Four-year-olds suspended from Wrexham schools
- Published
Twelve children aged four have been suspended from primary schools in Wrexham since the summer of 2017.
Data released by Wrexham council found a total of 168 primary age pupils in the county had been given fixed term exclusions since the summer term in 2017.
A quarter of the number of children suspended - 42 - were 10 year olds.
Wrexham council said teachers were witnessing an increase in children with difficult behavioural issues.
The local authority, which released the figures following a Freedom of Information request, has pledged to clamp down on the number of fixed-term exclusions.
Chief education officer Ian Roberts told the Local Democracy Reporting Service: "Children and young people are increasingly presenting with complex behaviours due to a range of factors.
"Whereas there has been an increase in fixed-term exclusions, this is not particular to Wrexham with similar trends across a number of local authorities.
"Each school has its own behaviour policy which it will implement through a graduated response process with exclusion never taken lightly and in most cases the last resort.
"The authority recognises a need to reduce exclusions with this being a current priority as detailed in the council plan."
A report published by the authority earlier this year, showed children across all age groups were banned from class for a total of 3,162 days during the 2017-18 school year.
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