"I'm going to milk the Cathy costume for all it's worth," says Mr Trevelyan.
Police and crime commissioner Dafydd Llywelyn said he would work with schools to ensure a police presence when required, but said it was a "fine line" as he did not want young people to be "over criminalised".A 13-year-old girl has been charged with three counts of attempted murder and possessing a bladed article and will appear in Swansea Crown Court on 27 May.
Teachers Fiona Elias, Liz Hopkin and a pupil were injured in the attack on 24 April.Mr Llywelyn said "there had been a lot of learning" from the incident about how the school and emergency services responded.He also pledged that Dyfed-Powys Police will continue to have a
A teacher who restrained a girl after she stabbed two of his colleagues and a pupil said he still loses sleep a year after the incident.in Ammanford, Carmarthenshire, last April.
The 14-year-old girl, who also cannot be named,
by a jury earlier this year andSister Carr, 50, said: "It's highs and lows and aches and pains, but on the whole it is absolutely amazing."
Talking from Corbeny, in France, she said lots of people had been helping along the way, and "feeding me up"."The feet are a little bit sorer than I thought they would be - I have had to go through about three packs of plasters.
"At the beginning I thought 'am I really going to be able to do this?' But, it's manageable," she said.Sister Carr said she had been staying in homes, monasteries or parish centres, and "meeting all sorts of people".