Head teacher forced to deny school is letting pupils identify as animals and giving them litter trays after poison pen campaign

A chief teacher had to deny that after the school’s poison pen campaign resulted in social media anger, it allows students to be identified as animals.
Highcliffe-on-Sea, a comprehensive secondary school at Doset, Highcliffe School President Patrick Earnshaw, appeal to online speculation on students in a recent border.
Under the title of ‘Garbage trays: Fact vs Social Media’, educator criticized Facebook groups for claiming that students were defined as cats and dogs.
He also claimed that students used garbage trays provided by teachers and placed in corridors around the school.
Furries are people who are interested in animal characters with human -like characteristics.
Those in the hairy community will usually wear ‘fur suits’ and express themselves through a ‘Kürk-Sen’-a personalized character that is often represented by art and interactions.
Mr. Earnshaw wrote the following in the school bulletin: ‘Some Facebook groups associated with school, Highcliffe students are allowed to be identified as cats or dogs, and I noticed that they are made available for them at school.
“ 18/24 months ago it was not true-the social media about school went on this issue for the last time-and now is not true.
Highcliffe-on-Sea, Doorset (in the picture), a comprehensive secondary school, had to claim that his students were defined as animals and used garbage trays.
Patrick Earnshaw, (in the picture) President of the Highclifffe School, rubbed the allegations in the school’s bulletin
Furries are people who are interested in animal characters with human-like characteristics-often wear ‘fur suits’ and interact with others (file picture)
‘We do not allow students to define themselves as cats and dogs or any animals, and we do not give garbage trays in the corridors or really anywhere else.’
The Director added that some of the natives believe that he believes that he was confusing the Channel 4 show Yorkshire in a way that trained Yorkshire.
After Dewsbury’s Thornhill Community Academy, the documentary showed that several staff discussed a ‘student who seems to be dressed like a’ fox, which was completed with a queue.
In the strange speech, the teachers were worried, and one asked for training around Furries because there was nothing they had faced before.
Mr. Earnshaw finished by adding his letter: ‘I can only assume that some people may have confused us with the content of the last part of the training of Yorkshire.’
Parents of a Highcliffe School who wants to remain anonymous, Advertiser and Times: ‘Obviously someone launched an inappropriate rumor. Both children said at school and said it was garbage. ‘
The school is part of the HISP Academy Trust and teaches approximately 1,500 students between the ages of 11-19.
Under the latest inspection in 2023, he maintained his ‘good’ degree and was praised in high quality in a ‘wide and ambitious’ curriculum and teaching, pastoral care and personal development.
Highcliffe School refrained from commenting.
Those in the hairy community often express themselves through a ‘fur -süber’ – a personalized character (file picture), which is generally represented by art and interactions
The rumors surrounding the Dorset School come after a school in Eastern Sussex, which is at the center of an emergency inspection after a teacher called ‘Desperate’ for refusing to accept a classmate of a teacher.
In 2023, Rye College, East Sussex, said ‘No children’ at school.
On the other hand, then the Minister of Women and Equality Kemi Badenoch ordered a school examination.
Mail, the mother of one of the girls who want to be kept anonymous, said: ‘I am proud of my daughter, always stand up for what he believes are right and everything he does.
“ “ Classmates and parents expressed an opinion that would share, but was shouted by someone who was authority and made bullying. ‘
He continued: ‘He made the teacher go to him and to boil my blood if he did not like what was told to him. What kind of welcome to a 13 -year -old girl. ‘




