these issues seem to be more than just acting up, many kids are neurodivergent and can’t function as well in a proper classroom and they need a bit of support

    • @cayk9444
      @cayk9444 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@Kris-2this is the consequence of adhd or autism (which STILL requires boundaries, expectations, and follow through) , but this is the consequence of children being the ringleaders at home, having no consequences for their actions, and never having to do anything “they don’t want to”

  • @lizcarr1330
    @lizcarr1330 Před 4 lety +64

    This isn't a teacher's job . This is shocking .

  • @katm6239
    @katm6239 Před 4 lety +254

    To all those teachers 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏

    • @terrorgaming459
      @terrorgaming459 Před 3 lety +2

      @@tosinoparinde9563 they put us in prisons and cry when school shootings happened freedom fighters never surrender to teachers are terrorists

    • @terrorgaming459
      @terrorgaming459 Před 3 lety +1

      @@tosinoparinde9563 Google teen sucide statistics 5089 die due to school a day abolish all forms of school google prevent uk teachers are legally allowed to spy on children and convict them of terrorism i and several of my friends have been convicted for terrorism at 9

    • @sbella44
      @sbella44 Před 3 lety

      I agree.

    • @sbella44
      @sbella44 Před 3 lety +4

      This is why so many adults have issues today.
      As child, they had so many issues and their schools had no funding to support them and their parents.
      So sad.

    • @semolinasemolina8327
      @semolinasemolina8327 Před 3 lety

      These teachers are basically tagging the acebook group 'the Poor's are at it again' - they are terrible teachers and terrible schools. There are much better strategies to

  • @lauracummings6482
    @lauracummings6482 Před 4 lety +97

    Nurture group is such a great way to deal with these kids. I hope we do this more everywhere. So nice for the mother’s who try so hard and want there kids to be educated. I hope they keep getting the funding.

  • @mhare8024
    @mhare8024 Před 4 lety +578

    Kids act like this when parents expect schools to raise their children, but don't allow them to discipline. Wth you think is going to happen?

    • @tosinoparinde9563
      @tosinoparinde9563 Před 3 lety +2

      @@lil_problemo I hate home work

    • @marclabrie6027
      @marclabrie6027 Před 3 lety +19

      Schools should be allowed to discipline them

    • @isabellavillanueva4639
      @isabellavillanueva4639 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @randomsongsinlocrianbecause they can’t!

    • @RubyLav8941
      @RubyLav8941 Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@lil_problemoI do, and discipline defo doesn’t help, it makes it way worse

    • @chrishughes3405
      @chrishughes3405 Před 8 měsíci +10

      This is just incorrect. Some kids are psychopathic, some sociopathic, some may have adhd and then most of the trouble makers are abused in some way at home.

  • @AussieBrit
    @AussieBrit Před 4 lety +102

    These children do not magically turn up to primary school and then manifest these behavioural problems. Intervention needs to start BEFORE they even start school. The funding needs to be spent on educating the ignorant parents that have fostered this antisocial behaviour, albeit sometimes unwittingly. This much is very clear.

    • @ivy88880
      @ivy88880 Před rokem

      What intervention is needed? Trying to learn more on the subject.

    • @AussieBrit
      @AussieBrit Před rokem +4

      @@ivy88880 Just as I stated. Educating parents so they can pick up on these problems early. Caregivers in pre-school and the like may have also noticed oppositional behaviour that should have been brought to the parents' attention, checking to make sure there are no physical anomalies that cause a child to behave badly (like undiagnosed hearing problems, for example.) So on and so forth. There are many different strategies that are used today.

    • @robbiecarter8773
      @robbiecarter8773 Před 8 měsíci +2

      ​@@ivy88880diet
      Attention
      Regular sleep
      Not yelling at kids parents at each other

    • @hannahcallow6374
      @hannahcallow6374 Před 8 měsíci +1

      - Learning needs not being met
      - socialization issues in the classroom

    • @nobodyyou_know7836
      @nobodyyou_know7836 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@joim3480 Did you even watch the video? Nothing to do with "manners". These kids are acting out their emotional and psychological distress. They need help, not "manners"

  • @MeMe-rw7kk
    @MeMe-rw7kk Před 4 lety +154

    Broken families, no dad figure. No punishment in school, children get rewarded rather than punished at school if misbehaving. I work in school and it is getting out of control.

    • @riverdeep399
      @riverdeep399 Před 4 lety +28

      True. My young teenage neighbour is out of control, yet she gets paid for holidays abroad and horse back riding, what lesson is learnt there? Bad behaviour wins treats, the hard working kids get nothing. I can't wrap my head around it.

    • @MeMe-rw7kk
      @MeMe-rw7kk Před 4 lety +12

      I agree. It doesn’t make sense and it’s certainly not working. Children have no respect, no boundaries, their language is just something else, yet there’s no punishment, no consequences . I’m dreading how they are going to end up as adults.

    • @naomic4390
      @naomic4390 Před 4 lety +18

      Totally agree that the children with behavioral problems get rewards yet the kids who want to learn get no rewards! Naughty kids at my sons school get tablets 2 play on and get to go to after school clubs (lego club/adventure club) but "good" kids cant go?? A boy in my sons class kicks off everyday, swearing, throwing chairs, punching etc but he still gets to go on all trips?? Just dont get it!

    • @EternalLeigh
      @EternalLeigh Před 4 lety +12

      Some of these kids don't come from broken families.Their parent just dont parent them/discipline them at home.Its disturbing how people automatically think all bad kids come from broken homes....And the behaved children come from two parent homes.Blind to the real world eh

    • @MeMe-rw7kk
      @MeMe-rw7kk Před 4 lety +4

      Chandra Johnson majority are from broken families.3,8 million children live with only one biological parent,2,7 million live with single mother.

  • @martinitime3537
    @martinitime3537 Před 4 lety +42

    Soon no one will want to be a teacher anymore.
    They can’t be expected to do the job that should be done by the parents.

    • @indescribable3865
      @indescribable3865 Před 2 lety

      Lots of terrible teachers out there not even teaching basic skills in favor of CRT

  • @rajimac
    @rajimac Před rokem +35

    I watched a program about the nurture room in Glasgow. It was so touching to see the children blooming . Tho teachers there are amazing. You cannot put a price on supporting vulnerable children and families.

    • @supahfly_uk
      @supahfly_uk Před 8 měsíci +1

      I was a nightmare at school lol, could have done with some of that.

