Headmaster Gareth Doodes has confirmed he has now launched a safeguarding probe after being told of the claims posted on the whistleblowing site
The headteacher of a top private school has launced an investigation into allegations of ‘sexism’ after claims girls were forced to kneel while teachers measured the length of their skirts.
Female teachers at the £15,000-a-year King’s School in Worcester are accused of enforcing ‘blatantly sexist rules’ and failing to punish bullies.
Headmaster Gareth Doodes has confirmed he has now launched a safeguarding probe after being told of the claims.
Allegations of female pupils having the length of their skirts measured were revealed on whistle-blowing website Everyone’s Invited.
Created last year, the Everyone’s Invited website has seen contributions surge since the murder of Sarah Everard from South London last month.
Hundreds of prestigious private schools have been named and shamed in a sex scandal that has engulfed Britain’s entire education sector.
Many other women have also used the platform to reveal their ordeals within the state education system, at university or the family home.
Allegations of ‘sexist rules’ and female pupils being forced to kneel so the length of their skirts could be measured were revealed on whistle-blowing website Everyone’s Invited
The anonymous post on Everyone’s Invited site, which was launched by campaigner Soma Sara, 22, and Meadow Walker, the daughter of late actor Paul Walker, read: ‘In the uniform rules it said that a girl’s skirt had to be 10cm above the knees when kneeling so several teachers made girls kneel to measure their skirts.
‘I remember walking out of cathedral and seeing teachers taking girls off and making them kneel on the cathedral floor just to check their skirt length.
‘This is the same school that would not let us show our ankles and made us wear full tracksuits (when we) were in our sports kit, even if it was 30 degrees and the middle of summer.
‘The saddest thing was that female teachers even enforced the blatantly sexist rules.
‘They made us think that our bodies should be covered and that it was our responsibility to make sure men wouldn’t look at us.’
The post went on to detail allegations of inappropriate sexual behaviour between a number of the male pupils towards girls at the school.
King’s School caters for 1,467 boys and girls aged 2-18 and received an ‘Excellent’ Ofsted rating.
The Everyone’s Invited post added: ‘This is the same school where guys used to go around daring each other to grab girls (bottoms).
‘And the same school that instead of dealing with reported racism, sexism and bullying in the school decided instead to change the uniform so that skirts were below the knee and couldn’t be rolled up, like that was the biggest problem they had.’
The allegations are now being investigated by school chiefs, with the headteacher urging anyone affected by ‘unacceptable treatment’ to report it.
He also said he was ‘pleased’ that pupils have an ‘opporunity’ to share their experiences on the whistleblowing site.
Headmaster Mr Doodes said: ‘I am aware that King’s has been mentioned [on Everyone’s Invited].
‘Immediately I informed my designated safeguarding lead.
‘We take all allegations extremely seriously and will be looking into this immediately after the Easter break.
‘I am pleased girls have an opportunity to disclose trauma through Everyone’s Invite but would encourage anyone from any school who feels their treatment by fellow pupils or staff has been unacceptable to also contact the safeguarding lead.
‘Details can be found on every UK educational institution’s website so such sensitive yet damaging issues can be investigated further.’
King’s School (pictured, stock image) caters for 1,467 boys and girls aged 2-18 and received an ‘Excellent’ Ofsted rating
The schools uniform policy is shared online and requires skirts to be worn ‘on the knee’.
Their uniform guide for years nine to 11 states: ‘Skirts should be worn and should be on the knee and no more than 5 cm above the knee when kneeling (i.e. 5 cm above the mid point of the knee cap).’
It adds: ‘Girls wearing a skirt which is too short for them will be asked to replace it with a new, longer skirt.’
Girls can also wear ‘slim leg or regular fit’ trousers ‘in a formal style’ – although ‘skinny or jegging style trousers are not permitted’.
It comes after a Mail on Sunday report revealed boys at private schools embroiled in the sex abuse scandal are having to change out of uniform to avoid street attacks and verbal abuse.
Current male pupils also fear including their school name on CVs in case they are turned away by potential employers because of the negative associations.
Others – aged as young as 13 – have faced abuse from members of the public and have been branded rapists in the street, prompting some to change out of uniform for journeys to and from school.
More than 11,000 testimonies have now been uploaded to the Everyone’s Invited website, which compiles reports of sexual abuse in schools.
Education Secretary Gavin Williamson has also condemned the alleged assaults as ‘shocking’ and suggested any schools implicated could face government measures.
But others have called for an end to the ‘gender wars’ sparked by the thousands of anonymous allegations.
