who coached sport at the school and was sentenced for grooming a year 9 boy. The boy’s family said they were not supported by the school.In November last year, another former St Kevin’s student, photographer James Robinson, burned his blazer on the school grounds to show solidarity with “current students and victims of St Kevin’s, and schools like it, who feel their identity is slowly being chipped away by a hyper-masculine culture”.
“We have taken measures to ensure ongoing curriculum development for education and shaping of young people. We acknowledge that significant work has been done and needs to continue. The pace of cultural change is a challenge we face, but actions will continue to be a priority,” she said.about the complaints of teachers was accurate, and said the school was acting too slowly to address them.
He said a request by teachers for bystander training for sexual harassment had not yet been put into action by the school. Another teacher said the Dropbox complaints were not isolated incidents and showed “we still have a cultural problem nobody wants to address”.