Homework prompts school to apologise

An English teacher in the U.K. asked over 60 teenage students to draft a suicide note for homework as part of a module on Shakespeare’s tragedy Macbeth, sparking outrage and prompting the school to apologise.

Students at the Thomas Tallis school, Kidbrooke, London, were asked to pen a final note to their loved ones after reading one of the play’s most celebrated scenes, when Lady Macbeth takes her own life.

‘Very distressed’

But the decision caused outrage among parents, some of whom claimed their children had been personally affected by the issue, The Telegraph reported.

Criticising the school for its lack of sensitivity, one mother said her daughter had been told to write the note, despite having lost three friends to suicide.

She was quoted as saying her daughter had become “very distressed” over the issue, and had told the teacher in question that such material made her feel uncomfortable.

Ill-conceived assignment

“My daughter had had personal experience with people her age committing suicide,” the mother said.

“On what universe was it ever, under any situation, a good idea to ask a group of teenagers to write suicide notes?” she said.

Other parents branded the decision “absolutely disgusting” and “insensitive”, with one claiming that the assignment had been ill-conceived given the age of the students involved.