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The English School In Which The Word British Is A Complete No, No.

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anotheoldgit | 15:06 Mon 04th Jul 2016 | News
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http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3672534/School-58-children-not-English-mother-tongue-refuses-use-term-British-fear-offending-migrants.html

/// He has even asked teachers not to use the term ‘British’ to reduce the chances of upsetting migrant families. ///

/// In 1992, half of the school was white British - but this is now at 15 percent ///








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Maybe he should also ban the words denoting the nationality of the non-British pupils in case the 15% of white pupils may be offended,
15:28 Mon 04th Jul 2016
PC gone mad (again)
Has anybody ever been offended by the word British?
The Head seems to be doing a good job overall- the school seems to be working very hard and is classed as Good by OFSTED.
I wonder what they call the British Isles.
Not the point FF, it is a ludicrous decision
The key points include: School's newsletters are even translated into Romanian and Polish.
The use of the word 'even' is intended to give a 'shock/horror' message- but if that's the primary language of a significant number of parents and some do not speak English well, then the school should be praised for doing what it can to communicate with parents

And how does banning the word British help with communication?
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fiction-factory

I wonder how 'good' the school is classed by the ever decreasing white English pupil's parents.

/// One father told the Sun he feels his daughter cannot speak up in class and worries the school will ‘get worse’. ///

I would treat the bit about "He has even asked teachers not to use the term ‘British’ to reduce the chances of upsetting migrant families." with a pinch of salt without knowing the exact context in which it was said.

I think the School is doing well considering how overstretched it is. I'm sure like all schools there is room for improving.


No problem with the term 'Human values' either.
Hopefully that parent has also communicated his daughter's worries to the school as well as the newspaper.
I take issue with you there. Muslims are humans but we don't want their values.
Question Author
fiction-factory

This is an English school, not one provided by a charity for the education of none English.
I wonder how 'good' the school is classed by the ever decreasing white English pupil's parents.
I didn't realise there was only one. I would agree this parent's views are as important as those of parents of black English pupils.
It seemed to me that the chief objection wasn't to "British" as a general adjective, but to teaching of ethics and morality in the sense of being particularly "British values", which does seem a bit of a stretch. We're hardly unique in wanting to promote tolerance, fairness, charity, caring etc etc.
The non-English? Is it a charity? I thought it was funded by taxpayers, and have no reason to believe only the English parents pay tax
Question Author
Mamyalynne

/// Hopefully that parent has also communicated his daughter's worries to the school as well as the newspaper. ///

With a headmaster such as that, perhaps he is frightened he might be called racist.
I find it hard to believe that the School has actually banned the word 'British' in all its contexts , however there is no point describing a pupil as British if they aren't.
Oh I haven't met met or heard the Headmaster - is he a tartar?
Question Author
fiction-factory

/// I would treat the bit about "He has even asked teachers not to use the term ‘British’ to reduce the chances of upsetting migrant families." with a pinch of salt without knowing the exact context in which it was said. ///

Would you wish us to take all of the report with a pinch of salt, or only those parts that make uncomfortable reading for you personally?

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