More than one in three Guardian It is said that he has been forced to raise concerns about toilets In their child’s schoolA new survey has suggested.
Voting of 2,000 parents of school-age Children This suggests that issues are so widespread that about 10 percent report that their child has asked to remember the school around the facilities due to their concerns.
According to a survey by Charity Parentcind, one in six (17 percent) parents evaluated toilets in their child’s school.
One parents told that their children felt as if they were “stepping into a horror film” while using the toilet, while the other mentioned that their child had to face cockroaches in cockroaches School facility.
The census poll also shows that 11 percent of the parents said that their child had missed school or asked to stay at home due to concerns about the toilet.
In response to these findings, the charity is urging the government to describe as “disgusting” school toilets, describing as part of comprehensive plans as “disgusting” school toilets. Increase school environment.
It comes to fix “collapse classes” after the announcement of £ 2.3bn per year by Chancellor and to reconstruct 500 £ 2.4bn per year Schools,
Some surveyed parents suggested that their children had wet themselves in school, or had to face constipation, as they had to avoid the toilet in school.
Jason Elsome, CEO of Parentcind, called the school toilet to “fit for use” for the prescribed government funds in the review used to make it “fit”.
He said: “With one lakh children facing insults due to the disgusting state of school toilets, we need to throw light on our children’s health and goodness, who are refusing to drink during the day to avoid going to the toilet and millions of children are suffering from constipation as their school toilets are so dirty.
“Parents tell us that we need to separate the cash to clean and upgrade the school dysfunctions.
“Parents tell us that their children have seen ‘Cockroaches coming out of the floor’ and toilets ‘Pu and urine cover’.”
Peppe Diyasio, General Secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders (ASCL), said: “Schools work hard to ensure that it is a matter, and will be disappointed at the findings of this research.
“Many schools are struggling with old and old buildings, which require a lot of maintenance due to the government’s young age, and it can play a role in the assumptions reflected by the respondents.
“We need better investment in upgrade and modernization to school buildings.”