A teacher was injured when a student allegedly lashed out after being asked to put their phone away at Tauranga’s Ōtūmoetai College.
Police received a report of a serious assault at the school on Windsor Rd about 10.15am on Tuesday.
“One person received injuries and was transported to a nearby medical centre to be assessed,” police said.
Officers were speaking to one person about the matter, and inquiries were continuing.
Ōtūmoetai College principal Russell Gordon said the school was investigating an incident involving a student and a teacher.
“This incident involved a single student who was asked to put their phone away,” he said, adding that the phone was not confiscated.
The incident resulted in the teacher being taken to Accident and HealthCare on 2nd Ave as a precaution, before being sent home to recuperate.
“We have involved the police, and they are conducting their inquiries,” Gordon said.
All college procedures and policies were followed “swiftly and effectively by our staff immediately after the incident”.
The college had a zero-tolerance policy for antisocial or violent behaviour.
“As principal, I fully support the board’s unwavering stance on this. We are committed to fostering a safe and respectful environment, and any behaviour compromising this will be met with serious consequences.”
He said the school adhered to the nationwide ban on phone use in schools, “unless the teacher uses their discretion to allow it for educational purposes”.
Students who witnessed the event had been offered counselling services, and their families were contacted immediately.
“We are diligently working to ensure all appropriate actions are taken in line with our policies and legal requirements.”
He declined to provide further details while the school investigated the incident.



7 comments
Extremely sad,
Posted on 01-08-2025 15:58 | By nerak
this world we live in. My son thought about teaching, I'm so glad he went into science instead. He would have made a great teacher, but at least I don't worry about him being at work.
What is wrong with kids today, is it entitlement, or .....
Addiction
Posted on 02-08-2025 08:00 | By Deep Thinker
It has been shown that phone's are just as addictive, & light up the same neurological pathways, as heroine. The aggression and lashing out by the student after being asked to stop using his phone, is similar to the violence and anger an addict would show if you took away his crack. Our rampant adoption and unbounded use of screens in children over the last 20 years, has created monsters. With AI now in full unrestricted swing, things will only get worse. This is the undoing of social cohesion .
Phones in schools
Posted on 02-08-2025 13:43 | By Leprechaun
Collect all phones at the door as students enter school. They can have them back for lunch break and home time.
In an emergency a guardian/parent can phone the school and collect the student concerned immediately , likewise the school can contact the said parent/guardian immediately.
As said previously if the phone is needed for class they can be collected for that purpose. David
@nerak
Posted on 03-08-2025 13:59 | By morepork
Kids are no "wronger" today than they have ever been. They ARE entitled, as you note, and the technology entitles them even more, but the necessary early guidance and a society reflecting courtesy and respect is gone.
Social change is inevitable, but it needs to be steered by early schooling and family values.
Instead of educating our kids to think for themselves, and acquire positive life skills and values, we try to wrap them in cotton wool and protect them with wokeness. Somebody said something that offended you? Never mind, we'll see them in Court. Bullying is rampant in schools and workplaces and the world is swinging to the right, with might becoming right.
When you see the shocking behaviour described in the article, think to yourself: "They don't lick it off the stones..."
We could engineer behavioural change, but there's no money in it...
Cell phone addiction
Posted on 03-08-2025 14:44 | By Wicked
It’s shameful The addictive nature of having to be on a cell phone. Should’ve been converscated before it got into the classroom and that’s for everybody. Wonder what effect this has on other students witnessing this kind of outburst. Feel sorry for the teacher. I wonder what the consequences will be for the student?
college kids counselling?
Posted on 04-08-2025 09:01 | By Opinion100
yeah do not condone the behavior from the student what so ever, but really counselling for college kids over this? dont act like a murder was committed.
next you'll be offering counselling for crossing the road.
these are 13 - 18 year old students not 5 - 12 year olds.
the mentality is not what kids need growing up. you are going to see things in life regardless and not every step you can help it, nor is counselling going to be offered
you create a much bigger problem of kids now being critical over thinkers, they see something like this and hang on to the trauma but did it really effect them? were they the victim? did they physically get hurt?
also to these parents with kids like this, dont think little timmy is so innocent. do something about it.
@ Opinion100
Posted on 06-08-2025 09:32 | By Yadick
Very well said. I wholeheartedly agree with your comment.
I remember getting the cane at school and the only counseling I got for that was from my Dad when he got home . . . I'm not sure which was worse . . .
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