Jane Lunnon, the new head of the £20,000-a-year Alleyn’s School in Dulwich, south-east London, suggested the solution should see young men become ‘part of the conversation’.
‘A gender war helps no one, and pitting girls against boys or ‘othering’ the opposite gender is no solution,’ she told The Times.
‘Our young people must learn how to tackle these things head on; how to listen to each other generously and with respect, and how to ex-press their concerns and their hopes openly together.’
A London school was also embroiled in a high-profile uniform row this week.
London’s Pimlico Academy has been at the centre of a mutiny by students and teachers who slammed the new uniform policies which critics claimed were descriminatory against Muslims and people with Afro hairstyles.
Changes introduced after new headteacher Daniel Smith’s arrival last September included banning hairstyles that ‘block people’s view’ and hijabs that are ‘too colourful’ at the school, where three quarters of children are from ethnic minorities.
Hundreds hundreds of pupils and parents gathered outside the school to protest carrying BLM banners amid chants of ‘we want change’ and demanding the removal of the Union Jack flag from outside the school.
The school’s headmaster Mr Smith has now acquiesced to some of the pupils’ demands and even praised the protesters, saying the flag will come down ‘pending a review’.
He has also agreed to amend ‘racist’ uniform rules and review the curriculum after the mass protest.
Women teachers ‘are scared to walk school corridors’: Union bosses say staff are also victims of schools sex abuse scandal as female workers worry about walking hallways alone
By Eleanor Harding Education Correspondent For The Daily Mail
Female teachers worry about walking corridors alone, union leaders warned as the schools sex scandal widened last night.
The NASUWT, which has 314,000 members in both private and state schools, said many women staff have reported sex asCsaults and harassment by male pupils.
It comes after more than 12,000 testimonies were collated by the Everyone’s Invited website detailing sexual abuse of girls by male students across the country.
Female teachers worry about walking corridors alone, union leaders warned as the schools sex scandal widened last night (Stock image)
Female teachers have also been victims of unwanted advances and behaviour, including ‘upskirting’ and ‘down-blousing’ – where pupils secretly film under their clothes and circulate footage online.
Yesterday Dr Patrick Roach, general secretary of NASUWT, said female teachers are suffering from the same ‘sexist and misogynist behaviour’ as girls have complained of and even have to constantly ‘think about how they are dressed’ to ward off attacks. One teacher told the union her face was superimposed onto porn and then shared online widely.
Others have been inappropriately touched or been the subject of sexist name-calling and ‘derogatory language’ in class as well as online, Dr Roach said.
He told the union’s annual conference yesterday: ‘Misogyny and sexism are all too real, all too apparent – whether it’s on the streets… or in our schools. And [the question is] whether female teachers and female students can feel that they are safe to walk along the corridors without having to think about how they’re dressed or whether they’re walking alone and how they’re going to be treated by pupils.
‘No teacher should feel that, no student should feel that. And yet we do hear that teachers and students do.’ He said the problem was related to the Everyone’s Invited testimonies, with the abuse that female pupils suffer ‘impacting’ on teachers, and ‘vice versa’.
He said: ‘We are seeing… so-called banter, sexist name-calling, the use of derogatory terms – both in class and online – to talk about teachers, the posting of sexist comments on social media, the belittling of teachers because of their sex.’
He said the most ‘extreme’ behaviour included ‘cases of upskirting, down-blousing, inappropriate touching’, and it probably represented ‘the tip of the iceberg’.
A motion debated yesterday at the conference stated bullying and intimidation including ‘sexual harassment and misogyny’ is ‘prevalent’ in schools.
It said: ‘These behaviours in schools are damaging the professional status and mental health of teachers and driving committed teachers out of the profession.’ One NASUWT member who was up-skirted said: ‘It was a breach of trust and he was a pupil that I knew and trusted.
‘We felt totally violated by what he had done. That was a very difficult thing to try to get over.’
The motion, which was passed, resolves to ’empower all members to be able to quickly identify and challenge bullying and intimidation before such behaviour becomes endemic’.
Some have told the union they are often not taken seriously when they report abuse or that it is simply viewed as ‘boys’ banter’.
Dr Roach said school management needed to take more responsibility for pupils’ predatory behaviour. He added: ‘Something has got to change in which the voice of teachers and the voice of students is respected, is valued and listened to.’
A spokesman for the Department for Education said: ‘In no circumstances should teachers be subjected to abuse simply for doing their jobs.’
They added that it plans to improve discipline in schools through a £10million behaviour hubs programme.
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