Opinion educationschool violenceschools The first step on a violent path The First Step On A Violent Path Relevant News Rapid investigation into possible criminal liability 17 June 2026 The first step on a violent path 17 June 2026 Tourist arrivals down for third month as Israel rebound continues 17 June 2026 Marios Demetriou 17 June 2026 FacebookXWhatsAppEmailPrintViber The report carried in the newspaper’s edition the day before yesterday by colleague Evangelia Sizopoulou was very good news indeed: the Ministry of Education’s Educational Psychology Service and its Counselling and Career Education Service have prepared a joint framework for dealing with serious incidents of violence and severe delinquent behaviour in schools. These incidents mainly involve physical, verbal, sexual, psychological or online violence, with the infliction — or intended infliction — of serious bodily harm or intense psychological distress on another person or persons. The policy document behind this initiative, which is a move in the right direction, has already been sent to schools and, as the report notes, sets out common practices for identifying such incidents, managing them appropriately, and ensuring systematic monitoring and review of the relevant procedures by teachers. The document notes that, according to research evidence, incidents of violence and delinquency in schools “are associated with low academic performance, low achievement motivation and negative emotions among pupils. At the same time, research supports the view that failure to develop prevention and intervention actions leads to an increase in the frequency and intensity of such incidents.” The most important part of this policy document, in my view, is precisely that acknowledgement: that academic failure is, in effect, the womb from which violence in schools is born, and that prevention must take pride of place in any effort to eliminate it — or at least to contain it. And prevention, of course, must begin long before a child starts lower or upper secondary school. Long before the “delinquent” child begins to feel “hatred” for school and starts, for example, to… set fire to schoolbooks — a mild form of delinquent behaviour seen from time to time in various schools, but one that may prove to be the… first step on a violent path. What does prevention look like? It can look like what the Ministry of Education did a few years ago, when it honoured a primary school that had adopted a programme to promote books and reading. Even during breaks, the school set up an outdoor library, while every classroom had its own library. The award was given as part of efforts to encourage good practices in preventing delinquency, and in recognition of the fact that love of books — of every book, schoolbook or otherwise — must be cultivated from kindergarten. And, of course, that love of books and of knowledge must first and foremost be held by teachers, professors and parents themselves, so that they can pass it on to children as a healthy view of life — not as yet another method of grade-chasing rote learning. Subscribe to our Newsletter Latest News Rapid investigation into possible criminal liability Tourist arrivals down for third month as Israel rebound continues Airlines resume some Middle East flights but disruption continues Fire breaks out in Tseri industrial area (video) Motorcyclist hits police officer as he tries to flee Famagusta traffic stop Government plans independent criminal investigators for Mafia State report FIFA World Cup 2026 – Street mural Follow en.philenews on Google News and be the first to know all the news about Cyprus and the world.
BoC, Cyprus Mathematical Society honour students’ maths prowess
• What happened: The Bank of Cyprus (BoC) hosted an awards ceremony recognizing students who excelled in mathematics competitions, organized by the Cyprus Mathe...