Alarm signal in the UK about the “Andrew Tate Phenomenon”: the boys refuse to talk to the teachers


Tristan and Andrew Tate. Photo: Inquam Photos / Eduard Vinatoru
Online influencers, Pecum Andrew Tate, supply an increase in sexism in the classroom, according to a new study by the British Nasuwt union in the field of education, which comes after the “Adolescence” series has pushed the concerns about the phenomenon “NEW”, reports Sky News.
Social media influence feed on an increase in misogyny and sexism in classrooms in the UK, teachers claim.
Over 5,800 teachers were questioned as part of the survey by the Nasuwt teaching union, and almost three out of five (59%) said that I think that the use of social networks has contributed to a deterioration of the student's behavior.
Andrew Tate was mentioned by a number of teachers who participated in the survey and who stated that he had a negative influence on the male students.
A teacher confessed that she had 10 -year -old boys who refused to talk to her “because she is a woman.”
Another teacher said that “the phenomenon of Andrew Tate had a huge impact on how the students (from a boys school) interacted with women and men they did not consider” masculine “.
Another respondent to the survey said that his school has experienced some incidents of “contemptible language against the female staff, as a direct result of the videos with Andrew Tate.”
The conclusions were published during the annual union conference, which takes place in Liverpool this weekend. A motion to be debated at the conference asks the executive of the union to collaborate with the teachers “to evaluate the risk that the far -right and populist movements represent for young people”.




