This website uses cookies for anonymised analytics and for account authentication. See our privacy and cookies policies for more information.





The voice of Scotland’s vibrant voluntary sector

Published by Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations

TFN is published by the Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations, Mansfield Traquair Centre, 15 Mansfield Place, Edinburgh, EH3 6BB. The Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations (SCVO) is a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation. Registration number SC003558.

Hundreds of children restrained and isolated at school

This news post is over 4 years old
 

Enable Scotland said children are being put at risk of physical and psychological harm.

Hundreds of disabled children are being restrained or secluded every year in Scotland’s schools, according to a charity.

A report for Enable Scotland, which advocates for people with learning disabilities, found 2,674 incidents of restraint and seclusion relating to 386 children were recorded by Scotland’s local authorities in 2017/18.

The true figure could be higher, however, as ten of the country’s 32 local authorities failed to provide data.

Enable Scotland said the report shows children are being put at risk of physical and psychological harm, as well as being denied their rights under the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child.

One parent told the charity how a young girl was regularly subjected to seclusion and restraint at school. On one occasion she was locked in a “safe space” for 45 minutes, where she soiled herself. The incident only came to light after another pupil wrote about the incident. The girl, now 17, is at a different school but remains on anxiety medication.

Another parent told how from the age of five her son was restrained regularly at school and was kept in a cloakroom by a teacher who held the door closed because he would not put his shoes on.

Enable is now calling for classroom staff to be given better training to ensure that children are not put at risk. The charity also wants to see children with identified additional support for learning needs being supported in class by staff who are trained in supporting positive behaviours.

Theresa Shearer, Enable Scotland CEO said: “In the 21st century, every child should go to school knowing they are safe from physical and psychological harm. They should feel welcome, listened to and be treated with respect from the moment they enter the school gates. To our collective shame, this is not the case for every child in Scotland.

“With the support of parents and children who have been directly impacted by this often- barbaric practice, we are calling on the Scottish Government to urgently tackle the issue of restraint and seclusion through better guidance, greater support for teachers, and transparency and improved reporting from schools. We also want to see the nomination of a single agency to lead on confronting this issue, including the need for accurate and timely reporting of incidents.

“We believe that, together with the other objectives outlined in the In Safe Hands? report, this will make a significant difference in ensuring that no child goes to school under a cloud of fear.”

 

Comments

0 0
Jacqueline Foy
over 4 years ago
What a relief that Enable Scotland have raised awareness of this When it happens to you, you are in such shock you really can’t comprehend what has actually happened My son, when aged 6, was restrained to a chair with a harness because he kept running out fire exits, the said harness was like something Hannibal Lector would wear, and I turned up to pick my son up from school, he appeared with this contraption on, it was for his safety I was told! Training and awareness is crucially needed, consult with the parents and work together to find the best solution to keep our kids safe would be my advise
Commenting is now closed on this post