Hey children, leave those teachers alone! - I'd love to read your view

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Postby Sabre » Wed Feb 22, 2006 3:49 pm

Hi mates, times are changing and there's an issue that concerns me and I raised to an irish woman that is my friend and discuss with me in the RS forum, I copy and paste it here, because I'd love to know wether it's an international issue, and I'd like to read your view, not only from the most experienced users like Drummerphil, but also youngsters.

----------------

Sabre wrote

There's an issue I'd like to discuss, and for some reason, I'd love to read your insight about it here, first.

We have passed from the


We don't need no education
We don't need no thought controol.
No dark sarcasm in the classroom
Teacher leave those kids alone
Hey teacher!, leave those kids alone
All in all you're just a another brick in the wall


To the


We don't need no little dictators
we don't need little basts
No bully fathers, hitting teachers
Children leave those teachers alone
Hey Children, leave those teachers alone
All in all you're just a another future :censored:


Well, I know the latter song is not good, but I'm not :censored: Pink FLoyd neither, you get the idea, don't you?

There's been a case that has annoyed me a lot. A teacher of Navarra was in the playground of the school and saw a girl that didn't want to enter the classroom. After commanding her to do so, she rejected twice, even mocked the teacher. The teacher got her from the elbow and pulled her to classroom, while she started to cry , shout and insult.

The day after that, the father of the girl came, and punched the teacher. The teacher then asked the girl to be expelled from the school, but that didn't happen. Now the court of justice has fined the father of the girl with 180€.

Are 180 bloody euros worth of being insulted, and punched, No!, me thinks.

IMHO the times that Pink Floyd described were not good, needless to say, too much authority, too much cruelty to children.

But some so called experts have decided that the kids must not be bothered at all, and I think this overprotection is creating real :censored: in the future. In my times, we went with no money at all to school, we didn't bloody need money. Nowadays kids do what they want, pay the coke in the little shop of my dad with 50 € bills, and are granted everything they ask for.

I think we need to get a grip about this, or we might lose control of the situation, if we haven't lost it already.


Skywalker wrote

I have to say that I think the situation is almost beyond remedy now. Children have no respect for anything or anyone because they have no fear of punishment any more. They know that nobody can touch them. It's like liberalism gone mad. In our local primary school a boy of about 10 or 11 threw a chair at his teacher. What was his punishment? He was suspended for a week. What sort of punishment is that?? A week off school?? That's a :censored: holiday, not a punishment!

Here, parents are no longer allowed even to slap their children. I know parents whose children blackmail them, threatening to accuse them of abuse if they don't get what they want. And children are no longer brought up to respect anyone at all or to have any sort of good manners. Most of them are spoilt rotten.

I think parents were brainwashed by modern childcare philosophy to think that any kind of authority or restriction would damage their child's development, and the pendulum just swung too far in the wrong direction.

The other part of the problem is -- and I know this is really politically incorrect, but I sincerely believe it -- that in most families both parents work outside the home. Mothers in particular feel an enormous amount of guilt at leaving their kids to be brought up by others, and this guilt leads them to be too lenient with their children, to try to give them everything they demand, and to overlook all their bad behaviour. So when kids cause trouble at school, it's easier for the parents to blame the teachers, and even to attack them, than to face the fact that the root of the problem lies at home, in the way they've been bringing up their chidren.

I think that nowadays being a teacher must be the hardest job there is! And they don't get nearly enough money for the :censored: they have to put up with! I feel really sorry for the poor :censored:!


Your thoughts, please?
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Postby Woollyback » Wed Feb 22, 2006 3:53 pm

the occasional smack round the earhole never did me any harm.


























discuss :D
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Postby Mikz » Wed Feb 22, 2006 3:57 pm

:nod exactly. The kids have nothing to fear anymore. When i was a lad , we got caned and the very thoughts of being dragged into a full assembly, and caned in front of everyone, and crying like a girl -SCARED ME SHI.TLESS :upside:
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Postby Woollyback » Wed Feb 22, 2006 4:23 pm

we used to get the slipper (or even the cane for something monumentally bad) but the worst was the b0llocking i'd get off my parents when i got home :sniffle

my primary school had an old-fashioned headmaster and you always thought twice about getting into trouble cos of the tw@tting you'd get off him, but then in my last year there they brought in a "progressive" headmaster who believed in talking to kids instead of b0llocking them, trying to get them to see the error of their ways etc etc (ie. a soft c*nt). me & my partner in crime thought all our christmases had come at once and got up to all sorts of feckin tricks after that, give him all the "yeah we're terribly sorry, we understand how we have let ourselves down ...yadda yadda yadda" then the minute his back was turned we'd be p1ssin our kecks at the naiive c*nt. the number of times i sneaked into his office and p1ssed in his kettle you would not believe :D
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Postby kazza 1 » Wed Feb 22, 2006 4:33 pm

I remember getting cracked on the head with a blackboard duster for not paying attention. Was covered with chalk dust and had a bump for days after. Told my dad about it and he said I must have deserved it (nice man my dad!!)

