30/03/2026
I read an article this morning about Australian school principals. Over 8,000 of them. The numbers are hard to ignore. Nearly half have experienced physical violence in their role. More than half have been threatened. Almost all report some form of abuse.
What struck me was not just the data, but the familiarity of it.
This is not surprising anymore. It lines up with what many of us are seeing every day. The tension in schools. The escalation. The sense that something is not quite holding the way it used to.
It is easy to frame this as a behaviour issue. It is easy to point to students, or parents, or leadership. That keeps the conversation simple. It also keeps it stuck.
What sits underneath is more complex.
Schools are now carrying far more than education. They are holding mental health, disability, trauma, family stress, and a growing sense of disconnection in the broader community. The system has stretched to absorb this, but it has not been redesigned to support it.
Children who are overwhelmed show it in the only ways they can. Families who feel unheard push harder. Educators who care deeply try to hold more than is sustainable. Principals sit in the middle of all of it.
Over time, that becomes normalised.
There is a quiet shift when something that should concern us begins to feel expected. Violence, threats, and burnout start to be described as part of the role. That is usually the point where a system is no longer coping, even if it continues to function on the surface.
The people in schools are not the problem. Most are doing everything they can, often well beyond what should be asked of them. The issue sits in the design around them.
A system that relies on pressure rather than support will eventually show strain. A system that responds to complexity with compliance will miss what is actually needed.
There is another way to think about this.
Not as a failure of individuals, but as a signal. A signal that schools cannot, and should not, be expected to carry this alone. Real support sits beyond the classroom as much as within it. Community, early intervention, relational approaches, and spaces that can hold complexity without escalating it further.
The article reflects a system under stress. The experiences behind those numbers reflect something deeper.
What we are seeing is not isolated. It is patterned. And patterns like this are worth paying attention to.
We surveyed more than 8,000 principals – they face violence, threats and stress in their schools In 2025, nearly half of school leaders reported being subjected to physical violence. Almost 54% experienced threats of violence.
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