Dollar Thief
Well-known member
1953
Last edited:
lunatic lefties no doubt.Imagine having to cope with such a savage teacher like this when you were a kid?
I think the pupil is going to need counselling for a good while.
I got clouted once or twice at school and never told my parents so that I didn't get clouted again.
Hopefully the teacher sues, wins and gets their job back.
No wonder the world is going soft.
Lecturer of 22 years fired for ‘lightly’ throwing cardboard at sleeping student
A panel found that although the disciplinary process was not followed properly Steve Dix had been 'reckless' in throwing the item.www.dailyrecord.co.uk
Leather strap cut into strips whacked across under-panted derriere six or more times, depending on severity of offence, after teachers' 3-4 step run-up, while recipient leant against the back of a chair. Made me what I am.
Yes I know.. That's why I said they should have just had a word with the idiot.He threw a piece of cardboard not a house brick.
I remember kids in my school falling asleep in class and teachers always threw things at them to wake them up, all the kids used to find it funny, even the kid who got woke up.
Warbeck boy, Mr Whaley threw the metal bin at my head, he was mental and absolutely loved Sellotape, he sellotaped literally everything. Including the very heavily dented bin.Roseacre had the persuader which was a very large and thick ruler - I was was sent to have it once and threatened to hit the teacher with a chair - he backed down.
Now Warbreck was on another level….
Mr Whalley - nobody crossed him as he was really scary and would beat the living daylights out of you.
Chalk - teachers could hit you on the forehead on a single spin.
Chalk wooden board rubber - again they had a deadly accuracy that could hurt!
In wood work one teacher liked to throw chisels - reading that back now is scary
Mr Bousted(?) our history teacher used to open the window on the second or third floor and hold you next to it threatening to throw you out.
Fallen(?) PE used to just make you run until you wanted to be sick - although I deliberately took him out in a tackle that stopped him playing for Fleetwood for a couple of months
There were many others, but the one thing I enjoyed the most was the Pupils v Teachers rugby game, yes we hurt them, but my god they did the same - and it was great
Schools were great back then - but it’s probably safer these days
Fred Harris owned that implement.Roseacre had the persuader which was a very large and thick ruler - I was was sent to have it once and threatened to hit the teacher with a chair - he backed down.
Roseacre had the persuader which was a very large and thick ruler - I was was sent to have it once and threatened to hit the teacher with a chair - he backed down.
Now Warbreck was on another level….
Mr Whalley - nobody crossed him as he was really scary and would beat the living daylights out of you.
Chalk - teachers could hit you on the forehead on a single spin.
Chalk wooden board rubber - again they had a deadly accuracy that could hurt!
In wood work one teacher liked to throw chisels - reading that back now is scary
Mr Bousted(?) our history teacher used to open the window on the second or third floor and hold you next to it threatening to throw you out.
Fallen(?) PE used to just make you run until you wanted to be sick - although I deliberately took him out in a tackle that stopped him playing for Fleetwood for a couple of months
There were many others, but the one thing I enjoyed the most was the Pupils v Teachers rugby game, yes we hurt them, but my god they did the same - and it was great
Schools were great back then - but it’s probably safer these days
Warbeck boy, Mr Whaley threw the metal bin at my head, he was mental and absolutely loved Sellotape, he sellotaped literally everything. Including the very heavily dented bin.
Yes - Barnes not Fallen!!!! My mistake!!!Whalley - We all laugh about him now but the bloke was a wrong 'un and should never have been put in charge of children.
Fallon - Never played football at any level, you have either got him mixed up with Barnes or have mistakenly overstated his footballing ability. In my opinion, Fallon was a James Hunt but Barnes was a good chap and used to bang them in for Fleetwood.
Boustead - I can't say he ever hung me out of a window but he certainly threw board dusters at me, a good egg on the whole and didn't take too much persuasion to abandon a Current Affairs lesson and have a sports quiz instead.
It was the fire bucket in our class.Stand in a corner holding a chair above your head for the rest of the class. If it lowered you'd get punished and made to do it all again. I think I had it once. This was primary; he'd have got his head kicked in at Sec.
Were you a Claremont sausage?It was the fire bucket in our class.
We had that too at Preston Catholic College . They were nicknamed ‘ cracks ‘ because of the noise the ferula made when it hit your hand . Usually doled out in threes , sixes , nines or twelves . Although from Accrington , my parents thought PCC rather than St Mary’s Blackburn was a better educational experience !The Ferula ,(not the plant )! at my school . Along, of course , with violent hair and ear pulling.
Loved the pupils v teachers rugby game, I clotheslined Joey Walters (English teacher) I actually quite liked him as well!Roseacre had the persuader which was a very large and thick ruler - I was was sent to have it once and threatened to hit the teacher with a chair - he backed down.
Now Warbreck was on another level….
Mr Whalley - nobody crossed him as he was really scary and would beat the living daylights out of you.
Chalk - teachers could hit you on the forehead on a single spin.
Chalk wooden board rubber - again they had a deadly accuracy that could hurt!
In wood work one teacher liked to throw chisels - reading that back now is scary
Mr Bousted(?) our history teacher used to open the window on the second or third floor and hold you next to it threatening to throw you out.
Fallen(?) PE used to just make you run until you wanted to be sick - although I deliberately took him out in a tackle that stopped him playing for Fleetwood for a couple of months
There were many others, but the one thing I enjoyed the most was the Pupils v Teachers rugby game, yes we hurt them, but my god they did the same - and it was great
Schools were great back then - but it’s probably safer these days
Roseacre had the persuader which was a very large and thick ruler - I was was sent to have it once and threatened to hit the teacher with a chair - he backed down
Was always a South Shore lad, so Roseacre and Highfield for me.Fred Harris owned that implement.
How would you have woken the lad up BFCx3? Gently carress his hair? Blow in his ear?Yes I know.. That's why I said they should have just had a word with the idiot.
I realise that idiotic teachers were more commonplace back in our day, but that's no reason to accept this level of stupidity.
I wouldn't have done either no... Why would I want to embarrass the lad any more than was necessary.How would you have woken the lad up BFCx3? Gently carress his hair? Blow in his ear?
To expect to be treated with a bit of basic decency, by an adult who is in a position of responsibility perhaps?Applying what is known as the Burchell Test is always difficult as the ET can't substitute it's own views - only decide if the employers response fell within a range of reasonable responses available
Personally I think it's tragic that a man loses his career because of an ignorant pupil and a namby pamby guardian who didn't just say ' what do you expect when you fall asleep in class '
It is mate, but falling asleep is not necessarily a show of disrespect... Could be a range of medical conditions, other issues...Respect is a two way street but only one has lost his career
I had a family relation taught by him…his weapon was called “Dan Tanner”. The art teacher Carroll used to throw him down the stairs!Warbeck boy, Mr Whaley threw the metal bin at my head, he was mental and absolutely loved Sellotape, he sellotaped literally everything. Including the very heavily dented bin.
It would depend dollar.. If the lad is flat out and disturbing the rest of the class with snoring, then I'd try and gently wake him up yes. If he wasn't disturbing anyone, then I'd probably just leave him to sleep and deal with it later.I can just see you as a teacher, going over to a sleeping pupil.
BFCx3 "Wake up poppet, I'm here to teach and you're asleep, come on cherub, stop snoring and wake up, if you wake up I'll give you £50 and my PornHub log in details..."
I take it shouting WAKE UP would also be out of the question?
Ha ha Bill Yates what a ** he was!!Was always a South Shore lad, so Roseacre and Highfield for me.
I can remember Mr Roberts, the headmaster at Roseacre, he used to use a cane across either your arse, or your hand. And that was the infants before you got near old Harris in the junior school. Maybe a bit before Seaside 1's time at Roseacre, as I was there at a similar time to Steamgun (66 - 73 in my case ).
At Highfield there was a teacher called Hillage (rape and pillage was his nickname). Apparently he liked to dig his knuckles into your head whilst calling you a numbskull. I wasn't in his class fortunately.. And then there was grumpy old Yates of course.
Yet despite your wonderful education, you can't perform a basic quote function on this forumThanks to the utter thickheads who educated me I've been in a successful job for 41 years.
The kids who are coming through now, with their somehow enhanced qualifications at our place, I wouldn't leave them to boil an egg.
We had teachers who specifically taught in the field they were qualified in, a full syllabus too.
Todays great if you want loads of meaningless qualifications that aren't relevant in any job you'd like.
On a serious note, the fact that many of us have managed to live normal functional lives, despite being abused in schools by these utter bellends that have been described in this thread is not really evidence that violence and abuse are appropriate or necessary.Thanks to the utter thickheads who educated me I've been in a successful job for 41 years.
The kids who are coming through now, with their somehow enhanced qualifications at our place, I wouldn't leave them to boil an egg.
We had teachers who specifically taught in the field they were qualified in, a full syllabus too.
Todays great if you want loads of meaningless qualifications that aren't relevant in any job you'd like.