But kids so get anyway with too much today. I drive every day of the week and see kids on the road who won't move for you. They just stand there daring you to run over them! On Saturday morning was driving to a pick up, came round a corner and there where 3 lads on bikes, just standing there talking. Had to stop pretty quickly, then asked them to move! Just got a lot of abuse from them. In the end I had to drive round them.
I feel for anyone whos a teacher. Imagine having a class full of kids who just dont listen to what you are saying and do their own thing. No wonder some teachers slap kids. I know I would. Then they end up in trouble for doing it. The world has gone mad. Its like Children of the Corn or one of those mad films.
BRING BACK THE CANE!!!!!!!
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Postby drummerphil » Wed Feb 22, 2006 4:40 pm

Where do i start............growing up i hated my Father,he would not think twice about raising his hand or taking his belt off.I was a middle child and i suppose it was a classic case of 2nd child syndrome.I always thought my brother got favoured because he was the oldest and my sister got favoured because she was the youngest and the only girl.
Strict discipline in our home was something my father and indeed my Grand Parents before him believed in.Meal times were one of the worst times because if you used the wrong knife or put your elbow on the table etc my father would strike out and hit you on your knuckles with his knife.
I've also been belted with his belt a few times for coming home late or once i remember he did it because i helped myself to a biscuit......He was indeed a right bástard and as a child i was scared witless of him.
At school you also had teachers who would bully and many times i have seen people get canned or hit with a slipper and i remember my mate Steve getting twátted on the head with a board rubber thrown from 20 feet away by our maths teacher.
In the early to mid 80's canning and that kind of physical discipline was banned and although i dont believe in the kind of punishment my father and teachers give out i can honestly say i grew up respecting my elders.Its only years later when you get married and have your own children you realise that the kind of discipline handed out in the 1970's although way over the top in many ways had the right effect.
I have mental scars from my childhood but i have to admit i did very well at school and very well with my football and rugby going on to represent the city and very nearly becoming a pro.I found sport as a way out and a release from the strict up bringing i had.
The problem today is the last two generations since the early 80's, have gone the other way,no discipline from parents and teachers has resulted with a yob / chav culture that have very little respect for anyone or anything.You see them day after day outside shops in gangs and turning areas of where you live into  a ghetto enviroment.In this country the youth do not have their own identity anymore because our youth culture is basically copied from America.
In years gone by Sports were something enjoyed by many after school,and virtually every night i was out with mates playing football.The problem now is many schools dont do team sports anymore because school fields etc are reclaimed by the government to build on and with the age of the video game more and more children never go out or indeed take part in team games.
I firmly believe that every 16 yr old should serve in the army for two years until 18,because discipline although to the extreme in my childhood is something that is needed to put the "Great" back into Great Brition.
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Postby Judge » Wed Feb 22, 2006 5:40 pm

Mikz wrote: :nod exactly. The kids have nothing to fear anymore. When i was a lad , we got caned and the very thoughts of being dragged into a full assembly, and caned in front of everyone, and crying like a girl -SCARED ME SHI.TLESS :upside:

i still cry like a girl for no reason

figures really  :D
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Postby drummerphil » Wed Feb 22, 2006 7:13 pm

Judge wrote:
Mikz wrote::nod exactly. The kids have nothing to fear anymore. When i was a lad , we got caned and the very thoughts of being dragged into a full assembly, and caned in front of everyone, and crying like a girl -SCARED ME SHI.TLESS :upside:

i still cry like a girl for no reason

figures really  :D

its your love of Smallville that makes you cry mate.
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Postby Mikz » Wed Feb 22, 2006 9:02 pm

:laugh: its fcuking clarks treatment of chloe arghhhh

Anyway was in the mall last weekend with my mate and his wee boy decided to go on the sit down protest :D  After a bit of noise he decided enough was enough , dragged him down the back and cuffed him... at which 2 passers by took offence to"thats a bl00dy disgrace hitting your child..you should be ashamed of yourself... etc etc
My mate just said- "f.cuk away off or you'll be next"
:laugh: killing myself i was.
A wee slap did nobody any harm,if he hadnt have did it, hed be still sitting there negotiating with him
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Postby Sabre » Wed Feb 22, 2006 11:19 pm

Some great posts around here, I'll pick drummerphil's but I could pick any other.

