It seems like the education system is more and more becoming an "us against them" situation.
Now, THAT, I can agree with. Come live in Pennsylvania the, "Teacher Strike State," and you'll see the us vs. them dynamic taken to the extremes.
It seems like the education system is more and more becoming an "us against them" situation.
I'm in agreement here. At times, it seems that school has become uncaring and cold. Here we have a 9/10-year-old boy playing with a toy Lego at lunch, which happens to be a toy gun. Yes, the policy is "no guns," but why couldn't the administration just have told the boy to put the gun away, or they could have even held it for him. Then a quick call to mom to say that the policy is no guns, even tiny toy guns. Then mom doesn't get all freaked out, the kid gets an explanation that makes sense, and everybody can stay out of the national news and go about their business.
It seems like the education system is more and more becoming an "us against them" situation.
ETA: And what is so wrong if the child is a little bit afraid of the principal? I know I was terrified of the "Principal's Office" and what it meant to be sent there. That's why I did my best to avoid getting into trouble!
The problem is, where you do draw the line? Are toys okay? What about air-soft guns? They are toys, yet they look so much like real guns that airport security often has a hard time telling for sure, and at least one child has been killed because someone thought he was pointing a real gun at another child.
What about size? This is tiny, but as a poster above mentioned, there are real weapons that are very small.
Somewhere there has to be a line. If you keep moving it, it's harder to follow the rules than if there is just one flat rule: NO GUNS.
That includes pictures of guns (we had a child suspended for that - he was drawing incredibly violent pictures and the school required that he be evaluated before returning to school) or toys (we've had 2 middle school boys expelled for bringing their air-soft guns to a school dance! :waitasecor even verbal threats (we currently have a third grader being assessed b/c he told another child he was going to bring a gun to school and kill him).
As an administrator, I cannot imagine a worse nightmare than having a child bring a weapon to school and harm others, unless it is that same scenario but I had a warning and didn't take it seriously enough.
AND, as the poster above stated, why is he bringing toys to school in the first place?
Last, the mother claims he was "almost suspended" in the original article, but never actually says that suspension was going to be the punishment or that the principal even suggested that. My guess is that the principal referred to the weapons policy which states that he would normally be suspended, and actually did use some common sense by not imposing that.
You are right that America is going to hell, but a lot of the reason is these parents who never let their kids learn any hard lessons about truth and consequences. I can promise you that if my kid got called into the principal's office they would be upset too, but not because of a pending lawsuit. It would be concern for how long their punishment at home was going to be for breaking the rules to begin with!
PS...he is not a preschooler. He is in 4th grade, so 9 or 10 years old. Too old to be bringing toys to school, and old enough to know the rules.
yet if this child were to bring a gun and shoot others in the school, this incident would have been looked upon and we would be questioning why no one saw the signs. I think the rules are clear. And they have been broken.
yet if this child were to bring a gun and shoot others in the school, this incident would have been looked upon and we would be questioning why no one saw the signs. I think the rules are clear. And they have been broken.
So does this mean that every child who likes to play cops/robbers, cowboys/indians or military men are all exhibiting warning signs that they are going to kill others? My son loves to play with "fake" guns. It doesn't matter if it's a rifle made by his Godfather or a Star Wars clone trooper shooter. It's simply a childhood game that can be taken out of context by others who don't agree with it. I think that any guns that look even remotely real should definately be kept at home. But, come on an itty bitty lego gun? Schools definately need common sense!
LOL! This child did NOT bring a gun to school. He brought a toy. There IS A HUGE difference! And bringing toys to school probably isn't a sign that the kid is going to go psycho in the future!
he brought a toy gun where he wasn't supposed to bring a toy gun. I don't know how much more clear the rule really needs to be to be honest.
IMO and in personal experience as both a parent and staff member, schools which have these sorts of policies do NOT keep them a secret from either the kids or the parents. The rules are reviewed thoroughly and frequently in the classroom, at parents nights, at PTA meetings and in parent-teacher conferences on a regular basis. They are told that ALL toy weapons, knives, guns etc. are to be left at home, not even taken to school in backpacks. It is not like these rules are in fine print on some unseen document locked in a file cabinet and then brought out randomly just to terrorize innocent children. In this case, the punishment fit the "crime"....he got taken to the principals office, given a stern warning, the parent was called to explain what was going on, and he has been given no further punishment. He learned his lesson, and hopefully dozens of other kids got the point, also.
jmoo
Oh, geez! They even want to control a preschooler's IMAGINATION???? How wrong is that?!
Oh, geez! They even want to control a preschooler's IMAGINATION???? How wrong is that?!