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A teacher who took a sip from a bottle containing a drink that smelled like alcohol and then proceeded to swear at students while trying to get them to dance the Macarena has been banned from teaching. Alice Ashton appeared cheerful while taking sips from the bottle but quickly turned agitated, using foul language and making inappropriate hand gestures, according to a student.
During a professional standards hearing, a 16-year-old student testified that Ashton consumed orange liquid that had an alcoholic scent during a personal and social education class. The student described the teacher as initially happy but later exhibiting concerning behavior, including swearing and rude gestures towards the class.
It was today found proven that she appeared under the influence and/or smelt of alcohol whilst at work.
She was struck off the teaching register indefinitely but may reapply in two years.
As a result of the incident, Alice Ashton has been removed from her teaching position following the testimony presented during the hearing. The behavior demonstrated by the teacher was deemed unacceptable and inappropriate for a professional educational setting, leading to her disqualification from teaching.
The normally quiet teacher at Ysgol Bro Caereinion in Welshpool played music from her laptop and was behaving out of character during the ‘rave-like’ lesson, the Education Workforce Council (EWC) Wales panel heard on Tuesday July 1.
When the class became unsettled, Ashton shouted and swore at at least two pupils as well as telling the whole class they were ‘little s***s’, the remote hearing was told.
The 16-year-old pupil, referred to only as Pupil H to protect her identity, told the panel how pupils discussed afterwards how odd the teacher’s behaviour had been.Â
She was later interviewed as part of an investigation by the school into the matter.
The teenager said Ashton had taught her PSE numerous times before the lesson in January 2024 when she had behaved differently from usual.Â

Alice Ashton was ‘smiley and happy’ as she was ‘swigging’ from a bottle but then became ‘agitated’, swore, and made rude hand gestures, one teenager claimed

Ashton was not present and not represented at the hearing and did not make any responses to the raft of allegations she faces, which means the allegations would usually be taken as denied

Ysgol Bro Caereinion, a bilingual, all age school, has more than 500 pupils aged four to 16
The pupil said Ashton’s ‘boring’ PSE lessons followed content she was familiar with and included alcohol and drug awareness but not on that day.
Sitting in the front row of the class Pupil H said she was near enough to smell alcohol, mixed with what appeared to be orange squash, contained in an Evian water bottle.
The bottle was full at the start of the lesson and almost empty by the end, the pupil added.
‘She was very, very close to us. There was a slight alcoholic smell,’ they said.
‘She was very, very lively and quite animated and speaking with her hands. In other lessons she was more reserved and quiet.’
Pupil H continued: ‘Alice Ashton had an Evian bottle with orange juice. I noticed she was regularly taking swigs from the bottle.
‘I recall Alice Ashton asked the class to make the Macarena. She played music and we were not doing work.’
The teenager described how Ashton ‘kept jumping up from her desk’ but became ‘irritated’ as the lesson went on.Â
One pupil, referred to as Pupil J, wanted to put a certain song on but the teacher didn’t want him to and when he played it on her laptop, the teacher ‘swore and yelled at him’.
Another pupil, Pupil G, was walking around the classroom ‘annoying’ people before Ashton told him to go out of the room but warned him ‘not to snitch’.
‘She began to swear at him. She put her middle finger two to three inches from his face and continued to swear at him,’ Pupil H told the committee.
The teacher then turned her annoyance on the class, she claimed. ‘Alice Ashton swore at the whole class because we became rowdy.’
Ashton was not present and not represented at the hearing and did not make any responses to the raft of allegations she faces, which means the allegations would usually be taken as denied.Â
But she did email the EWC last summer saying she was no longer working as a teacher, was no longer in Wales, and had moved to England.
Some of the responses Ashton had given to the school’s inquiry were also detailed by EWC presenting officer Lewis Harrison.
He said that Ashton had denied swearing or singing to the class when interviewed by the inquiry.
CCTV footage of the class was also shown to the committee in private.
Describing what the footage showed, Mr Harrison said it was totally at odds with Ashton’s denials to the school’s investigation.
He said Ashton had claimed she played music at the end of the lesson only and may have sung along to it quietly but ‘I would not have been singing to the class’.
Mr Harrison said this was ‘untenable’ given the CCTV footage.
‘It is totally untenable to suggest the music is being played as background music. The evidence is very clear that Miss Ashton did not remain at the front of the class. She invited pupils to dance,’ he told the hearing.
Mr Harrison also described in more detail how other pupils had described what happened during the class during the school’s investigation.
One child, Pupil A, said: ‘She (Ashton) was slipping with swear words, talking a lot less formally, and having been so irresponsible it felt like a mini rave with loud music, shouting, and dancing.’
Pupil A added that Ashton was ‘acting crazy’, her walking was wobbly, and she was ‘not acting like a teacher’.
Another said: ‘She got us to dance the Macarena and she did not care about the lesson anymore… she got some students dancing to the laptop and speakers and it spiralled out of control.’
Another pupil described how Ashton had told Pupil G to ‘sit the f*** down’.
At the start of the hearing the panel was told by the school investigator that the orange liquid Ashton had was tested for alcohol by the school.
 But she had not taken that into consideration because the school did not have an alcohol testing policy.
Mr Harrison said evidence from pupils was clear that the liquid Ashton was drinking during the lesson that day smelled of alcohol and that she was presenting as being under the influence and acting out of character.
The panel must decide whether any or all the allegations are proved and, if so, whether individually or collectively they amount to unacceptable profession.
Ysgol Bro Caereinion, a bilingual, all age school, has more than 500 pupils aged four to 16.Â
The school opened in September 2021 following the merger of Ysgol Gynradd Llanfair Caereinion and Ysgol Uwchradd Caereinion.