The shortcomings are so serious that the student health services estimate that the school's shortcomings mean that about a handful of students per class risk not reaching the knowledge goals. It appears from the Swedish Schools Inspectorate's documents that both parents, students and teachers have tried to sound the alarm about the situation.

"If a teacher is sick, we don't always get a substitute teacher, and if we do, we read something completely different than it was intended," says Moheimmen Al-Hamdani, who attends the school.

Emir Al-Aboudy says that sometimes it feels unsafe at the school.

"There can be chaos both in the classroom and in the corridors after school ends," he says.

The school is criticized for not working enough to create a safe environment that contributes to studying, despite the fact that both staff and students have said that there are a lot of fights and verbal abuse.

The boss after the criticism: Not taking full responsibility for students' schooling

There are a number of problems that the reviewing authority, the Swedish Schools Inspectorate, addresses (see fact box).

"The hardest thing to read is the experience that we have an unsafe and uncertain environment and that you feel that we do not provide the education the students are entitled to," says Thomas Karlegatt, who is the operations manager for the school and leisure administration.

There are about four hundred students at the school.

Do you think the city has taken responsibility for the students' schooling given the criticism?

"Not fully, we need to do even more than we've already done and there's a lot of work going on," Karlegatt says.

The school and the City of Helsingborg have until September to take action, otherwise you risk receiving a fine of one million kronor.