 Prevent is part of the UK government's counter-terrorism strategy. Basically the government says we need to kind of find these people before they become violent. So suddenly the workplaces became potential areas for identifying people and children as well. I think Prevent when it came to the fore, we started worrying quite a few of our teachers. Prevent was, it's fair to say, poisoning the relationship between tutors and students but also it was targeting in particular Muslim students. The school missed my son's need. He needed support and the school failed to give him that support. In fact they failed to even recognise that need because there was so how bent on, this is a brown Muslim boy, he must be a terrorist. He was profiled. The evidence shows that a British Muslim is eight times more likely to be referred to the channel programme under Prevent. That show is clearly discriminatory. If the political will was there, the actual research could be done to identify what are the risk factors that lead someone to committing a terrorist act, rather than simply having this scattergun approach where you refer essentially anyone you're a bit worried about. And that's what's happening. This policy is problematic for all of us as citizens because it is actually creating a them and us binary. It's also restricting freedom of speech and thought for everybody. It starts now with people of the Muslim faith but that extends.