  • @LyYAHN
    @LyYAHN Před 4 měsíci +4

    17:05 the lady in charge of that situation there was amazing! She handled it perfectly!
    She showed the kids not onli Jordan's amazingly positive attributes, but offered the kids an emotional connection to Jordan (and one another) by showing that everyone gets embarrassed sometimes. Even she put her hand up, showing that adults also cam get embarrassed and that it's not only because of negative things but because of positive things such as praise, as well.
    Beautifully done 🫶🏻

  • @mcgirlletsgo7135
    @mcgirlletsgo7135 Před 3 lety +43

    It’s sad. These children are disturbed by what they see at home. It’s good to see that they are working with the parents as well.

  • @jeanninereynolds4989
    @jeanninereynolds4989 Před 8 měsíci +16

    I disagree with a lot of the comments here. Undiagnosed learning disabilities and mental health issues are often at the root of the problem. Having parents and teachers working as a team are essential

    • @zoedark7101
      @zoedark7101 Před 7 měsíci +1

      You can't use disability as an excuse for disrupting the entire class

    • @jessicawatson3320
      @jessicawatson3320 Před 4 měsíci +2

      😊I agree with you, whilst mental health and learning disabilities may not be an excuse for bad behaviour, it may be a root cause. Like frustration caused by a child with a learning disability not being able to understand the work being put in front of them. People would assume they are just being naughty by acting out. However, if they take time to ask that child why they behaviour poorly they would realise they are struggling to understand their work and what is being asked of them, triggering a meltdown x

    • @roselambert
      @roselambert Před 17 dny

      Thankyou, you took the words out of my mouth

  • @diewilden80er73
    @diewilden80er73 Před 4 lety +217

    When kids behave like Levy, they should call the mother to pick him up, doesn't matter if she is working or not. It's her responsibility to take him to a specialist. Perhaps it would be better for him to visit a special school with smaller classes. These children are ticking bombs if they don't seek professional help while they are still young.

    • @hazelnut340
      @hazelnut340 Před 4 lety +8

      And if the parent cannot afford It?

    • @chepecho
      @chepecho Před 4 lety +47

      @@hazelnut340 Simple, parents have to find a way , you bring kids to the world you take care of your own child is a matter of responsibility and hard work not just relaying on the system.

    • @babysnoops14
      @babysnoops14 Před 4 lety +3

      That is not always work
      I was fine until for the past year or so. Now I keep going into the quiet room and end up throwing things or self harm. The staff know what it is but still dont really help.
      They trying to make me go to classes but i refuse

    • @babysnoops14
      @babysnoops14 Před 4 lety +1

      @TheWatcher743 mental health. The doctors dont know what type. Also I dont like lot of people

    • @alishaobrien7221
      @alishaobrien7221 Před 4 lety +1

      @@babysnoops14 while growing up, did you witness domestic violence at home?

  • @annapurna9893
    @annapurna9893 Před 2 lety +30

    How is threatening to send kids home a punishment? They’d love that!

    • @georgikobakov2184
      @georgikobakov2184 Před 2 lety +5

      Yeah that was good to bring up A proper punishment for the kids should be more like you know the parents coming into school and having a meeting with the headmaster or mistress

    • @GeeEee75
      @GeeEee75 Před 8 měsíci +7

      Depends what home looks like. When I was a kid I would much rather be at school than at home.

    • @cayk9444
      @cayk9444 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Yeah especially when there’s no consequences at home, which is clearly an issue

    • @naomi5893
      @naomi5893 Před 8 měsíci

      Schools are underfunded and can't always cope with lots of kids with behaviours. The easiest thing to do for the sake of the child, the teacher and the other children is to send the child home, it's not helpful in the long run though.

  • @tc7289
    @tc7289 Před 3 lety +79

    I wish nurture groups existed when I was at school, so many kids would disrupt lessons and myself and others who wanted to learn lost out. I also think there needs to be a similar scheme for the 'quieter' often socially anxious children to have their voices heard and work on their confidence as they are missing out whilst the confident disruptive kids get all the attention and one to one support. Schools are too full though and too many people are having kids without having worked on themselves and they go on to putting their own childhood trauma's onto their children, I speak from experience. I felt like I was raised by children and then I had to become a parent to my parent whilst I was still a child and it's put me off having my own kids. Please people think before you have children, your actions have an impact on those children and society.

    • @mrroo4342
      @mrroo4342 Před 2 lety +2

      I'm in that stage right now!

    • @Nefariously_ignorant
      @Nefariously_ignorant Před 8 měsíci +1

      I agree with everything you said and especially the part from "too many people are having kids without having worked on themselves" to the end feels very poignant
      I see this all the time and it makes me feel very down, like we're doing this for nothing
      I was raised like that, my life is in pieces because of my failed upbringing and I'm now witnessing it all over again with my niece and nephew, sometimes I think I don't want to see this and I don't want my life any more

  • @anaishealy5073
    @anaishealy5073 Před 3 lety +70

    I remember being at school and it was so quite. When lunch time came, I'd say half the school was missing. Turned out the trouble makers were shipped to Alton Towers for the day because Ofsted was coming in and they didn't want them effecting the grade. 🤦🏾‍♀️ It was quite a nice day being able to learn for a change without all the disruptions but the truth was that was not our reality. The sore was a lie. Schools should be fined or something for doing things like this. Ofsted is a joke, doesn't mean anything. Be aware of this when deciding your children's school.

    • @evenneve4579
      @evenneve4579 Před 2 lety +9

      I go to an outstanding school (rated by ofsted)but if someone came in on a random day it would probably be shut down
      Someone broke their leg by falling down a hill because people where throwing meat on her because she was a vegetarian

    • @anaishealy5073
      @anaishealy5073 Před 2 lety +5

      @@evenneve4579 that's awful, poor kid. I hope it wasn't her who broke her leg 😔

    • @SRPC21
      @SRPC21 Před 2 lety +4

      They deliberately put all the naughtiest from our year in my class; by the final year there were only 4 girls in it and a quarter of the boys bunked off the last day so you can’t see them in the end of school photo 😅.
      I went to a “good” school too, but only appreciated that the naughtiest were deliberately moved to one class recently as a way of managing them.

    • @anaishealy5073
      @anaishealy5073 Před 2 lety +3

      @@SRPC21 sucks it was your class. I hope it didn't affect your education. They should be in a class of their own really.

    • @anaishealy5073
      @anaishealy5073 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@-...-zed-...- the very intelligent and the most misbehaved get all the attention. The children in the middle suffer. Being at school has been the only time I've hated being average. At my school average children got absolutely nothing. We got less than. I think this is why the you have good children who start to misbehave.

  • @rippingtons60
    @rippingtons60 Před 3 lety +21

    It's so criminal the way the US and the UK treat teachers. They need much better pay and FAR better benefits for putting up with all this madness.

