"Emirates Education" identified 4 degrees of violations

An updated list for managing students’ behavior in “attended” and “distance” education

Failure to adhere to school or sports uniforms is a “minor” violation.

Photography - Ashok Verma

The Emirates Foundation for School Education (Taleem) has issued an updated regulation for managing students' behavior in the attendance and distance education systems, according to which it identified four degrees of violations, and the mechanism for dealing with them by school administrations.

According to the regulation circulated by the Foundation to all government schools, to enter into force in the current academic year 2021-2022, four degrees of violations have been identified that govern students of in-person and distance education, which are “simple, medium-risk, serious, and very serious violations.”

With regard to students of attendance education, the “simple” first-degree violations are failure to adhere to the school or sports uniform, sleeping or non-compliance in the classroom, repeatedly being late for the morning assembly or not participating in it, entering or leaving the classroom at the time of class without permission Eating food and chewing gum in class or during the morning assembly. Not bringing books and school supplies or leaving them at school.

And she continued: “Second-degree violations” of medium severity are “absence from school before and after vacations, smoking inside the school campus, writing on walls, school furniture and the school bus, not following the prescribed behavioral and guiding systems and instructions for using school facilities, uttering, pointing and waving in an inappropriate manner.” to colleagues at school, as well as deliberately abusing colleagues and school staff through social media, and escaping from school during the school day.”

The third-degree “serious” violations for students of attendance education included deliberately damaging or sabotaging school equipment, tools and attachments or school buses, absenteeism from school without an acceptable excuse before and after vacations, holidays and weekends, and bringing and misusing a mobile phone inside school and during classes. Stealing or covering it up, sexual harassment, insulting the divine religions, photographing, possessing, publishing and circulating pictures of school workers and learners without their permission with the intent to offend.

Fourth-degree “extremely dangerous” violations included six violations: impersonating a student in school transactions or falsifying official school documents, possession and bringing in white sharp tools or dangerous materials of all kinds inside the school, causing fires inside the school campus, leaking exam questions or participating in it, bringing and promoting drug use, sexual assault.

With regard to distance education students, the regulation specified for them four degrees of violations, ranging from simple to very serious, in proportion to the nature of the educational system to which they are subject.

The first-degree violations for this category included being 10 minutes late to attend the distance education class when broadcasting live without an excuse, wearing clothes that violate public taste and morals, side conversations or talking not related to the study and obstructing the course of the lesson during the broadcast, mocking the teacher or a colleague during the broadcast. Distance education class Eating while attending a distance education class Adding any unauthorized program Misuse of microphone or camera and chatting without prior permission from the teacher Misuse of the powers available through Microsoft Teams.

Violations of "medium severity" included the absence of one school day when teaching remotely without an acceptable excuse, inciting students not to attend distance education classes or threatening and intimidating them, not attending lessons on distance education platforms, and fabricating quarrels between students, whether visual. Or written during broadcasts via distance learning platforms, failure to respond to the rules regulating the conduct of lessons, misuse of ministerial computers during or after distance learning lessons, audio or video communication with the rest of the students after the broadcast, whether from inside or outside the school, For non-educational purposes, using e-mail or social media to disclose personal information, removing the teacher or students from the group that may disrupt the lesson, using profanity, racist or other terms that may be offensive to any other user, abusing or insulting the Official visitors during classes during the broadcast.

According to the regulation, the violations of the third "serious" and the fourth "extremely dangerous" degrees are the same as those applied to students of urban education.

Being late 10 minutes from attending a distance education class, without an excuse, is a first-degree violation.

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