A MUM has called for a ban on playground ‘bundling’ after her daughter suffered a broken collar bone.

The prank, in which children pile on top of each other, turned horribly wrong in a playing field at Wey Valley School when Jodie Lane fractured her collarbone and needed hospital treatment.

Jodie, 14, tried desperately to get up as pupils continued to ‘bundle’ on top on Monday lunchtime but was pinned to the ground.

She heard her collar bone ‘pop’ and suffered bruised ribs and a split lip before she blacked out from the pain.

Jodie claims a teacher told her to ‘get up’ and then walked away as she lay in agony on the floor.

She said: “I was just stood there and someone jumped on me, I fell on the floor and they accidentally smacked me in the mouth, which started bleeding.

“I tried getting up and everyone started shouting ‘bundles’, running over and jumping on me.

“I used my elbows to try and get up and someone must have jumped on and my collarbone popped.

“The pain was unbelievable and I blacked out, I could still hear people but my head was on the floor.

She said: “A teacher told me to get up and I said I couldn’t, I was shouting at him to get an ambulance but he just walked away."

Jodie called her mother on her mobile phone, who got a bus to the school while medical centre staff called an ambulance.

They were taken to Dorset County Hospital where Jodie was treated with painkillers and had her arm put in a sling.

Mum-of three Michelle Lane wants the practice to be banned at school.

She said: “This was a serious injury and I can’t believe the school made her go to the medical room herself.

“A teacher told me this bundle game has been going on for six months now, it was an accident waiting to happen.

“Someone’s going to end up getting seriously hurt.”

Wey Valley headteacher Phil Thomas said lessons would be learned but he would not put a stop to pupils ‘letting off steam’ at break times.

He said: “There hasn’t been anything malicious taking place, it was simply an accident.

“As it’s getting hotter the ground is harder and youngsters don’t realise they’re growing.”

He said he had spoken to the member of staff, who was not medically trained, and advised him that a medically-trained staff member should have been contacted.

He said an ambulance was called as soon as Jodie came under the care of the school’s medical centre staff.