I don't know about you, but I've seen, time and again, "good" parents that end up with "bad" kids, and "bad" parents that end up with "good" kids.
Exactly right, IM.
It's not the parents' fault. It's always the mother's.
I don't know about you, but I've seen, time and again, "good" parents that end up with "bad" kids, and "bad" parents that end up with "good" kids.
The professor stated tonight that other staff had asked her to do something with him as he was making others in the class uncomfortable by taking pictures ("especially under the desks") of other students w/o their permission. She decided to remove him from the classroom so the others wouldn't have to put up with him. She reported his actions to campus police, and other appropriate depts but nobody could require him to get counseling. His "violent" papers seemed a secondary concern in all this (IMO).
It's a shame that he wasn't removed from school, period, if he didn't go to counseling.
He had to be seeing someone in order to get meds. I haven't heard anything about that yet.
Exactly right, IM.
It's not the parents' fault. It's always the mother's.
Yesterday, I had to go on the internet to try to find news about Iraq. I couldn't find any. This tragedy has overshadowed the war. Even the Drudge report was missing Iraq news. Now we know that 170 people have been killed during approximately the same time period. Which story should have priority?
I am not being cruel - this VT shooting rampage is terrible. However, I agree with those who say that it is a different world we live in, as Dr. Phil also said yesterday. Things that happen closer to home and touch our lives more, get more press.
33 x 100 = 3300 horrible deaths in Iraq.
As a memorial to the students, I would create a walk through rock garden, on campus, with 32 sizeable rocks, surrounded by flowers. Each of the 32 rocks would have a 6" X 9" plaque with an individual biography of the student that died.
The difference is that this happened on a college campus rather than in a war zone. The students and faculty did not realize they were in danger that morning.
The difference is that this happened on a college campus rather than in a war zone. The students and faculty did not realize they were in danger that morning.
This is when and where 'OUR SYSTEM' FAILS our students, both the sane as well as those in need.
This is the EXACT reason I QUIT teaching TWICE.
When a teacher identifies a student as being a child/individual in need of intense assistance from special education resources, or at the college level, in extreme need of psychiatric assistance, and the teacher's/professor's efforts are met with not only hurdles and brick walls but OFTEN with total rejection, we have essentially FAILED as a teacher. We have failed to HELP the child in NEED as well as to protect the safety and well-being of the other twenty (whatever) children/students/individuals in our classrooms.
Twenty-something other students can not properly LEARN when they are in constant fear, or when the structure and consistancy of their daily classroom environment is threatened by an unstable student.
Ooh, you've touched on one of my sore spots there, Nova. That attitude fries me. (I'm just pointing out the general opinion, I know YOU don't feel that way.)
What can a school system, system, police or anyone do if a person has not committed any crime? I think that many victims, to include abused women, have found themselves in this situation, where they feel threatened. Yet, the police say that their hands are tied because a crime has not been committed.If reports are true, I think that they DID INDEED realize that this student was a danger.
The System Failed these students.
Teachers identified the strong potential of his psychological illnesses.
Students felt 'threatened' by him.
The system did not act in the best interest of the entire college student body, to include a failure to act in the best interest of Cho himself.
Its only been a couple of days. I dont think its exploitation at all. Now Anna Nicole Smith? Thats what im sick of and I was into that saga heavy at first but enough is enough.
As far as this tragedy I for one like the coverage, it shines light on what happened so maybe future tragedies can be prevented.
And for me I want to gain insight as to why it happened, if that can ever be answered.
Oh, I feel that way alright. But only with regards to my own family.![]()
I don't think he should of been allowed to own a gun either he was not a citizen. Possibly laws should be changed. I stated that after Chai Vang went on the war path & shot all the hunters in Wisconsin. They should never have the rights to carry guns in our country.
Be careful - Imus got fired for that.
Tee Hee- I can relate to THAT one!Only in my case- it's BOTH parents! :doh:
I completely agree and especially in a state so close to the Nation's capital. I thought they'd be more cautious about who owned firearms and could be a potential terrorist after 9/11.I don't think he should of been allowed to own a gun either he was not a citizen. Possibly laws should be changed. I stated that after Chai Vang went on the war path & shot all the hunters in Wisconsin. They should never have the rights to carry guns in our country.
I'm wondering if Cho was ever sexually abused as a child? That would explain his rage and the topic of his "plays."I knew a lot of writing kids in college who dropped the f-bomb all the time, esp in poetry. They thought it was cool and hip to be all angry and full of angst. I would agree with Nova, that a lot of younger people write that way ... it makes them "deep."
Or at least that was what a lot of them thought.