Where do i start............growing up i hated my Father,he would not think twice about raising his hand or taking his belt off.I was a middle child and i suppose it was a classic case of 2nd child syndrome.I always thought my brother got favoured because he was the oldest and my sister got favoured because she was the youngest and the only girl.


It seems that England is simply 10 years forward comparing to Spain, your seventies are our eighties.

My dad also is quite strict, but I respect and love him. He used his belt sometimes too, but the leather part. I won't use that tactic when I'm dad, but I'd never consider saying my dad is aggressive. He used it only  when I really screwed it up, I deserved more.

He was not that strict like asking utter manners while dinner, but there were rules, if I didn't eat the lettuce, I didn't eat the dessert. I wasn't given everything I asked. When he was shouting at me, he asked me to look at his eyes and not to the ground and things like that. Nothing like that is done by nowadays fathers, that send their sons to school and receive them at 22.00h to send them to bed. They wouldn't care.

My dad was born after the civil war. Hunger times in Spain, as Spain picked the wrong friends in the WWII (Although we did not officially enter it). My dad wouldn't understand I'd say I don't want to eat vegetables, and always reminded me hunger times. We had plenty of money, but he's always been very humble because of that youth.


At school you also had teachers who would bully and many times i have seen people get canned or hit with a slipper and i remember my mate Steve getting twátted on the head with a board rubber thrown from 20 feet away by our maths teacher.
In the early to mid 80's canning and that kind of physical discipline was banned and although i dont believe in the kind of punishment my father and teachers give out i can honestly say i grew up respecting my elders.Its only years later when you get married and have your own children you realise that the kind of discipline handed out in the 1970's although way over the top in many ways had the right effect.


Same here, I went to a priests' school. I was given with the board cleaner (the wooden part), smacks, and things like that. Nowadays though if a teacher do that, he's nearly sent to prison, in the mean time, our youngsters are becoming little gangsters addicted to cocaine and speed, I guess that's much better for the politically correct brigade.

In years gone by Sports were something enjoyed by many after school,and virtually every night i was out with mates playing football.The problem now is many schools dont do team sports anymore because school fields etc are reclaimed by the government to build on and with the age of the video game more and more children never go out or indeed take part in team games.


When we were children, we had our knees full of little injuries, due to we played football in street. We had to fix our trousers with patches, as we gave our best as keepers in the hard cement. Now you won't see that, they'll be playing with the last handheld console. That's a mistake.

I firmly believe that every 16 yr old should serve in the army for two years until 18,because discipline although to the extreme in my childhood is something that is needed to put the "Great" back into Great Brition.


I disagree, My father says that all the time "in military you'll make a man", but IMHO the main part of your education was given by your father, not military.

Really good post Drummerphil.

In a nutshell, I was a little bástard when I was a child, but I knew that if I did it, I payed it. I know consider my self a decent person, and I owe that to education.

I had some fights to win respect in playground (children matters), but I knew that if my father knew it, I had belt as punnishment. Nowadays fathers will defend their sons stupidly. You cannot learn to be responsible that way. I learnt that I could be a bást sometimes, but there was some risk, so you considered things.
Last edited by Sabre on Wed Feb 22, 2006 11:25 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Postby RAFABENITEZ » Wed Feb 22, 2006 11:19 pm

the attitude iv heard off people at school is, " if the teacher hit me id hit him back" :laugh:  gotta love the 90% tard population of youth these days elders eh?
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Postby drummerphil » Wed Feb 22, 2006 11:30 pm

Sabre wrote:Some great posts around here, I'll pick drummerphil's but I could pick any other.

Where do i start............growing up i hated my Father,he would not think twice about raising his hand or taking his belt off.I was a middle child and i suppose it was a classic case of 2nd child syndrome.I always thought my brother got favoured because he was the oldest and my sister got favoured because she was the youngest and the only girl.


It seems that England is simply 10 years forward comparing to Spain, your seventies are our eighties.

My dad also is quite strict, but I respect and love him. He used his belt sometimes too, but the leather part. I won't use that tactic when I'm dad, but I'd never consider saying my dad is aggressive. He used it only  when I really screwed it up, I deserved more.

He was not that strict like asking utter manners while dinner, but there were rules, if I didn't eat the lettuce, I didn't eat the dessert. I wasn't given everything I asked. When he was shouting at me, he asked me to look at his eyes and not to the ground and things like that. Nothing like that is done by nowadays fathers, that send their sons to school and receive them at 22.00h to send them to bed. They wouldn't care.

