- Education Secretary launches call for evidence on behaviour
and discipline in schools
- Government asks leaders and staff for views on mobile phone
policies ahead of reviewing wider behaviour guidance later this
year
- Part of Government’s commitment to ensuring pupils benefit
from calm, orderly classrooms
The use of mobile phones in schools is one of a number of areas
being looked at by the Government as part of a review of
behaviour in schools.
The Education Secretary has today
(29 June) launched a call for evidence asking teachers, parents
and other staff for their views and policies on managing good
behaviour, ahead of planned updates to Government guidance later
this year on behaviour, discipline, suspensions and permanent
exclusions.
The six-week consultation seeks views on how schools maintain
calm classrooms, the use of removal rooms and creating mobile
phone-free school days, among other measures.
This next step follows the department’s £10 million behaviour hubs
programme which partners heads and leaders from England’s
highest performing multi-academy trusts with schools struggling
with poor behaviour and discipline.
The move follows the Education Secretary’s speech to the
Confederation of School Trusts earlier this year, where he set
out the importance of good behaviour as part of the Government’s
continuing drive to raise standards and support young people to
recover from the impact of the pandemic.
Education Secretary
said:
“No parent wants to send their child to a school where poor
behaviour is rife. Every school should be a safe place that
allows young people to thrive and teachers to excel.
“Mobile phones are not just distracting, but when misused or
overused, they can have a damaging effect on a pupil’s mental
health and wellbeing. I want to put an end to this, making the
school day mobile-free.
“In order to for us to help pupils overcome the challenges from
the pandemic and level up opportunity for all young people, we
need to ensure they can benefit from calm classrooms which
support them to thrive.”
The call for evidence asks for information about schools’
behaviour strategies and practices, including questions on
practices or interventions that have been effective in addressing
low level disruptive behaviour.
It will also gather responses from schools about how and when
they might decide to transfer a pupil to another school in their
best interest, known as managed moves. The survey asks how
schools’ behaviour policies and approaches have changed in
response to the pandemic and what successful practices they
intend to maintain.