З життя
The Headteacher Shook Her Hands and Said: “What Can You Do? The Parents of These Bullies Helped Repair the School”
Robert and Emily had been inseparable since nursery school. They lived just next door to each other in a leafy suburb of Manchester, so their parents had arranged for them to attend the same primary school, even ensuring they were placed in the same class. Their teacher was asked to seat them together at the front, just in casethere were plenty of boys in class, and Robert could look out for Emily if things ever got unpleasant. Both children were delighted to start school, and learning came easily to them both.
But by the time Year 3 rolled around, Emilys mother began to notice that her daughter wasnt herself. Emily had become skittish, seemed constantly anxious, and had lost all enthusiasm for going to school. One morning, she tearfully begged her mum to transfer her to another school. Her mother, taken aback by her distress, phoned Roberts mum to see if anything similar was happening at their house. It turned out things were no better there.
Robert, usually so cheerful, had also been asking if he could move schools. That afternoon, when Roberts mum saw the dark bruises on his arms and back, the two mothers decided enough was enoughthey would visit the school together to find out what in Gods name was happening.
The teacher tried at first to assure them that everything was perfectly fine during lessons, suggesting perhaps the children had fallen out with someone outside of school. But suddenly, a mob of children burst noisily into the classroom. Both mothers scanned the scene and saw boys yanking at Roberts blazer, and further off, at Emilys cardigan.
The mothers rushed in to shield their children, but their voices were drowned out by the chaos. The teacher did her best to calm the rowdy children. One quick-witted girl dashed off to fetch the headteacher, and eventually, the room settled.
Standing in the quiet aftermath, the two mothers insisted they wouldnt let this lie. If necessary, they would demand meetings with the parents of the bullies, or even report the assaults to the police. The headteacher tried to placate them, promising to invite the other parents to the school the following day and that they could all sit down together.
As he showed them to the door, he confided, nearly in a whisper, “Those boys their families are loaded. They dont listen to anyone, they talk back during lessons, and bully the other children. Weve called in the parents before, but frankly, the apples havent fallen far from the treeits no use.”
The next day, Robert and Emilys mothers arrived right on time. The parents of the troublemakers were already there, exactly as the headteacher had warned: loud, belligerent, and completely dismissive of everything the teachers tried to say. They hurled insults, demanded their childrens innocence, and wouldnt let anyone else get a word in. Only the headteachers stern presence kept things from unraveling entirely.
But in the end, nothing was resolvedthe privileged parents stormed out, grumbling that their children shouldnt be bothered over such trifles. The headteacher shrugged in resignation: What can we do? Their parents funded the schools new sports hall. We cant exactly suggest removing their childrens enrolment.
At home, Robert and Emily finally opened up, describing how these boys terrorised everyone in class. Any boy caught alone in the corridor was fair game. Robert and Emily were attacked simply for being close friends; the bullies couldn’t stand it.
Unable to bear any more, both mothers withdrew their children from the school, placing them elsewhere. The headteacher, having reached her limit, handed in her resignation. She simply couldnt work another term with parents and pupils so utterly void of respect.
