Which I guess was actually an improvement over elementary school, when I got beaten up five times in two years, and the principle figured the problem must have been with me. Clearly if I made a better attempt to fit in, I'd get beat up less. Lets start by making you stand in front of the class and talk about yourself once a week.
In elementary school, the teachers were mostly decent and I was really just an awkward kid with a giant bully target painted on his forehead. My family moved almost every year up until 3rd grade, when we settled into a very small, religious-conservative, backwater town in Indiana. I had been raised in a very intellectual/non-religious environment on a healthy diet of D&D, video games, and fantasy literature. So I was already incompatible with this place. Then they told me that we were probably going to live there for the next 10 years or so, and I went crazy at the notion of making friends and actually keeping them. I was an obnoxious class clown reject for the next 3 years.
The next 4 years of Junior High/High School in this same school district were a lot like what you just described. The faculty would go so far as to join in the bullying at times. The principal of my school did an interview with the local paper after 9/11 where he nearly flat out stated that it's the kids who get bullied who are the real problem, and that they need to be kept in their place.
Edit: Luckily we got internet when I was in 7th grade. I seriously credit it with saving my life. That was when I met real decent people (the internet was a very different place in 1996) and had rapid series of revelations that led to me realizing the place I lived was very very fucked up and wrong, and quickly becoming a recluse, obsessed with figuring out what the hell was wrong with people. I had started down a terrible path, and if I hadn't hopped on IRC and started talking daily to people from all over the planet, I wouldn't have made it out of that place intact.