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Friday, 8 June 2007, 19:38 GMT 20:38 UK

Teachers vote for Army school ban

Soldiers Scotland's biggest teaching union has voted by a clear majority to call for a ban on the armed forces targeting recruitment campaigns at schools.

The move follows an emotional debate at the EIS annual conference in Perth.

Supporters of the motion claimed the military was tackling a shortage of recruits by targeting impressionable teenagers in deprived areas.

An Army spokesman said they were disappointed and would go into schools when invited by headteachers.

Supporters of the ban claimed the military targeted teenagers with t-shirts, pictures of helicopters and even Christmas cards from the recruiting officers.

Opponents at the conference in Perth said it did not make sense to single out the military when other services such as the fire brigade exposed staff to danger.

"We owe it our children to offer them more than a potential one way ticket to the bloody mess which has become Iraq and Afghanistan"
Christine Grahame MSP

An Army spokesman said: "We are obviously disappointed by the way the debate went at the EIS conference.

"We will endeavour to visit school as previously when invited to do so by headteachers."

Delegates were told that one establishment in Glasgow had 14 visits from army recruiters in the past year, while another experienced a 10-fold rise in the number of army visits during the past 12 months.

The motion was put forward by the EIS' Edinburgh Local Association.

EIS general secretary Ronnie Smith said afterwards: "There was evidence that they (the armed forces) were concentrating their efforts on some of the poorest and most disproportionate areas.

"It was felt that there was not a uniform approach."

He added: "We support the concept of schools as places of education, and of career guidance.

"But I think there's a fine line between legitimate career guidance and other tactics which intrude into the life of the school."

Career opportunities

South of Scotland SNP MSP Christine Grahame, a former teacher, said she backed the decision.

She said: "It is entirely inappropriate for the armed forces to be undertaking these visits simply because they are facing falling recruitment levels overall combined with increasing levels of desertion and serving troops resigning from the army.

"We owe it our children to offer them more than a potential one way ticket to the bloody mess which has become Iraq and Afghanistan.

"At present, it appears that the armed forces are getting preferential treatment in terms of access to schoolchildren, some as young as 14, at the detriment of other public services and business career opportunities. That cannot be right."



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Related to this story:
Teachers reject industrial action (08 Jun 07 |  Scotland )
Teachers call for school Army ban (02 Jun 07 |  Scotland )
Army 'targeting poorer schools' (04 Dec 06 |  Wales )
Army's school visits 'should end' (17 May 06 |  Scotland )
Army recruitment goes private (12 Mar 01 |  Scotland )
Army enlists recruitment firm (23 Jan 01 |  Scotland )
Army recruitment policy criticised (25 Oct 00 |  UK News )

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British Army
Careers Scotland
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