Victoria high school students take muck-up day too far with teachers egged and police called

High school students in Victoria are taking their teachers too far and calling the police

High school students in one state have taken their bad times to the extreme, firing on teachers, vandalizing campuses and calling in the police.

Several schools in Victoria have had to pick things up again after year 12 students went too far and overdone with their end-of-year tradition.

Police were called to Camberwell High School, in Melbourne’s east, on Thursday after reports students caused thousands of dollars in damage.

A group of balaclava-clad Year 12 students broke into the school and spread sardines, bleach, varnish, rotten milk and vinegar throughout the senior center.

Students were allowed to return to school on Monday. An angry teacher said staff and students were being targeted by the group.

Year 12 students at Victoria have been warned not to take the Muck Up activities too far

Year 12 students at Victoria have been warned not to take the Muck Up activities too far

Police were called to Camberwell High School on Thursday after students damaged the school (photo, damage at Camberwell High)

Police were called to Camberwell High School on Thursday after students damaged the school (photo, damage at Camberwell High)

‘On Thursday they were also touching and flowering students and employees. They were told to leave, but came back. Three female employees were hit with eggs and the police were called,” she told the newspaper Herald Sun.

‘Teachers had to clean it up before students arrived. We had to throw out all the couches and I don’t know what they’re going to do with the carpet. It was really evil.”

A Victoria Department of Education spokesperson said the offending students were disciplined appropriately.

“Camberwell High School is deeply disappointed by the behavior of some of its Year 12 students and has taken appropriate disciplinary action,” they said.

‘Camberwell High School has a clear policy around the expected behavior of its students and has taken immediate action to stop the disruptive behavior and support the students and staff affected.’

Year 12 students from across Victoria have shared hundreds of videos showing them vandalizing their schools.

Muck-up Day is an Australian school leaver tradition where Year 12 students organize fun activities during their last week at school.

However, some students have used clutter as an excuse to cause serious damage and create messes that take staff hours to repair.

A Tintern Grammar student said his class was ‘robbed’ of their mess experience as teachers cleared their mess before classes started.

The clip shows teenagers throwing streamers across stairwells, stacking furniture in classrooms and hanging 2023 posters on the walls.

Some students arrived at school early to help staff clean up the mess.

“We were absolutely robbed,” the caption read.

Cohorts from across the state shared videos of their classmates throwing bean bags across classrooms and hallways, drawing on walls and covering furniture with silly string.

A student said his class was 'robbed' of a mess experience after staff cleared up students' mess (above) before classes started

A student said his class was ‘robbed’ of a mess experience after staff cleared up students’ mess (above) before classes started

Year 12 students from across Victoria have shared hundreds of videos showing them vandalizing their schools (pictured: a mess up video)

Year 12 students from across Victoria have shared hundreds of videos showing them vandalizing their schools (pictured: a mess up video)

At Melbourne Girls’ College, all Year 12 students were locked outside the school and their final assembly and guard of honor canceled after bungled activities damaged school property on Monday morning.

‘Many girls were in tears. They couldn’t get their bags and they were thrown over the fence. We sent them to school thinking they would be safe, but they were expelled by staff,” one parent told the Sun.

The Ministry of Education said: ‘Melbourne Girls College canceled a final assembly for its Year 12 students on Monday after some year-level students breached the school’s clearly defined behavioral standards.’

“The school is investigating the incident and will follow up with students.”

Daily Mail Australia contacted Melbourne Girls’ College and Camberwell High.