  • @mnumzanemchunu776
    @mnumzanemchunu776 Před 4 lety +113

    I pity for the rest of the kids in the classrooms when the switch is flicked off on these special kids.

  • @thehonesttomomtruth610
    @thehonesttomomtruth610 Před 4 lety +56

    It seems like a lot of anxiety. I feel bad for these kids

    • @gracesrebornnursery2999
      @gracesrebornnursery2999 Před 3 lety +6

      I was like that up until the end of year 4 but then I moved to a new school and I got the help I needed my parents got a private diagnosis for me and now I’m the best at school I’ve ever been

    • @phoenixxam5812
      @phoenixxam5812 Před 3 lety +2

      Why do you feel bad for the kids?

    • @kaylinalaska6117
      @kaylinalaska6117 Před 3 lety +2

      @@phoenixxam5812 usually the reason they don't want to go into class is because they're anxious, and the teachers following them around and distressing them is making it worse

    • @phoenixxam5812
      @phoenixxam5812 Před 3 lety

      @@kaylinalaska6117 ohhhh ok

    • @Chloe-gd8qk
      @Chloe-gd8qk Před 3 lety +3

      @@kaylinalaska6117 but the teachers have to do something. They cannot just leave them, because like they say the children could hurt them-self, hurt others or leave the school.

  • @wciantar45
    @wciantar45 Před 4 lety +186

    Where . Are. The. Parents?

    • @noelgeorgette3150
      @noelgeorgette3150 Před 3 lety +7

      @Jotaro Kujo Why can't their mothers raise them properly?
      Some of these kids could probably use a good whupping.

    • @gracesrebornnursery2999
      @gracesrebornnursery2999 Před 3 lety +1

      The teachers at my school always tell the parents to leave

    • @tsg7official
      @tsg7official Před 3 lety +5

      Dead

    • @Corrie561
      @Corrie561 Před 3 lety +9

      Probably struggling with addiction due to their own trauma and need help but can’t get it due to the stretched NHS, therefore their child suffers due to a lack of emotional support. Please think of these possibilities.

    • @tosinoparinde9563
      @tosinoparinde9563 Před 3 lety

      @@Corrie561 I have Austim

  • @rocknrollrat2344
    @rocknrollrat2344 Před 4 lety +39

    My aunt's a teacher and she said the same thing - recently more and more children are relying on her to "raise" them (be a consistent role model, teach them right from wrong , discipline effectively, etc.).
    At what point did we forget how to raise children properly? Or is it that we got lazy or simply stopped caring? (Yes, single-parent homes are much more common than they were 20 or 30 years ago, but plenty of amazing children come out of those situations, too.)

    • @ingridakerblom7577
      @ingridakerblom7577 Před 4 lety +7

      Many parents dosen't do their job. And when the kids are acting out, they'll go to different doctors Untill they get a diagnosis the parents want.. after this they can blame the schools etc for not taking enogh time (from every other kid) to teach their distruptive kid, now pumped full of amphetamine like medications thats often are not needed.. there is a difference between mental health issues & diagnosis, and lazy parents who dosen't understand what it means to raise a child.. you need to teach them emphaty etc it woun't fall down fom the sky and land on their kids lap just like that..
      So if the first doctors say no, the'll just go to the next one, and the next one untill they'll get that ADHD or autism diagnosis, so no one can any longer question the parents involvement in actually raising their own kids.. and if someone questions or disputes how the parent act, there will be a shitstorm & the parents can then blame schools, teachers etc for not taking enough time from everyone else, to teach THEIR child.. Instead of blaming themselves & trying to do better.. it's scary how easy it is to make young kids dependent on "narcotics", bcs the parent dosen't want to take their responsibility.. Either the kids have the need for medication, or not, and it should be determined by the actual need of the child, not what the parents want & their need to blame someone else & play victim..

    • @spikefivefivefive
      @spikefivefivefive Před 4 lety +4

      "Yes, single-parent homes are much more common than they were 20 or 30 years ago, but plenty of amazing children come out of those situations, too."
      Gee, how do you account for the rise in children's anti-social behavior then?
      The statistics show that children from single-parent homes are much more likely to be involved in drugs, crime, etc..
      Just look at prisons ...

    • @agravery223
      @agravery223 Před 4 lety +7

      More attention needs to go to parenting class... hurt people hurt people... break the cycle

    • @marclabrie6027
      @marclabrie6027 Před 3 lety +3

      @@ingridakerblom7577 parents use the diagnosis to not have to discipline their kids and get them out of trouble at school

    • @yuyukawa9104
      @yuyukawa9104 Před 8 měsíci

      Yet violent crime tends to decline every year.

  • @amelialane9638
    @amelialane9638 Před 11 měsíci +21

    These teachers and specialist staff who are trained in working with behavioural children deserve the world. They go through so much and they get hurt physically and mentally they honestly are the kindest people! 🥺

  • @LauraBidingCitizen
    @LauraBidingCitizen Před 8 měsíci +23

    When I worked in daycares, I felt so honoured to be part of those children’s lives, to watch them grow & learn every single day from babyhood through to 4-5 before they set off for school. However, I came across some very disturbing behaviours from some children & 20+ years on they still play on my mind.. what happened with them, how they got through school, what are they doing with their lives etc. All children will, at some point, try & push boundaries, it’s a given, that’s why it’s important to create that structure, have those boundaries in place, have consequences for actions etc. However, you can't guarantee that continues at home. When a child of 3-4 is biting both other peers & adults until they bleed, lashing out, toilet trained but purposely wetting themselves & laughing (& even, in one case, going as far as to smear their feces..), you have to wonder whats going on at home for them to react like that.

    • @msch7620
      @msch7620 Před 8 měsíci +1

      They know they are in a space with 0 consequences.

    • @user-zj5br9zf1h
      @user-zj5br9zf1h Před 8 měsíci +1

      I agree with you. To find the root cause and let psychologist to work with him instead of putting him in "mini jail" each time. The of why questions and support as not a pupil but as a child will help to understand much more about what to do further and in which way.

  • @dacha9540
    @dacha9540 Před 4 lety +62

    It shouldn't be just the teachers trying to deal with the child's behavior...it should be parent involvement because children have learned what they have been taught or not by their parents for proper social behavior...this concept just puts a bandaid on it & doesn't address the root problem...

    • @skylerlawson5027
      @skylerlawson5027 Před 2 lety +1

      Exactly 💯

    • @mlmj1994
      @mlmj1994 Před rokem

      Yes. Society has placed the burden on the public education school system to rehabilitate children. It’s really unfortunate.

