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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
National
Tamsin Rose

Parents’ worsening behaviour on social media creating stress and heavier workloads, school principals say

NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet and Minister for Education and Early Learning Sarah Mitchell meet with the teacher’s advisory group for a roundtable
Dominic Perrottet has flagged he is looking at boosting schools’ admin staff, while the NSW Secondary Principals’ Council president has called for dedicated social media staff to deal with parents’ behaviour. Photograph: Dean Lewins/AAP

School principals in New South Wales say they need urgent help to manage increasingly poor behaviour by parents on social media, with online pile-ons and slanging matches creating unnecessary stress and increased workloads.

Almost 90% of NSW school leaders told the 2021 NSW Secondary Principals’ Council (SPC) survey that “social media hate campaigns” from parents were affecting their wellbeing and occupying their time.

SPC president, Craig Petersen, said parents had forgotten how to deal with problems face to face or over the phone and it was creating an unsustainable position for principals who were being left bogged down and demoralised.

“If I’ve got a gripe with the school, I’m not necessarily going to ring up the office and make an appointment see the principal, I’m just going to give the school or the teacher or the principal a blast on Facebook,” he said of parent behaviour.

“Once it goes up on Facebook and people start piggybacking on to it, suddenly, we can’t actually manage that situation any more.

“You can easily end up with a relatively minor matter that could have been easily resolved, taking not just hours, but in some cases days.”

Principals reported parents sparking inappropriate discussions about everything from individual teachers and planned excursions to suspensions, expulsions and departmental decisions.

When principals need to respond to student use of social media, it’s usually due to incidents between students, whereas with parents it’s often the school, teachers or the principal themselves who are under attack.

Current complaints handling processes mean when a social media pile-on occurs on a specific post, each parent has to be contacted and have their issue dealt with separately, adding to the time taken to resolve an issue.

While a similar number of principals reported issues with parental behaviour online in the 2019 survey, the council says anecdotally the problem has worsened during the pandemic.

Ulladulla High School principal, Denise Lofts, has been leading schools for 13 years and said parent behaviour had worsened, noting vaccines had been a major flashpoint.

“People [used to be] coming in and screaming in your front office. Now they don’t do that. They go and scream online,” she said.

“I’m dealing with stuff that I’ve never really had to deal with, in terms of people’s inability to relate in a sensible and controlled manner.”

Petersen called for dedicated social media staff for schools so teachers and principals could return to doing their jobs.

“In most schools we will be using a member of the teaching staff to do our website and our social media management,” he said.

“Appoint people who’ve got the expertise to manage the finance, manage the assets, manage the social media – all the things that are coming up in that survey that are taking us away from the work.”

Lofts – also the council deputy president – said principals required access to support and advice in the moment when they’re “being targeted”.

“It’s been the undoing of many a good principal.”

Speaking after a roundtable with teachers last week, the NSW premier, Dominic Perrottet, flagged he was looking at boosting admin staff for schools to reduce the workload on school staff.

“There’s a lot of time that is taken away from our teaching staff into areas of administration that we should look at,” he said.

“Every business out there has administrative staff, so the business can get on doing business. We need our teachers focusing on teaching, not being caught up.”

The survey, the first since 2019, also found 80% of principals were facing increased stress and workload due to a lack of resources and almost a quarter of principals planned to retire within three years.

Opposition leader Chris Minns described the survey as “sober reading” and called on the government to address principals’ concerns.

“Excessive burnout and extreme stress should not be an accepted part of a teacher’s job and the government needs to acknowledge the severity of the issues and fix them,” he said.

The education minister, Sarah Mitchell, said social media was an issue the department would “continue to look at” but there was no specific plan to change the support already on offer.

“We need to make sure that those principals in those schools are supported,” she said

“There is a bit of education for our parents to understand that while that increased access using online platforms is great, we also need to be respectful and reasonable about how we communicate with our children’s schools.”

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