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When Fear Is A Part Of Life At School
Posted by Owen Jones on April 30, 2011Warning: strip_tags() expects parameter 1 to be string, array given in /var/www/html/siteclones/websites/domains/parentbase/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 664
Do you have happy memories of your school years? Do you have glad memories of teachers and school friends? If you do then you were lucky, because some children hate each minute of being in school and not because they are no good at it either. Often it is the clever children who are taunted for being swots and teachers’ pets. They are safe in the class, but the travelling to and from school and the school breaks can be nightmares.
However, it is not just bullying from other children that causes fear in school children. There are other causes for fear in school as well. Sometimes, children think that a particular teacher does not like them and sometimes children are only scared of failing or doing badly. Occasionally teachers are afraid of doing badly as well. It can all lead to an atmosphere of fear at school. It makes you wonder how anyone could have enjoyed their school days, does it not?
This atmosphere of fear can get greater in state schools because the teachers are subject to success charts and the children are more open to bullying. Furthermore, all of the school shootings in the world have taken place in state run schools.
However, the most insidious kind of fear in school comes from teachers who are scared of missing the targets set by the state, because that will cost them their jobs. This fear is passed on to their students. The regime of fear is exacerbated by over-sized classes. Why?
Because teachers can hold the attention of only so many pupils – as we all can in regular discourse. Therefore, if the class is too big, the teacher will have to switch roles from being a teacher to a controller. When this happens, education suffers for the sake of keeping order.
For all of these reasons and more, many parents are turning to home schooling. Some of the reasons why parents are deciding to educate their children themselves are: distrust of the state education system; fear of bullying or worse of their children; a desire to teach their children in a more conventional or religious manner.
There are education packages that parent-teachers can buy to give them a course of action on what to teach. There is also a lot of help available on the Internet. The problem facing any parents who wish to educate their own children is providing a rounded education.
People have a natural tendency to specialize in one subject or group of subjects like, say, astronomy or the sciences, which is why schools supply many teachers, so that every one can teach his or her favourite topic. However, if you are the only teacher you will have to teach all the subjects yourself.
This is why it is best to have a program or set of guidelines to follow. It is difficult to teach maths if you have no aptitude for it, so look at your strengths but also your weaknesses before you take the momentous decision to withdraw your children from school and teach them themselves
Owen Jones, the writer of this piece writes on numerous topics but is currently involved with Fear At School and home Schooling. If you would like to read more, please go over to our website entitled Home Schooling.
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