    • @jessicaburns2266
      @jessicaburns2266 Před 8 měsíci

      That’s true but I give it to the teachers for helping

  • @DT-hx4gz
    @DT-hx4gz Před 4 lety +35

    Bless the teachers' hearts.

  • @CardsbyMaaike
    @CardsbyMaaike Před 4 lety +77

    3 hours to try and get a kid in a class? blimey in my time that would have been dealt with in 10 minutes...I was a good kid, but my teachers weren't putting up with this..this kid is given too much power. I;m sure they have problems at home, so did we, not all kids act out

    • @babysnoops14
      @babysnoops14 Před 4 lety +3

      It took me nearly all day for me to go into class. The staff trying to get me to go but I wont. I keep going into the toilet and lock myself in. Also staff are worried about me coz I wont do anything.
      The Monday that just gone, one of the staff blame me for wasting 2 years if I dont come out.
      I was crying and I was on the phone to my best friend (she the only person who calm me down) she got angry at the teacher for saying that as i was pulling my hair and everything

    • @ultraboombean
      @ultraboombean Před 4 lety +4

      @@babysnoops14 I dunno how old you are and maybe you have anxiety. Maybe you need methods to help you to stay in class. Maybe they can put a desk further from the rest of the class ? Not sure but I would talk to the staff and take a deep breath. They do want to help you and maybe you can find strategies. Best of luck 🙏

    • @tosinoparinde9563
      @tosinoparinde9563 Před 3 lety

      @@babysnoops14 I Hate work

    • @babysnoops14
      @babysnoops14 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ultraboombean it fine now. It was because I was bullied and they didn't do anything. Im at university now so they are more understanding.

  • @wmdkitty
    @wmdkitty Před 4 lety +119

    Why aren't there any consequences for the bad behavior?

    • @daniellefleetwood1765
      @daniellefleetwood1765 Před 4 lety +11

      Amen Shawna. Their behavior just escalates since they know there will get away with it.

    • @geo9994
      @geo9994 Před 3 lety +7

      Teachers have to be soft nowadays they can't "hurt anyones feelings" and if that happens then the kid tells the parents and then the parents come to the school and complain about that teacher. Its not like before when the teacher and parents were on the same side those days have gone trust me.

    • @celticphoenix2579
      @celticphoenix2579 Před 3 lety +4

      There were. The child got put into a bare time-out room until they were calm enough to articulate the issue and actively work with the teachers to an agreed compromise or resolution. Repeated offenses saw the kid sent home. The days of beating a child into compliance are thankfully gone. Children are human beings, often in difficult home situations, who deserve help learning the coping mechanisms "normal" children from "normal" homes learn. Much like training animals, with children rewarding correct behavior gets much better results than punishing bad behavior.

    • @tosinoparinde9563
      @tosinoparinde9563 Před 3 lety

      @@celticphoenix2579 I hate work

    • @semolinasemolina8327
      @semolinasemolina8327 Před 3 lety +1

      The kids are put in a cell!

  • @Katiepembroke
    @Katiepembroke Před 8 měsíci +9

    Each of those children strike me as hurt , I can't help but wonder how much of there behaviour is learnt and seen

  • @hyperlyeverafter
    @hyperlyeverafter Před 3 lety +57

    There needs to be more AWARENESS of ADHD and Oppositional Defiant Disorder, Conduct Disorder and so on. There needs to be ASSESSMENT and DIAGNOSIS (by a paediatric psychologist/psychiatrist) and teachers need TRAINING for these kinds of psychiatric disorders and ADDITIONAL SUPPORT from specialists- in the classroom helping these teachers in the classroom every day. These children need very SPECIFIC behaviour management plans (specifically the adults need to learn how to motivate and care for these children) and the next step might also be the right medication. My daughter has ADHD (like her father) and Oppositional Defiant Disorder that varies in severity depending mostly on how closely others stick to her behaviour management plan. She is currently too young to try medication as an extra tool. Breaks my heart to see some of these children not getting the right support. I am trained in early childhood education and primary education so I understand how most schools etc run and the training teachers get and how a-typical children are not supported. If you would like a great resource on ADHD - Dr Russell Barkley is a great place to start (great lectures on CZcams). I will also add that how classrooms and learning are run should change to accommodate learning in ways that would better support children with eg ADHD.

    • @rebeccaryan5030
      @rebeccaryan5030 Před 3 lety +13

      Also awareness of Autism (especially high functioning) and sensory issues!

    • @leahvollmer610
      @leahvollmer610 Před rokem +12

      Adhd is over diagnosed

    • @Heavens-Humanaterian-Army
      @Heavens-Humanaterian-Army Před 10 měsíci +13

      Its a lack of good parenting...not medical issues...half the medical conditions don't even exist...there just other words for your kid is a naughty brat and needs discipline.

    • @greengage6546
      @greengage6546 Před 8 měsíci

      It could be caused by anxiety also

    • @crochetomania
      @crochetomania Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@-...-zed-...-do they have 30 kids in the classroom in the posh schools? Do they have not enough teachers in posh schools? Plus any posh school would not participate in a programme like this because it would damage their reputation.

  • @jlcubful
    @jlcubful Před 4 lety +23

    Parents need to wake up!!!! And parent!!!!

  • @paulafoster2607
    @paulafoster2607 Před 8 měsíci +5

    Wouldn't it be nice if every school had something like this in place? It could really make a difference in so many lives.

  • @helenamoniqueclarke8135
    @helenamoniqueclarke8135 Před 4 lety +46

    It almost always starts at home.

    • @marclabrie6027
      @marclabrie6027 Před 3 lety +1

      Discipline starts at home

    • @kaylinalaska6117
      @kaylinalaska6117 Před 3 lety

      @@marclabrie6027 you don't need discipline to have a happy home

    • @kaylinalaska6117
      @kaylinalaska6117 Před 3 lety

      no it doesn't.

    • @marclabrie6027
      @marclabrie6027 Před 3 lety

      @@kaylinalaska6117 how so

    • @eggfluffington5408
      @eggfluffington5408 Před 3 lety +2

      @@kaylinalaska6117 you do, it should never be aggressive if my kids are naughty I put them in the corner they are brought up with manners do there homework on time . I was beaten as a kid, starved punished for nothing and would never do the same to my girls

  • @ashleymarshall5502
    @ashleymarshall5502 Před 7 měsíci +6

    Learning disabilities are under funded and many children get missed and are just seen as naughty children. That's not the case, they just get misunderstood.

    • @becky2235
      @becky2235 Před 7 měsíci

      Exactly ths ks for making this issue sewn

  • @jakeeiseman-renyard3505
    @jakeeiseman-renyard3505 Před 11 měsíci +8

    I was in a nurture group in infants school. One of many things I feel the juniors school could and should have done differently is to have a nurture group, too (along with many things I wish I'd done differently, as well). Something a nurture group can help with for kids with special needs at the transition from infants to juniors school is the shock of going from being one of the oldest in the school to one of the youngest, all over again.