My dad was born after the civil war. Hunger times in Spain, as Spain picked the wrong friends in the WWII (Although we did not officially enter it). My dad wouldn't understand I'd say I don't want to eat vegetables, and always reminded me hunger times. We had plenty of money, but he's always been very humble because of that youth.


At school you also had teachers who would bully and many times i have seen people get canned or hit with a slipper and i remember my mate Steve getting twátted on the head with a board rubber thrown from 20 feet away by our maths teacher.
In the early to mid 80's canning and that kind of physical discipline was banned and although i dont believe in the kind of punishment my father and teachers give out i can honestly say i grew up respecting my elders.Its only years later when you get married and have your own children you realise that the kind of discipline handed out in the 1970's although way over the top in many ways had the right effect.


Same here, I went to a priests' school. I was given with the board cleaner (the wooden part), smacks, and things like that. Nowadays though if a teacher do that, he's nearly sent to prison, in the mean time, our youngsters are becoming little gangsters addicted to cocaine and speed, I guess that's much better for the politically correct brigade.

In years gone by Sports were something enjoyed by many after school,and virtually every night i was out with mates playing football.The problem now is many schools dont do team sports anymore because school fields etc are reclaimed by the government to build on and with the age of the video game more and more children never go out or indeed take part in team games.


When we were children, we had our knees full of little injuries, due to we played football in street. We had to fix our trousers with patches, as we gave our best as keepers in the hard cement. Now you won't see that, they'll be playing with the last handheld console. That's a mistake.

I firmly believe that every 16 yr old should serve in the army for two years until 18,because discipline although to the extreme in my childhood is something that is needed to put the "Great" back into Great Brition.


I disagree, My father says that all the time "in military you'll make a man", but IMHO the main part of your education was given by your father, not military.

Really good post Drummerphil.

In a nutshell, I was a little bástard when I was a child, but I knew that if I did it, I payed it. I know consider my self a decent person, and I owe that to education.

I had some fights to win respect in playground (children matters), but I knew that if my father knew it, I had belt as punnishment. Nowadays fathers will defend their sons stupidly. You cannot learn to be responsible that way. I learnt that I could be a bást sometimes, but there was some risk, so you considered things.

Cheers Sabre mate,

Maybe our countries aren't that different after all,you just get better weather.... :D
Last edited by drummerphil on Wed Feb 22, 2006 11:32 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Postby Sabre » Wed Feb 22, 2006 11:37 pm

As occidentals we have many things in common, and as old countries we have our own particularities :)

But you know what, it's amazing that everybody agree nowadays children do whatever they want, yet, nobody does anything about it. It seems a global phenomenon! it seems that somebody has decided for the whole europe that a lad cannot be touched! and they tell you aggresive if you say the contrary. But we all know where's that frontier.

I hadn't have a fight since I was 16, so I hardly can say I'm a violent guy!
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Postby drummerphil » Wed Feb 22, 2006 11:45 pm

Sabre wrote:As occidentals we have many things in common, and as old countries we have our own particularities :)

But you know what, it's amazing that everybody agree nowadays children do whatever they want, yet, nobody does anything about it. It seems a global phenomenon! it seems that somebody has decided for the whole europe that a lad cannot be touched! and they tell you aggresive if you say the contrary. But we all know where's that frontier.

I hadn't have a fight since I was 16, so I hardly can say I'm a violent guy!

I agree and what amazes me in a lot of cases nowadays,parents either have no idea where their kids are,who they are with,or what they are doing.........

sad thing is many parents dont care either and you can see why the children are the way they are.
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Postby Woollyback » Thu Feb 23, 2006 12:43 am

christ have you heard us lot, we sound like the very people we took the p!ss out of when we were kids ourselves - the old buggers moaning on about the youth of today :D  still, most teenagers these days are tw@ts. i live in an affluent very middle class area and you should see the kids swaggering about thinking they're 50 cent's long-lost white twin brother, before going home for a cup of horlicks at mummy & daddy's £500k barratt home. laughable little sh!tes :laugh:   i grew up in a poor working class town with half the kids in my class on free school dinners and their dads on the dole, and yet they still had a bit of respect for other people. the problem isn't caused at school though, teachers merely have to deal with the symptoms. the cause is bonehead parents who think the sun shines out of their kids @rses and from a young age confuse "little sh!t" with "full of character" so the kids grow up thinking they're the dogs bollox and untouchable
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