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Bad behavior “result of uncovered needs” says the council with strict school in headlines

Schools are encouraged by a local educational authority to recognize why children behave poorly in class.

The behavior in Mommouthshire Schools has made the headlines with Caldicot school director Alun Ebenezer, which has demanded a harder discipline in Wales and the BBC believes that it believes that it is a culture of the “hiding place behind words like 'Wellbeing” and “Mollycoddling” children gives.

In autumn 2023, the teachers staged a number of strikes in Caldicot due to verbal and physical abuse of students at the secondary school, but since Mr. Ebenezer was appointed last summer, Estyn said that the behavior and morality of employees had improved.

His comments to the BBC, after presenting liability this month on Saturday morning, pushed the school back into the headlines and television debates after we said: “I think we are treating ourselves at the moment and hiding behind words such as well -being and Safe rooms and it makes things unsure and harms people's well -being. “

He also defended a directive that the students have to be transferred to the well -being by the employees, and said: “We understand that there are some students in this school who need appropriate well -being.

“But let these young people get the help they need and not the queue of a hundred people at the back who do not want to be in physics.”

Members of the Peoplecty Committee of the MONMOUTHSHIRE COUNTY COULICIL were given through his approach to behavior through inclusion Dr. Morwenna Wagstaff updated.

She told the council members: “We try to recognize schools and environments, and they become pretty good in it and have really good practice to see what the children present. The behavior is very often a communication of something that is not filled.

“Very often we children who present behaviors of real challenges and worry are exposed to the risk of exclusion, and if we take the time to develop, it turns out and this need has not been fulfilled. “

Dr. Wagstaff said that she was “very excited” that Monmouthshire does an inclusion service that also includes the provision of children with additional learning needs and more of a separate additional need service “and other bits”.

The conservative city councilor Jane Lucas said that she wanted to thank the inclusion service on behalf of young people because she said that such support was not available when she was at school.

The Osbaston member said: “I am addressed as a serious dyslexic, but I was not at school, I didn't get the opportunity to be driven out or recognized that I have just been pushed out, so it is nice to hear what you says and the system has changed. “

Cllr Lucas said she used “defensive actions”, of which she said she still used and she realizes that some people think that she is about confident: “People often confuse it as an attitude and it is not the case. It is only veiled what happened to me. I can really thank young people in the name. “