  • @james1234168
    @james1234168 Před 4 lety +37

    When I was a primary kid and tried anything like this, I would be swiftly taken to the head teachers room, get a sizeable yelling, and have no break time for a week 😂 I tell you what, it'd be a long time before I'd try anything again. Class disruption used to get sorted real quick

  • @ZH-Rocks
    @ZH-Rocks Před 2 lety +10

    How come in other parts of world we dont see these bullying/tantrums and outburst) specially at this young age in schools??there has to be a reason why children are acting up here..i took my child abroad for 2 yrs and they were astonish to see how disciplined the children were in class.(yr 6,9 and 13 ).

    • @SuperBurger2011
      @SuperBurger2011 Před 2 lety +1

      I think in Western countries there is always a feeling that no matter how many bad choices you choose to make in life, there will always be a safety net to catch you. I think this is what allows them to act up - they know they will be given endless chances. I think this leads to a sense of entitlement in both adults and children. In the East, on the other hand, there are no safety nets to catch you. If you act out, and end up being expelled (which they are much quicker to do in the East), you know your life is going to be tough from there. You'll be alienated by all your previous friends, likely not be let into another school quickly, and if you grow up not having achieved much there are no government payouts or anything to make your life liveable. Children are aware of this over there. They grow up knowing they must be disciplined and hardworking because it's a cultural norm over there; you get a good life if you conduct yourself properly. If not, you get nothing. There is no sense of entitlement.

  • @Drebolaskan
    @Drebolaskan Před 4 lety +20

    I spent 3 yrs in London right after kindergarten. The schools were so pretty and grand compared to what I was used to back home, I couldn't imagine any kid wanting to cause trouble with so much activities and resources available to them. I recall getting some mild bullying from the kids, but it didn't register in my childish mind and I just brushed it off. Then I moved back to Asia and got the shock of my life; everything was stressful, I didn't understand the change in culture/environment, teachers were yelling, the kids just shunned me, got caned almost everyday, family problems, noone to talk to, not knowing what I should do or how long this madness would go on for and I distinctly remember wondering why people are so afraid of dying when life itself is just full of pain and it's all just going to end the same way either way; but I had no idea how one would go about bringing their own demise, or I likely wouldn't be here right now. Oh, and I would stress eat every night till I grew almost 3 times my usual size.
    I forgot where I was going with this, but I think it had something to do how a strong-handed approach is sometimes needed but how it needs to be tempered with a strong focus on the well-being, mentally and emotionally, of the child. That's the gist of it at least

    • @sherrydobbins188
      @sherrydobbins188 Před rokem

      They have no idea where the boundaries are..line between acceptable and unacceptable behavior..letting a child make its own choices .why are their adults in charge if they are not setting the limit's

  • @frankman2134
    @frankman2134 Před 4 lety +32

    Kids like that are so annoying

  • @Lifewiththee
    @Lifewiththee Před 3 lety +10

    If my kid acted like that.... I’d tell the school to call me and I’d go to class with him. I’d set him straight, because sending them home seems to not work. From what I see anyway. I mean if they don’t like doing school work and they know they will be sent home if they act up... they will act up.

    • @coolkitty2075
      @coolkitty2075 Před 9 měsíci

      I made sure my son was ready for school.
      I was a lone parent

  • @mynameisbryan_7155
    @mynameisbryan_7155 Před 4 lety +51

    it is not the school's fault it is the parents fault because they don't know how to discipline their kids

  • @naomi5893
    @naomi5893 Před 8 měsíci +6

    There is a lack of male teachers and male role models in schools. Both my husband and my dad work in schools and my mum works in eary help, it's so important for males to be present in schools. Especially if some of the kids have an absent father figure.
    Also state schools are pretty underfunded, especially with mental health issues.

  • @annieridesagain3867
    @annieridesagain3867 Před 3 lety +18

    This documentary is years old , the children featured are adults now . But I would have had Jason tested for FASD if I had been able to .

    • @azsli2
      @azsli2 Před 3 lety +5

      And absent seizures. The way he zoned like that

    • @hello-un2rp
      @hello-un2rp Před rokem +2

      This was 2 yrs ago tho

  • @user-jo7ce4ld2s
    @user-jo7ce4ld2s Před 3 lety +8

    These are very good teachers. They help the children very much. The angry pupils are angry but the teachers help them.

  • @elainehoughton6404
    @elainehoughton6404 Před 3 lety +12

    There will be no teachers left soon and I don’t blame them. 🤦‍♀️

  • @mariacrouch7109
    @mariacrouch7109 Před 10 měsíci +4

    MORE PAY BETTER CONDITIONS AND MORE MONEY AND BETTER RESOURCES INTO SCHOOLS THIS IS WHAT IS NEEDED URGENTLY

  • @mariofilippeschi4855
    @mariofilippeschi4855 Před 4 lety +47

    Filipino mom: 🥿👟🧹 this would fix it

    • @tribecca4578
      @tribecca4578 Před 4 lety +1

      Yup!

    • @celticphoenix2579
      @celticphoenix2579 Před 3 lety +8

      It doesn't fix anything, just kicks the can down the road a ways. I speak from personal experience.

    • @tosinoparinde9563
      @tosinoparinde9563 Před 3 lety

      Yup

    • @yuzuru1813
      @yuzuru1813 Před 3 lety

      It will just traumatized them and make them scared of you, and maybe they'll even start kicking off more at school

  • @szeszi21
    @szeszi21 Před 4 lety +31

    It's not always about bad parenting. There are children born with subminimal brain damage where regular parenting won't work and things can go wrong easily. I don't wanna say that's the backgrond in all cases but it's not easy to judge it from the outside.

    • @SRPC21
      @SRPC21 Před 2 lety +4

      I’ve found a disproportionate amount of troubled children have no father figure at home but you’re right that in some cases it could be a disability, even in a perfect family environment.

    • @coolkitty2075
      @coolkitty2075 Před 9 měsíci

      There are schools for children with special needs

    • @zoedark7101
      @zoedark7101 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Brain scans should be done more regularly.

    • @naomi5893
      @naomi5893 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@zoedark7101That's expensive.

    • @aliwilliams5407
      @aliwilliams5407 Před 8 měsíci

      @@-...-zed-...-those children learn to hide it. Affluence can be positive but the negative is that those children’s behaviors are controlled with heavy medication that leads many into addiction.

