UNMIK on Air
“Teacher
leave the kids alone”
(By Valon
A. Syla)
Besim: In my classroom my friend was
making noise, he moved a little from his chair, and the professor came in and hit
him. He did not say anything to the pupil, neither did he give a warning….
-And does this happen often?
-Yes this happens often, especially in my classroom the
professors are very tough
These are words one can often hear from students in Kosovo when talking about their school day.
Hello and welcome to UNMIK on Air,
The days when teachers used to impose order by hitting
children’s fingers with a ruler, or pull their hair or even spank children seem
to be things of the past; many parents believe their children are safe at
school, but the reality seems to be quite different these days in Kosovo; many
students in Kosovo seem to have witnessed at least one violent act from a
teacher against a student. Besim is a pupil of the Faik Konica primary school and
he says
Besim: I have seen many times a teacher beating the
pupil, and I have experienced that myself, it is a bad feeling, and I felt very
ashamed when my schoolmates watched me, and that’s very bad. Now it is not
happening that often, but in the past the violent action was usual, and I
remember a teachers beating two or three pupils per day.”
In Kosovo when students say a professor is tough, one doesn’t mean that the exams are difficult to pass, but rather that the professor can literally beat the crap out of you. Pulling hair, pinching and grabbing someone by the ear is an everyday happening, where as slapping, beating and kicking are very rare but still happens in some Kosovan schools. Ragip Zekolli is an adviser to the Ministry of Education.
Ragip Zekolli: The use of violence in school is
not allowed at all, I‘m not only referring to physical violence but
unfortunately in Kosovar schools the use of physiological violence is also
present, when the professor calls pupils by different offensive names and
words.
A year ago the Ministry
of Education enforced a new regulation for Grammar and High Schools. Code number 31 of the new regulation
establishes that in the case of a violent or aggressive act from a teacher
against a student, the director of the school should suspend the teacher for at
least 3 days with possible further actions. Ragip Zekolli again
Ragip Zekolli: We inherited a school system
and we kept it for 40 years, this system is very classical and during the past
the pupil’s were tortured, they even didn’t have the right to speak out. In one
word the teacher was the one that decided on every issue”
So it’s again the teachers who will decide if they will respect the new regulation and change their old fashioned ways in the classrooms. Still Besim says that violence continues although in smaller proportions.
Besim: In our school there is not too much violence,
there is a new law prohibiting teachers from beating us is in power, and so now
there is not so much violence”
But violence does not come only from the teachers side, there are cases where school children stab each other with knives and sometimes they carry guns to the classroom. Last year a 17 year old student was killed with a knife after a fight in one of Prishtina’s secondary schools.
The Ministry of Education thinks that the regulation on school violence has had an impact, and according to Ragip Zekolli, day-by-day violence in schools is disappearing.
Ragip Zekolli: Our first step is to create
awareness, the second step unfortunately I have to admit that the violence in
schools cannot be stopped without taking actions. So we made clear to the
teachers that if they use violence against the students they will be suspended
from teaching, because we think that’s the only way, the teachers and pupils
will understand”
The presence of violence in schools has an impact on the
student’s future behavior in society. To give an end to all of this there is
need for a strong cooperation between teachers, students and parents.
And that was all from this edition of UNMIK on Air. Thanks
for listening and stay tuned for more