The fact that the school allowed the Spirit Week to even have a "Hit A Jew Day" (totally pupil-instituted or not; surely this kind of thing involved at least a day's worth of planning, and could have been squashed before it started?) would be reason enough for me to, if I had children, pull them from the school at once. (Even "Hit A Tall Person Day" is bad.)
I concur that "sent home for a day" is a singularly toothless penalty, too. It's like telling them "Ooh, dear, your prank went too far!" rather than "What the hell is wrong with you little monsters?!" and the latter is definitely what they needed to hear. :(
I can't imagine that the school allowed "Hit A Jew Day." (The school district would be sued out of existence.) It appears that it was the brainchild of a few idiot students, and the administrators acted when they found out about it.
The instigators definitely needed more than a one-day suspension. I don't know what the best method is to uproot that kind of casual bigotry in children, though -- they probably don't even fully realize what kind of crap they're perpetrating. I doubt any of them are hard-core anti-Semites; more likely they just thought it was hee-larious.
Keep in mind, this is a country now where people will put up signs calling President Obama a n***** and then claim with a perfectly straight face that they didn't intend it to be racist.
Yeah, I'm probably expecting too much of the administrators, especially since all discussion could easily have gone on after school at somebody's house - but once there was a Hit A Tall Person Day, shouldn't there have been extra vigilance that the other Days in Spirit Week weren't terrible? :/
It is agonizing to voice any criticism of President Obama, however mild or well-informed, in this part of the USA. If the person disagrees with you, you're likely to get a ten-minute sermon on the Christlike qualities of our president; if they agree, you are treated to a ten-minute conspiratorial tirade, redolent with ear-blistering racist pejoratives.
That said, I honestly prefer the beer-bloated ranting redneck who limits his bigotry to a verbal steam-off (however disgusting) over the parents and school officials who raised, educated, and trained those children to be such vile scumwads, and then let them get away with it.
Another reason I'm glad my wife wants to homeschool. Also "South Park"??? What in the (long string of expletives deleted) are parents doing letting their kids watch that show?
You get two guesses, then I get two guesses. I will however tell you that any time I have said what I thought about it, defenders for it have sprung in dozens from the earth.
...Principal Margaret Jackson did her homework and was ready the following morning. She addressed the entire student body. That included a review of the student code of conduct and an explanation of why what happened was wrong. She spoke of the need to respect one another - and possible consequences.
She then shed light into murky corners, calling on students with information to come to her office.
The culprits were given a one-day, in-school suspension, served right away, and the parents were summoned to school conferences.
Parents of the kicked students were notified as well.
In addition, the first 20 minutes of the school day at North Naples Middle School for the time being will focus on character traits such as respect and kindness.
Swift and clear? Not only can you clearly get away with this stuff, we're going to lump the whole student body together and lecture them endlessly because we clearly can't discriminate between perpetrators and bystanders.
My classmates at school used to play an unpleasant game called 'Jewing' which involved conning strangers in the street into giving them small amounts of money.
Comments 9
I concur that "sent home for a day" is a singularly toothless penalty, too. It's like telling them "Ooh, dear, your prank went too far!" rather than "What the hell is wrong with you little monsters?!" and the latter is definitely what they needed to hear. :(
Reply
The instigators definitely needed more than a one-day suspension. I don't know what the best method is to uproot that kind of casual bigotry in children, though -- they probably don't even fully realize what kind of crap they're perpetrating. I doubt any of them are hard-core anti-Semites; more likely they just thought it was hee-larious.
Keep in mind, this is a country now where people will put up signs calling President Obama a n***** and then claim with a perfectly straight face that they didn't intend it to be racist.
Reply
Reply
That said, I honestly prefer the beer-bloated ranting redneck who limits his bigotry to a verbal steam-off (however disgusting) over the parents and school officials who raised, educated, and trained those children to be such vile scumwads, and then let them get away with it.
Reply
Also "South Park"???
What in the (long string of expletives deleted) are parents doing letting their kids watch that show?
Reply
Reply
That response was swift and clear.
...Principal Margaret Jackson did her homework and was ready the following morning. She addressed the entire student body. That included a review of the student code of conduct and an explanation of why what happened was wrong. She spoke of the need to respect one another - and possible consequences.
She then shed light into murky corners, calling on students with information to come to her office.
The culprits were given a one-day, in-school suspension, served right away, and the parents were summoned to school conferences.
Parents of the kicked students were notified as well.
In addition, the first 20 minutes of the school day at North Naples Middle School for the time being will focus on character traits such as respect and kindness.
Swift and clear? Not only can you clearly get away with this stuff, we're going to lump the whole student body together and lecture them endlessly because we clearly can't discriminate between perpetrators and bystanders.
>. ( ... )
Reply
Reply
Leave a comment