  • @eclipse_eternal8178
    @eclipse_eternal8178 Před 3 lety +16

    When I was in secondary school In year 9 and 10 I had a period of really hating and being terrified of my food tech practical lessons so one day I got in the room then immediately walked out and hid in the bathroom for 2 hours and even though I went out eventually after that incident every food tech lesson I made a scene somewhere in the school like full on crying and having a meltdown (baring in mind I was model-ish student and would never be imagined to do this) and for a while I would not go at all and they gave me tons of opportunities to make the right decision and to go anyway but that was not the issue i was terrified of messing up in the actual lesson so it didn't make much difference but after I was threatened at parents evening to be taken off the course and a LSA helped me to get into the lesson and to get started and that no one was judging me I very slowly managed to go to every lesson even though I was terrified every time I still managed to do my practical exam and I ended up passing my subject and getting s GCSE out of it so moral of the story I don't really have one but just wanted to show that it's not always so easy to do the right thing there are often reasons why you don't.

    • @bunglejoy3645
      @bunglejoy3645 Před rokem +5

      Please be aware its not always the parents there's many psychiatric learning difficulties these kids can have adhd sensory processing disorder oppositional disorder difficult home situations even mental breakdowns severe anxiety school phobia autism come age 12 even scriphonia psychosis schizoid affective disorder paronia I wascwell vehaved not violent never would be but had mental health issues from age 14 to present day in late life being a 1970s baby these thing wernt known about turns out I've properly bee high functioning aspergers from age 5 though onlyvinformally diagnosed by psychotherapist in 2018 sadly mum didn't live to see it I cared for mum for 20 year my mental health despite extensive treatment dosentvimpr9ve no offense mental but all I can do is to educate people on mental health

  • @user-cw6yj5gq9y
    @user-cw6yj5gq9y Před 3 lety +11

    When I was in primary this boy in my class would come up to me an slap me on the face then we went to secondary he was only there for 3 days then expelled so now I’m safe 😀

    • @JustElly123
      @JustElly123 Před 3 lety +2

      That’s terrible. It’s such a shame how much tolerance primary schools have to have beyond what should be accepted.

  • @bill_
    @bill_ Před 3 lety +17

    I went to a village primary school with about 50 kids so we didn’t really have any bad behaviour or bullying.

  • @elzaaltmann
    @elzaaltmann Před 3 lety +39

    Stop giving them choices, tell them what they have to do and whats expected of them. They are still children! I do not remember in my day that we had these rediculous outbursts.

    • @eilissmith8591
      @eilissmith8591 Před 3 lety

      To a degree I agree with you, kiss’s do best with boundaries, but the school system encourages personal responsibility and making choices, which is a necessary life skill.

    • @elzaaltmann
      @elzaaltmann Před 3 lety +2

      @@eilissmith8591 they are still children, hence the reason they do not drink, or drive and are not judged in an adult court. Their brains aren't all that yet.

    • @katepausig8562
      @katepausig8562 Před 2 lety +2

      Choices for kids are okay to an extent.

    • @hello-un2rp
      @hello-un2rp Před rokem +2

      Tbh choices make it better alot of the times because then they can decide what they want to do and come back with a smile.

    • @davetherave3511
      @davetherave3511 Před 8 měsíci +3

      That's worst possible advice, and shows that you total ignorance.
      They could have learning difficulties, broken familyd, be abused etc.
      You need to find the root and cause of the behaviour instead of punishment

  • @tamaraj4200
    @tamaraj4200 Před 4 lety +10

    Why are kids in school at age 3? I didn't start school until age 5 and I was barely ready. Also why so many toys for the older children. As of grade 1 at 6 years old there were no more toys in the classroom except for show and tell. That is probably a major distraction.

    • @ultraboombean
      @ultraboombean Před 4 lety +4

      Early education , pre-k actually helps kids ....prolly cuz their parents do not teach them basic stuff they need to know before even starting school at 5.

  • @foreverkenzie2397
    @foreverkenzie2397 Před 3 lety +8

    The issue is alot of adults are just broken kids in an adult body

  • @iszychurch4711
    @iszychurch4711 Před 2 lety +6

    I am hoping the teachers contacted social services to check that these children were not being abused/neglected. I know so many children who have acted in similar ways and it was the abuse that they were going through at home, I too was abused at home and the teachers were useless.

    • @everydaysaschool-day7517
      @everydaysaschool-day7517 Před 8 měsíci

      There is a rigorous safeguarding procedure in UK schools.

    • @notacatnt
      @notacatnt Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@everydaysaschool-day7517 There is? I wrote a card for mother's day and a teacher printed it for me, and it said something along the lines of "I love you mummy, but please don't hit me again". Nothing was done. Across multiple schools, when there was evidence of how I was treated. Schools don't deal with bullying, even when it becomes a legal issue. They certainly never helped with my home life, either.

  • @alientourist4171
    @alientourist4171 Před 2 měsíci +1

    This program is absolutely fantastic. I wish they would do it in Canada.

  • @louisemerriman1079
    @louisemerriman1079 Před 3 lety +32

    If I would of behaved like that in school I would have been chilling with whitney and Michael Jackson by now

  • @Robyamdam
    @Robyamdam Před 4 lety +55

    Anakin Skywalker knew how to fix those pesky kids

    • @timothycurnock9162
      @timothycurnock9162 Před 4 lety +1

      Lol that's funny. You were my brother, oh how we all met some guys like that. I cry everytime.

    • @rabidrabbitshuggers
      @rabidrabbitshuggers Před 4 lety +5

      *Lightsaber pulled out of sheath*
      Let's plan some parenthoods.

    • @finnsnow2495
      @finnsnow2495 Před 4 lety +1

      Master Skywalker, what are we going to do?

    • @tosinoparinde9563
      @tosinoparinde9563 Před 3 lety

      @@rabidrabbitshuggers I hoped Luke Skywalker will save us from school

  • @sir_rick_dickpump
    @sir_rick_dickpump Před 3 lety +8

    I love how most kids parents would say there kids are perfect.

  • @sambee8982
    @sambee8982 Před 4 měsíci +1

    4:30 That dreaded moment at school when breaktime is over in the playground and you hear the whistle being blown and the teacher on duty shouting at everyone to stop.🤣🤣🤣

  • @susananderson1071
    @susananderson1071 Před 3 lety +6

    Without a huge turn around in the homes that are dysfunctional or these school interventions, imagine what these disruptive, angry children will be as adults. Crime would go up exponentially, many of those would be violent crimes. Plus if they cannot function in a learning environment, they surely will be unable to function in jobs, most will be uneducated.
    Yes parents need to be aware of the home environment and seek help for themselves or their children but what other programs are out there if not for those in the schools. I would think funding would come from local governments and schools both.

