Boys As Young As Five At Risk Of Becoming Radicalised Extremists

Back of a young boy with a backpack, heading to school on a sunny day.

Boys as young as five years old are being at risk of becoming radicalised extremists or criminals as one Sydney school has been found to have ten problem students.

The Department of Education has revealed that it hopes to combat ‘anti-social and extremist behaviour’ in schools in New South Wales as it was found that ten boys in a primary school in Sydney’s inner west have been�identified as ‘at risk’ and have been put into a special program,�The Daily Telegraph�reported.

Psychologist and school counsellor Rose Cantali said that there is a rise in the number of disturbed children, making them disengaged�from learning. She said that this increases the risk of these children to become criminals or terrorists and become involved in radicalisation and other criminal activity when they are older.

Boys As Young As Five At Risk Of Becoming Radicalised Extremists | Stay at Home Mum

She said during her time as a counsellor she encountered a Muslim mother who ended up rearing three extremists. “The mother had needed to have many dealings with the counsellor due to her children’s learning needs and poor behaviour at school,” she told The Daily Telegraph.

Ms Cantali said that three�of the mum’s boys ended up becoming terrorists — one jailed currently and the other two jailed in other countries.

Psychologist and researcher at Macquarie University�Wayne Warburton, who specialises in aggressive behaviour, told the newspaper that many teenagers are feeling ‘anxious, sad or suicidal’. “[Changed behaviour] must start with children who are young and it must be scaffolded in schools and the curriculum,” Dr Warburton said.

A Department of Education spokesperson said that ‘robust systems’ are in place in the state’s schools to identify students who may be easily influenced to engage in crime or extremist behaviour.

Source:�Dailymail.co.uk�and 7 News Facebook

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Clare Whitfield Chief Editor
Clare Whitfield is the Editor of Stay at Home Mum and a recognised voice in practical home management for Australian families. Based in the northern suburbs of Sydney, she balances editorial leadership with life as a stay at home mum to two school age children. Her background in home economics and more than a decade of experience in recipe development, family budgeting, and household systems inform her work.

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