Kuwait Times

Pupils aged as young as 7 caught sexting

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LONDON: More than 60 percent of school staff in Britain are aware of 13-16 year olds sharing sexual material online, and pupils as young as seven have been caught “sexting”, a study yesterday. The report from teaching union NASUWT union found that 63 percent of teachers were aware of 14-year-olds sexting, while 45 percent said they knew of 13year-olds sharing material of a sexual nature.

A small amount of teachers said seven-, eight-, and nine-year-olds were engaged in such behavior, and a quarter of respondent­s said they were aware of 11-year-olds sexting. Around half of all teachers said they knew of pupils using social media to send sexist and bullying messages to other students, and a similar number were aware of racist messages. Half of them had suffered online abuse and negative comments, including false accusation­s of pedophilia.

Almost a third of teachers reported seeing online photos or videos of themselves taken without consent. “Over the three years the NASUWT has been running this survey the situation has deteriorat­e,” said Chris Keates, general secretary of NASUWT. “Online abuse has a devastatin­g impact on teachers’ and pupils’ lives and yet no serious action is taken by government to ensure that schools are responding appropriat­ely to this abuse.

“The level of abuse that teachers are suffering at the hands of parents online is simply unacceptab­le.” Examples of abuse included a fake Twitter account describing the teacher as a wife beater and parents threatenin­g to “knock out” teachers. The Department for Education stressed that teachers “have a right to feel safe” at work. “We want to make sure young people are aware of the risks and dangers - including sending inappropri­ate images,” said the department. “The law is also crystal clear that where teachers find indecent images of children they must report this to the police.

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