  • @shirleyac12
    @shirleyac12 Před 8 měsíci +4

    These children often have parents that are dysfunctional. They learn how to treat others if they witness adults treating others badly . I doubt if dysfunctional parents deal with their children appropriately. I think parenting classes should be compulsory if a child clearly starts school without any self control management at all. School should teach and parents should be a nurturing example to their kids. It’s good there’s staff to help children that parents clearly can’t be bothered with . I feel for staff and children that want to learn . Of course some children change which is brilliant. Thanks to staff and their parents .

  • @rustyiron
    @rustyiron Před 4 lety +19

    The problem starts with their grandparents failing to raise their parents abetted by Social Services . Seeing this behaviour makes me wonder at what things like at home or even if they have a home. Unfortunately these children will be passed from grade to grade without knowing anything.

  • @shemaromuir3030
    @shemaromuir3030 Před 4 lety +46

    All I have to say is the kids are lucky they are not in the Carrabbian or Africa.

    • @astrongyoungwoman2460
      @astrongyoungwoman2460 Před 3 lety +4

      😂😂😂😂 that's true that will be grave situation

    • @minhphuongnguyen8504
      @minhphuongnguyen8504 Před 3 lety +4

      or asia

    • @terrorgaming459
      @terrorgaming459 Před 3 lety

      Google teen sucide statistics 5089 die due to school a day abolish all forms of school google prevent uk teachers are legally allowed to spy on children and convict them of terrorism i and several of my friends have been convicted for terrorism at 9 stfu

    • @ntandowetu3733
      @ntandowetu3733 Před 3 lety

      You are so correct , British kids have it so easy which is unfortunate for them 🤔

    • @STYLESBYLIFEBEAUTYNMORE
      @STYLESBYLIFEBEAUTYNMORE Před 3 lety

      Let me tell you

  • @msch7620
    @msch7620 Před 8 měsíci +3

    The kid @14:05 has either something neurological or some deep trauma of neglect and violence. It makes me so sad. I hope he got the right help and is doing fine.

  • @jennychurchill2716
    @jennychurchill2716 Před 9 měsíci +4

    Its the parent's responsibility to discipline their own children. Too many of them cant be bothered.

  • @ullisfe1039
    @ullisfe1039 Před 3 lety +3

    Its so so important to also work with the parentes. As they say poor parental behavior effects the children tremendesly.

  • @ihatekarens6163
    @ihatekarens6163 Před 8 měsíci +5

    I used to have this problem. I would act out and stuff. Turns out I have ADHD and maybe possible autism. I wasn’t acting out because how I was raised I was acting out because my brain was not functioning properly

    • @jessicawatson3320
      @jessicawatson3320 Před 4 měsíci

      It's so easy for people to blame the parents..or lack of a parent.😊
      Thanks for raising this issue 😊

  • @Lubomishka92
    @Lubomishka92 Před 5 měsíci

    I think it was lovely that the Mum was acknowledged for her contribution too, well done ❤

  • @dragonredsinbad4631
    @dragonredsinbad4631 Před 3 lety +7

    I personally had such strict parents I enjoyed school I knew they couldn't hit me. But then feared letters home. Also parents evening so I had no choice but to behave. The colours and other students I honestly enjoyed my time there, I didn't want to go home. I enjoyed the uniform the lessons the school trips. But I think for some kids they just born with behavioural problems epically if parents smoke or used drugs or over abused alcohol during pregnancy. It's so unfair. I guess the kids wonder why they can not control themselves or their rage or emotions. Also poor or no discipline at home could lead to bad behaviour in school.

  • @klaus2550
    @klaus2550 Před 7 měsíci +3

    I was very much like these children and I feel for them. It's usually either a case of they don't get enough attention at home, they aren't having enough discipline at home, they're seeing that aggression at home or that they may be something like being autistic. I experienced alot of that as a kid and I wish my school would've looked into it. Referred me for some kind of assessment because. Kids aren't violent for no reason

    • @klaus2550
      @klaus2550 Před 7 měsíci

      I wish they'd had something like a nurture group. I used to just get locked in a room for hours

    • @becky2235
      @becky2235 Před 7 měsíci

      Well said

  • @yahuchanonyakov
    @yahuchanonyakov Před rokem +3

    That look that Casey had on his face at 23:37...I dealt with 2 twin boys before that looked at me with that exact same look on their faces....a lot of this starts at home. There must be good parenting and nurturing there.... And even with that in place, child rearing is still a huge challenge.

  • @JosephLive..
    @JosephLive.. Před 4 lety +12

    They need to be more strict

  • @attitudeproblem6462
    @attitudeproblem6462 Před 3 lety +6

    That would definitely make me choose a different career path.😬😬😬

  • @classyundercutelectra4330
    @classyundercutelectra4330 Před 3 lety +19

    'A bare room with nothing to climb on' Little dude must be levitating then 😂

    • @evangelene12
      @evangelene12 Před 2 lety +1

      Your listening and comprehension skills, and English sentence construction aren't so good. The sentence says - bare walls, and no furniture to climb or throw. "To climb or throw" refers to the furniture. You can't throw walls can you? Also a door is not a wall. Maybe dig out those first grade English books hmmm?

    • @dburr706
      @dburr706 Před 2 lety

      Hahah fr. Dude was just hanging in the window 🤣

    • @eevee727
      @eevee727 Před 2 lety

      @@evangelene12 Their comment was a joke.

  • @angietyndall7337
    @angietyndall7337 Před 3 lety +7

    Do the schools in the U.K. have Social Workers, Psychologist, or Special Education teachers, who can Diagnose for disorder like ADHD, Autism; etc.?
    How about Social Workers doing Welfare Checks for homes with these kids?

    • @amelialane9638
      @amelialane9638 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Yes there are social workers and Psychologists as well as specialist teachers. More awareness needs to be done for neurodevelopmental conditions.

  • @aigatulifau6127
    @aigatulifau6127 Před 7 měsíci

    Awesome Levi!!!

  • @Samprids
    @Samprids Před 3 lety +1

    A girl in my class shes actually one of my friends she has anxiety and sometimes we cant get her in the classroom straight away and she just gets sad and gets worried BUT THANK GOD SHES NOT AS BAD AS HIM LIKE HE BROKE A PUPULS ARM LIKE SHE WOULD NEVER DO THAT ON PURPOSE (but I dont really know if its anxiety as well)

  • @ceseak1571
    @ceseak1571 Před 9 měsíci +3

    All behaviour is communication. This behavior may be mental health, learning disabilities, giftedness and or promlems at home. I am happy these children are gating help in nurture groups i hope that they get any support they need.

