1. Woman dies in truck rollover on Sydney’s North Shore
A woman has tragically died after a truck overturned in a suburban yard, crushing her.
The woman, in her 30s, was killed when the loaded trip tipped sideways down an embankment at about 5pm yesterday in Wahroonga, on Sydney’s North Shore.
Paramedics treated the woman at the scene, but she was soon after pronounced dead, the Daily Telegraph reports.
A four-year-old boy believed to be the victim’s son is reported to have witnessed the horrific incident. He was taken to hospital for treatment of minor injuries.
Top Comments
@ Stephanie: Teaching is the absolute essence of my being and despite becoming the scapegoat of the entire country, no other career would give me the same satisfaction that teaching does. Once you are in a classroom on your own, you will quickly learn that 90% of what they teach you at uni is absolute rubbish. Teachers are highly trained professionals who know how to identify the learning needs of children, especially those who are disruptive. Managing classroom behaviour is an integral component of teaching and learning, as every child has a right to learn. Having said that, the disruptive child ALSO has that right, and a decent teacher would have used every strategy in the book to ensure the child's negative behaviour is managed. At times, those disruptive children need a "time out" so they can refocus their behaviour to something more constructive. Time out can also be used as a redirective, and quite frankly, if the behaviour is so bad that it requires the child being removed from the room, then it is done so to protect the rights of the other children.
Whether we like it or not, there is a socially acceptable way to behave in the work place, in public etc. Children need to learn how to MANAGE their frustration, anger and disappointment and need to be taught strategies which allow them to deal with their negative emotions and move on. Developing resilience in children is far easier than "fixing" broken adults.
@ Stephanie, it's great that you're studying teaching as it's an amazing, rewarding profession. I do agree with you that disruptive students miss out and continually fall behind, but why should all 33 children miss out and continually fall behind with them? I am a Primary School teacher and have been for the past 12 years. I work on a system of positive reinforcement and that works well. It doesn't work for all students however and when you have 33 young children in a class with various needs, it is virtually impossible as a single person to deal with every single issue. I try my best during my lunch breaks, after and before school to deal with these issues, but in class you can't always do this or you fall behind. You have to think what's best for all the students as a whole and if a child is continually being disruptive, disrupting the learning of all students, endangering student lives by being violent or aggressive, then action needs to be taken.
It's easy to sit back and observe what's happening, but I'm sure you'll change your views when you're the main teacher in the classroom 5 days a week, with your own students who have various learning needs, not to mention a jam packed curriculum to get through. I think the problem with education these days is that there are too many expectations on children. We need to slow down and teach children at a young age social skills, allow them opportunities to play instead of rushing them into academic education. If we can address these social and emotional issues at a young age, it will make it easier for teachers in the long run.