Pubdate: Fri, 14 Apr 2006 Source: Yorkshire Post Today (UK) Copyright: 2006 Johnston Press New Media Contact: http://www.yorkshiretoday.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3780 Author: James Reed, Education Correspondent Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) KELLY GIVES BACKING TO DRUG TESTS IN SCHOOLS Teachers Urge Get-Tough On Pupils' Misbehaviour Random drug testing in schools was given the personal backing of Education Secretary Ruth Kelly yesterday as teachers called for tougher action on bad classroom behaviour. Teachers at the NASUWT annual conference attacked independent appeals panels for sending children back to the schools where they had assaulted teachers. In one incident, a pupil was excluded for throwing a rugby ball at a teacher's head. The youngster was allowed back into school and days later another pupil carried out a copycat attack. Another teacher described a disgusting craze called "seagulling" where bodily fluids are collected and then smeared on a victim. Ms Kelly told delegates schools faced new challenges on top of typical bad behaviour including "cyber bullying" - the use of mobile phones and the internet to get at other pupils - and drug abuse. Asked at the conference what the Government would do to keep schools as "places of safety", Ms Kelly pointed to the random drug tests administered at Abbey School in Kent. She said the school had found it "a hugely effective way of creating peer pressure against taking drugs in the school environment". Wickersley School, in Rotherham, has trialled the use of sniffer dogs searching pupils as they board school buses but the Kent school is one of the few to embrace the idea of random searches on school grounds. Ms Kelly's comments were given a cautious welcome by the union which said it was not opposed to testing but insisted teachers should not be directly involved. Paul Desgranges, NASUWT executive member for South Yorkshire, said: "Drugs in school are a real issue. Careful steps have to be taken to create an environment safe for teaching and learning. "I think parents would be horrified if their child was in a classroom where other children are under the influence of drugs that could influence their behaviour." The NASUWT yesterday called for all local authorities to provide properly-funded "pupil referral units" where problem children could be sent. Delegates told the Birmingham conference that some headteachers were reluctant to exclude violent pupils as they were worried there was nowhere for them to go. Teachers also expressed concern that the policy of inclusion - encouraging more children with special needs to be taught in mainstream schools - was putting staff under pressure. Earlier this year, the union in Sheffield published the results of a survey of teachers' experiences from a single day in the autumn term. On that one day, 34 teachers claimed to have been been assaulted and 97 attacks by pupils on each other were witnessed. Ms Kelly said evidence from schools watchdog Ofsted was that behaviour was improving.As delegates laughed, she admitted it only took a few pupils "to make life a misery" and the Government had to do something about it. Ministers have promised a new legal right to discipline in the new Education Bill as well as the right to confiscate items like MP3 players and mobile phones. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin