School tells 17 year old 'Stop riding in or we'll expel you'

16 Posts | Latest reply on 09/07/2012 11:28:19 by ribek | Go to original / last post
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Sandi

In: Huddersfield, W
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  A school has threatened to expel a 17-year-old if he carries on travelling in by motorcycle.   Jack Deeley has twice been sent home from school for arriving on his Aprilia RS125.   The Windsor High School and Sixth Form College says students are not allowed to travel by ‘motorised vehicle of any kind’ but Jack says other students park cars outside every day.   Teachers last week told the sixth-form pupil he would be permanently excluded unless he left his bike at home.   He plans to transfer at the end of the academic year but in the meantime is forced to travel by other means.   The school, in Halesowen, West Midlands, said: ‘It has always been the case that Windsor students are not allowed to travel to school on a motorised vehicle of any kind.   'With the addition of the sixth-form the school reaffirmed this position to parents, students and our local community.   ‘We place a high priority on making travel to and from school as safe as possible for all our students without creating additional traffic. It is also right to honour our commitments made to parents and the local community and it would be wrong to make an exception for any one individual.’   The school would not clarify whether the motorised vehicle policy applied to buses or parents dropping off children in cars.   Lorraine Gaskell, PA to head teacher Keith Sorrell, said: ‘At this point, no further comment will be possible.’   Jack, from Halesowen, said: “For six months I was riding in but one day I parked the bike legally on the road where it was visible from the school and they made a big deal about it. Now they’ve said if I continue to go there by bike I will be excluded.   “I know loads of students who park cars right outside the gates. One has a personalised number plate.   “People drop kids off, people drive there. I think I’m just being singled out because the motorcycle is more noticeable. I pay my road tax so I can’t really see where the school is coming from.”                                                                                                                                                                               
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davidneale

In: London
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Sounds like another classic, nanny state senario. I don't suppose the teachers drive in to school, do they? I don't see how a shool can dicate to a pupil what they do outside of school hours and off of the school premises. Surely there will be much more additional traffic caused by parents on the school run in their 4 x 4's and people carriers.                                                                                                                                                                             
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Brummie Jackie

In: Hobbit HQ
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As his parent i would check the schools policy and then attack it with everything i could regarding teachers journeys, dinner ladies etc, but i guarantee the policy only refers to students !!!                                                                                                                                                                             
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Minnie the Minx

In: Cheshire
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I bet whatever the outcome, the school has successfully disrupted his studies and risks destroying his motivation. Stupidity like this could ruin his achievement this year and set him on the road to being a complete cynic like us lot. I've seen this happen so many times over dreadlocks, hair colour, jewellery, or in my case the colour of my tights. Presumably he can ride a push bike in- and that's safer?
Gloom's Profile
Gloom

In: Southport
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I think the policy the school has implemented is reasonable.

Students are not allowed to drive/ride to school.

The problem here is that they are not applying it to car drivers only to the poor lad on his scooter.

Pity I live so far away or I'd organise 15 - 20 bikers to give him a lift in and home every day for 2 weeks and see how they like that. Anyone local fancy taking the idea up?
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JP

In: Birmingham
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I would but I cant ride at the min due to falling off not a good add for bikes really lol                                                                                                                                                                             
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Deleted Member

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brill idea Gloom Thumbs Up - i too agree that if they stop him using a "mororised vehicle to get to school" then they must stop all the car drivers too.... grrrrrrrr.... just so typical of a school to pick on one pupil over and above the others......   let's hope they see sense and make it fair the Censored - and like you say minni... is a push bike safer??   also aint it a good idea for younger ones to be getting the experience of riding / driving rather than save it for mad times out at weekends.... at least they get more experience and that way are safer for themselve and everyone else...                                                                                                                                                                             
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Deleted Member

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OMG, how ridiculous is this ruling.

I can remember when I was at school (yes I know it's hard to believe before you all say it) that some of the older lads who'd turned 16 used to come to school on their mopeds and this guy 1 year older is being stopped by his school.                                                                                                                                                                             
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Deleted Member

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not an educational issues the school should but out                                                                                                                                                                             
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GreyGra

In: Durham
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I suspect that this guy is getting stick because he's Visible. Another car in the road outside is not really notable, but this kid is. 
A better tack would be for him to list the car driving students and then ask the school to enforce the rule across the board. If they don't then they don't have a leg to stand on.
Let them hang themselves.

                                                                                                                                                                             
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HippyRockChick

In: Manchester
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I don't see how a school can enforce how you get there and obviously his parents are ok with it.  How can school rules apply to outside school hours? 
I remember one of our 6th formers coming to school on a scooter and no-one stopped her.  It was an all girls' school and that was in 197?????something or other Embarrassed                                                                                                                                                                             
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bluesbiker

In: Birmingham in th
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Yea But Ang modern scooters have engines and petrol and stuff. not just a plate to put yer foot on. GeekBig smile   Our school was just happy if you turned up.Geek                                                                                                                                                                             
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HippyRockChick

In: Manchester
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LOL

                                                                                                                                                                             
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centurion

In: Catterick Garris
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When my ex-wife was in the 6th form (back in the late 1970's) she once got in trouble for allowing her pre-unit Triumph to drip oil in the bike sheds!                                                                                                                                                                             
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Deleted Member

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Go let the air out of the head's tyresEvil Smile                                                                                                                                                                             
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ribek

In: Coventry
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I had a similar problem at school back in the 70's.  We were supposed to wear a cap to and from school and I got dragged into the headmaster's office for wearing a helmet instead.                                                                                                                                                                                


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