When The Gap State High School cracked down on its uniform policy last year, giving detention to students for having the wrong-sized heels on their shoes, it hit the headlines. Then the flood of abuse began.
“Abusive phone calls to the office, online abuse through social media and emails, and an attack on the school where someone decided to come in and scrawl on the school buildings… it was a bizarre and absolutely completely over-the-top reaction,” Queensland Teachers’ Union president Kevin Bates tells Mamamia.
The school’s principal, Anne McLauchlan, has revealed that on two occasions, parents had to be told to leave the school grounds because of their hostility.
She’s now warning parents that “derogatory” social media posts about staff will be reported to the Department of Education.
This is far from an isolated incident. Several years ago there was a similar response to a news story about a school on the Sunshine Coast banning cartwheels.
“We actually had principals and teachers receiving death threats, because they banned students doing cartwheels because they’d had a number of students do themselves significant injuries,” Bates remembers.
He says the behaviour schools are seeing has “no logical connection” to the issues.
“Suddenly it becomes the sort of thing that results in tantrums, swearing, physical abuse.”