  • @26prodjectstudios53
    @26prodjectstudios53 Před 3 lety +4

    My Mum:"Dont Worry, You Will Have A Great Day At School"
    My Day At School:

  • @franceswomble8083
    @franceswomble8083 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Our children are eating junk food ff's chicken nuggets, cheese burgers, pizza noodles, Coke Cola Mountain Dew potato chips, cookies, and candy. They stay on games 🎮 and tv for hours, lots of homes, no father. Poor parenting skills are a big part of behavior, not knowing how to deal with these behaviors. We are seeing this in America also.

  • @ivelissecamacho1989
    @ivelissecamacho1989 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I have family that works within the school system, and they are emotionally and physically exhausted and feel like they barely accomplished their teaching plans for the day, because they spend most of their hrs dealing with disruptive students. GOOD TEACHERS have either quit, transferred to another city/state or retired. And what we have left are teachers and staff that are worse than the students.
    THIS IS WHAT HAPPENS WHEN:
    *government intervenes in ways they shouldn't within families and the way they raise their own children. (Yeah, yeah, there's lots of abusive parents, but for some reason, the government seems to almost always intervene in the wrong homes) 😮‍💨
    * You take more and more rights away from parents. Thats is a 💯 fact!
    *when u tolerate and reward bad behavior in the hopes that it will somehow help them behave better.
    * when u DON'T HOLD THEM TRULY ACCOUNTABLE for their actions!
    * Schools continue to allow such behaviors, knowing is affecting teachers' and students' ability to learn what they should!
    Never in my 34yrs of age have I heard of teachers running out of classrooms, crying during class, complaining about how they have no control of the situation, etc. Talking about their personal issues.
    My daughter is 13yrs old and all I hear is "my teacher was crying today" "my teacher says she only there for the money" (which i know can't be true, cause teachers don't get paid enough) "there was a fight today, blood and students badly hurt" yet the school allows those kids to go back to school the next day!?!??!?!?! It's UNBELIEVABLE, really.
    This is what's happening in the US, I'm from Massachusetts, and this is what I've noticed, and it's extremely disappointing!

  • @lauracummings6482
    @lauracummings6482 Před 4 lety +15

    Why are they disruptive? Maybe normal school is too much for them. Maybe they have too high of expectations and they are acting out because they aren’t able to cope with the demands we now place on children.

    • @dimitriosvuthoulkas2538
      @dimitriosvuthoulkas2538 Před 3 lety +1

      Chdreins needs paaviles times for you talk to learn rassiings good T classroom

    • @cayk9444
      @cayk9444 Před 8 měsíci

      “The demands we now place on children”, oh come on, when I went to school there were WAYYYY more expectations, dont be ridiculous. These children have no structure and do what they want at home, and they want to do the same at school.

  • @junemiller2638
    @junemiller2638 Před 3 lety +20

    Oh godddd I used to treat my teachers like this oh shiiii I didnt realise how much the teachers controlled themselves

    • @honeybunch5765
      @honeybunch5765 Před 3 lety +3

      Why were you acting out in class?

    • @willowr3614
      @willowr3614 Před 3 lety

      Same here. Being in school was very stressful for me and most don't have the training needed for difficult kids. I was either locked in the quiet room or restrained in the quiet room the whole day multiple times a week. Throughout my entire 12 years in school I was not taught in school or at home how to cope with everyday life stressors.

  • @abigailloar956
    @abigailloar956 Před 8 měsíci +3

    The fact that the nurture groups eventually outperform the regular class proves ALL children need more one-on-one, smaller classes, and more active learning. Just proves that the school setup is trash and the reset button needs to be hit

    • @becky2235
      @becky2235 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Well said. But i sadly doubt it eill happen

  • @lea-emmalouise7002
    @lea-emmalouise7002 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I was like this in school when teachers don’t help me I mess around to get there attention

  • @ravenrisby
    @ravenrisby Před 3 lety +3

    You cannot see they have emotions that steam from home

  • @jorgelourenco2085
    @jorgelourenco2085 Před 2 lety +10

    Fantastic video. Even if it goes beyond teachers work, it really helps a lot to understand how to deal with some of these situations. Cheers.

  • @chanyphilly8266
    @chanyphilly8266 Před 2 měsíci

    I'd have left Levi standing there to make his own mind up. With no attention he'd have bored himself and come back in eventually. But it took 3 members of staff standing in the cold, basically begging him to come in before resorting to dragging him back into the building. Those 3 staff members could've been inside, helping with other children who were willing to do the work.

  • @Crazychickana10
    @Crazychickana10 Před 4 lety +27

    Okay I'm trying to understand what's going on
    I know every kids have problems within the home
    but I do feel it is not right for the kids who having problems to disrupt the classroom and the teachers teaching
    That holds the teacher back in the kids that wants to learn in that wants to be there to get an education
    but what are we doing with the kids who do have these problems OU letting them to decide what they want to do know you do not do that
    if they act up they get punished for it so that means if they go into the quiet room to go to the quiet room for how long period off time
    you have to understand the kids you're having challenging problems they know right from wrong they just want that attention that they're not seeking anywhere else

  • @megangreene3955
    @megangreene3955 Před 9 měsíci +3

    I would like to see this nurture group imported to the United States. It looks really good. I think my son, Thomas, would benefit from it.

  • @joelhall5124
    @joelhall5124 Před 3 lety +5

    Seems like they have no control at all. The kids know they can do whatever they like.

  • @selkarogers7662
    @selkarogers7662 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Unfortunately kids that struggle like this are usually products of their environment. Others have special needs and need to be properly assessed and sent to a special class/ school but again parents need to be on top of that. A chaotic and dysfunctional home where parents do the absolute least for their kids is where most of this stems from. Not to mention abuse, addictions, severe neglect in the home. When I was coming out of highschool I used to volunteer at a primary school where most of the kids came from underprivileged backgrounds. Seeing how sweet but damaged the kids were because of the homes they came from broke my heart and made me never want to go into teaching. Most of the kids were being bounced around foster care or being raised by other family. One 7yr old girl was in the custody of her 18 year old sister. That school did their absolute best and we provided breakfast, lunch and 2 snacks a day. For some of the kids that we knew werent being fed we would send them an extra lunch home at the end of the day for their dinner. I used to pray they would survive their effed up home lives.

  • @mencadotranforming4411
    @mencadotranforming4411 Před měsícem +1

    Why were they surprised to find that the children who (being in the nurture groups) had more one-to-one attention, support, and guidance did better in math and reading by the end of the year than did the other students? What child does not do better with experiencing more one-to-one teaching?