Teachers warn against police 'spot inspections' in schools
A group of teachers on Friday, Jan. 27, warned against police “spot inspection” for deadly weapons --- saying it “will not solve violence in schools.”

“The concern needs a more substantive and comprehensive solution, not a simplistic police quick fix,” said Alliance of Concerned Teachers - National Capital Region (ACT-NCR) President Ruby Bernardo in a statement.
ACT said this after the Department of Education (DepEd) released a statement on Jan. 26 noting that Vice President and Secretary of Education Sara Z. Duterte has instructed the agency’s Field Operations to issue a directive for all local offices to coordinate with the police in identifying schools which “require spot inspections of weapons among personnel and learners.”
READ:
https://mb.com.ph/2023/01/26/deped-to-tap-pnp-mental-health-experts-amid-violence-related-incidents-in-schools/
For ACT, frightening students with punishment and authoritative figures are “not the way to teach them” the value of human life and dignity and respect for human rights.
“It would only undermine our schools as safe spaces and zones of peace,” Bernardo said.
Instead of this, ACT underscored the importance of a “concerted effort” from the homes to communities and schools to teach these values to children.
“More importantly, they need to be raised in a nurturing society that is tolerant of differences and turns to dialogue for conflict resolution to achieve genuine peace,” ACT added.