‘People have had enough about being told what they can and can’t do’ | UK | News

A fuming father, a 12 -year -old daughter, declared that “something should change” after being removed from a variety of class because she was wearing a dress adorned with a flag of unity.
47 -year -old Stuart Field is determined that his daughter Courtney Wright is determined to “have enough to say what people can do and can not do” following the isolation of the school that arouses a screaming in the local community.
Despite the Bilton School in the Rugby in Warwickshire, Keir Starmer spokesman, who published an apology, stressed that “being a British is something to be celebrated”.
Mr. Field also announced that the students who exhibited St George’s flags and Galli flags were rejected at school gates.
In a recent video, he said: “What happened on Friday should not be any child in the UK. It caused too much upset in England, I think people say what they can and cannot do when they are proud to celebrate their culture and their own history. I don’t think this will end soon unless something changes.”
Mr. Field, who worked in the maritime restoration, refrained from determining the changes he envisaged, but expressed his confidence that the condemnation of the school had a wider social anger on a nerve.
The school, which was well -ratified by Ofteded, introduced the day as the chance to wear clothes representing citizenship or family heritage instead of students’ usual school uniforms.
However, Shortly after coming to Courtney’s dress inspired by Spice Girls, the young girl was taken out of the lessons without saying a single word, and was not allowed to make an inclusive speech about the importance of being British, which spoke about the values of eating fish and chips eating and justice and courtesy. Reports the mirror.
“Courtney was very embarrassed and could not understand what he was doing wrong. He shouldn’t be ashamed to be British. No one should be punished to celebrate British culture and history.
“One of the school was politicized for a union of Jack’s Jack, even if it wasn’t Courtney’s intention. Courtney did not do anything political. It was about being British, even about freedom of wearing a dress. It was her interpretation of the British culture and what it means to her.”
“On Friday, July 11, Culture Celebration has occurred from our students, our family and the members of the wider community,” Stowe Multi Academy Trust said.
The school issued a statement that expresses regret for the incident: “We regret the distress caused by this and offer our sincere and unprotected apologies. Since then, we talked to the student and his family to listen to his concerns and to think about how it can be handled better.”
The statement continued: “We are determined to learn from this experience and to ensure that every student is recognized and supported while he is proud of his inheritance.”
Emphasizing the pride of the school in various student body and the unique heritage brought by each student, the explanation added: “As a school, we strengthen our policies and personnel education in order to enable us to reflect our values of our practices.