Good grief! That looks like a tool of a teacher-Nazi. "Annoying classmates"?! I annoyed my classmates every single day simply by my presence on this planet. "Lack of materials"? My teachers honestly couldn't have cared less where you got your pens and paper from, so long as you had them by the time class began. One of my neighbors in math class borrowed my spare calculator every single day throughout the year, and it would have been unthinkable for her to have gotten in trouble for not having her own.
These kinds of rules have gotten truly out of control. If a student has a bad cold, for example, would he get a detention for being "inattentive," showing a "lack of cooperation," and "annoying other students" by potentially infecting them, too? Would that result in three detentions? Good heavens!
So, at this school, are students allowed to speak unless the teacher first barks an order to them to speak? What about laughing? I was notorious, from the 2nd grade through high school graduation, for laughing out loud, uncontrollably, and for no good reason. I just couldn't contain myself when I started. 9 out of 10 times, people (students AND teachers) enjoyed the comic relief and helped me to calm down a little. During that lone 1 out of 10, I was told to take a walk, get a drink of water, and come back when I'm a little calmer. I never once got in trouble for it, even though it could be considered "annoying" and "disruptive."
I went to school from 1987 to 2000, and, back then, I guess teachers and students were allowed to be human beings, not concentration camp overseers and automatons. We were allowed to speak our minds, engage each other (and teachers) in mature debate, have fun within the context of the class, and just be people. Hugs were routinely and freely exchanged, be it student-student, student-teacher, or teacher-teacher. When I was in elementary school (and early on in middle school, too), the exterior doors to the building were kept wide open when it was hot outside to provide some ventilation. It wasn't until later that schools had to be turned into Fort Knox to keep pedophiles and kidnappers out.