Home Australia Brentwood Secondary College: Anger as another Melbourne school becomes embroiled in vile league table scandal

Brentwood Secondary College: Anger as another Melbourne school becomes embroiled in vile league table scandal

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Another Melbourne school has been caught up in the degrading list scandal after it was found that seven students were ranked according to who the 'biggest shits' are (pictured)

Another school has been hit by a shocking list scandal which ranked girls according to who the “biggest shits” were.

The list was found scrawled on the back of the girls’ toilet door at Brentwood Secondary College, a co-educational school in Glen Waverley, in Melbourne’s east.

It is the latest degrading list created by Melbourne students after male students at two other schools ranked female students based on attractiveness.

The principal of Brentwood Secondary College was completely unaware of the list until he was alerted by Seven news On Wednesday.

Another Melbourne school has been caught up in the degrading list scandal after it was found that seven students were ranked according to who the ‘biggest shits’ are (pictured)

“Anyone found to have engaged in such behavior will face immediate disciplinary action,” principal John Ballagh said in a statement.

Daily Mail Australia has contacted Brentwood Secondary College for comment.

It comes after students at McClelland College and Yarra Valley Grammar School were suspended for their involvement in sorting female students by appearance.

Laura Spence, interim principal of McClelland College, said in a statement that support has been provided to affected students.

“The safety and well-being of our students is a top priority for us and we support students affected by this behavior,” he said.

“I am very grateful to the students who immediately informed me about the matter.”

The list was found scrawled on the back of the girls' toilet door at Brentwood Secondary College, a co-educational school in Glen Waverley, east of Melbourne.

The list was found scrawled on the back of the girls’ toilet door at Brentwood Secondary College, a co-educational school in Glen Waverley, east of Melbourne.

It comes as the fallout continues at McClelland Secondary College.

A mother told Seven News her daughter “doesn’t feel safe” after the disturbing incident.

‘It’s incredible, the boy was only suspended for a week. If he’s going to come back, half the girls in Year 10 won’t,’ she said.

Other parents called for the student’s expulsion.

“I would expect them to be expelled from school, but how do you fix that?” she said.

Another added: “I certainly wouldn’t feel comfortable if it were me.”

“Hopefully (the school can) discipline them the right way so they don’t do it again.”

McClelland College (pictured) in Frankston, in Melbourne's southeastern suburbs, is investigating a list that rated female students on their appearance after it was created and distributed by a group of Year 9 boys.

McClelland College (pictured) in Frankston, in Melbourne’s southeastern suburbs, is investigating a list that rated female students on their appearance after it was created and distributed by a group of Year 9 boys.

Another list compiled by Year 11 students at Yarra Valley Grammar School included photographs of female students and ranked them from best to worst as “wives”, “beauties”, “mediums”, “objects”, “outlets” and “inviolables”.

Yarra Valley Grammar principal Dr Mark Merry described the post as “disgraceful”.

‘Mutual respect is in the DNA of this school, so this was a shock not only to us… but it was also a shock to the year level and the year level children who see this as very, very out of place. ,’ he said.

A Victorian Department of Education spokesperson told Daily Mail Australia it is committed to ensuring students engage in respectful relationships and has measures in place to facilitate this commitment.

“Misogynistic and disrespectful behavior is totally unacceptable in any Victorian school, and the school has rightly taken swift action,” the spokesperson said.

‘More than 1,950 Victorian government, Catholic and independent schools are signed up to the Respectful Relationships initiative, supporting them to embed respect and gender equality throughout their school community and eradicate these vile attitudes towards women.

“We all have a responsibility to teach respect to students and will continue to invest in programs that promote gender equality to ingrain those attitudes.”

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