M mrsam Guest Sep 12, 2017 #1 A video clip has been obtained showing how a class teacher assaulted his female student by flogging her mercilessly The name of the school is reported to be Mdlamfe High School in Esikhawini, South Africa See video below Attachments Capture.JPG 18.5 KB · Views: 39
A video clip has been obtained showing how a class teacher assaulted his female student by flogging her mercilessly The name of the school is reported to be Mdlamfe High School in Esikhawini, South Africa See video below
curator Administrator Sep 12, 2017 #2 This is just awful... that is not a teacher but a madman. Completely lost control!
curator Administrator Sep 13, 2017 #5 Samguine said: We suffered worse while in school Click to expand... But now we know better. It is not discipline, it is abuse!
Samguine said: We suffered worse while in school Click to expand... But now we know better. It is not discipline, it is abuse!
P PressRoom Guest Sep 13, 2017 #6 Samguine said: We suffered worse while in school Click to expand... Please remove me from the 'We'. I didn't suffer this nonsense... To use that as an excuse for this madness is synonymous to murder.
Samguine said: We suffered worse while in school Click to expand... Please remove me from the 'We'. I didn't suffer this nonsense... To use that as an excuse for this madness is synonymous to murder.
M mrsam Guest Sep 13, 2017 #7 Oluogunjobi said: Please remove me from the 'We'. I didn't suffer this nonsense... To use that as an excuse for this madness is synonymous to murder. Click to expand... Lol. I am not excusing what the teacher did. It's absolutely wrong. No teacher dare try that on my child. What I meant was that it is a widespread practice in African secondary/primary schools and it should be looked into.
Oluogunjobi said: Please remove me from the 'We'. I didn't suffer this nonsense... To use that as an excuse for this madness is synonymous to murder. Click to expand... Lol. I am not excusing what the teacher did. It's absolutely wrong. No teacher dare try that on my child. What I meant was that it is a widespread practice in African secondary/primary schools and it should be looked into.