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Queensland students fight club videos shared on social media: Rosewood State High School

Disturbing videos have emerged online of secret fight club brawls between school students, with the brawls being cheered on by other pupils.

Shared on social media by dedicated accounts, the videos show vicious altercations between both male and female students, with the fights taking place in public as well as on school grounds. 

Some of the students involved are from Rosewood State High School, with police being called to the school 10 times in six months to deal with violence. 

Videos from other schools in the city of Ipswich have also been shared online. 

Disturbing videos have emerged online of secret fight club brawls between school students, with the brawls being cheered on by other pupils 

Some of the students involved are from Rosewood State High School, with police being called to the school 10 times in six months to deal with violence. Videos from other schools in the city of Ipswich were also shared online

In one video from Rosewood, two teenage boys were filmed standing in the middle of a ring of other students. 

The two fought as other students yell encouragement and threats. 

‘Get him,’ one boy shouted, while another said ‘break his teeth’. 

In another clip, a boy was knocked to the floor with one punch to the jaw by another wearing a Rosewood uniform. 

A third showed a woman shouting ‘please stop’ while another girl moves towards her threateningly. 

Finally, a fourth video showed a teen girl attacked from behind as she walked through the grounds of her school, with the attackers punching her several times in the face. 

Mark Peters said his 14-year-old daughter was attacked by two students at a park down the road from Ipswich State High School.

‘It breeds criminals, it really does,’ he told Courier Mail

Department of Education spokeswoman said the department was aware some students used social media to film and share ‘inappropriate material’

His wife Natasha added: ‘What we want is to make sure that the kids that can’t be moved out [schools where fighting is happening]… there is some resolution for them to feel safe and get an education there.’

A Department of Education spokeswoman said the department was aware some students used social media to film and share ‘inappropriate material’.

‘Parents concerned about cyber-bullying should immediately raise the matter with school staff,’ she said.