Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

To: All
Rank Location Receipts Donors/Avg Freepers/Avg Monthlies
24 Kuwait 100.00
1
100.00
3
33.33


Thanks for donating to Free Republic!

Move your locale up the leaderboard!

2 posted on 01/03/2004 10:51:11 AM PST by Support Free Republic (I'd rather be sleeping. Let's get this over with so I can go back to sleep!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]


To: Support Free Republic
We as a society should stop babying these punks. If they break the law they or there parents should be held accountable. No more excuses. In school or out we have rules and laws and they need to be obeyed. The sooner these overgrown babies learn that the better.
23 posted on 01/03/2004 11:53:31 AM PST by baylorbaylor
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies ]

To: Support Free Republic

”. I was shocked that these incidents happen. I am a student in a private school in Greece and I have never even thought about children being arrested by the police for being rude to the teacher or having a fight without serious injuries and weapons. All these problems would be solved by the teachers and would end up as a detention or a suspension depending on the occasion.
We read this article in class and the first thing that came to my mind at that moment was “I don’t understand, are the teachers that bad at controlling a class that they need to arrest the students.” When we started discussing it further a fellow student in my class said the following, “What a waste of time, I would prefer going to a Juvenile Detention Center than a detention because you miss the hole day! And I mean it doesn’t even help the student to make him behave better!” Isn’t that true? How can it help a child that has mental problems for example, who is sent because he was sent to a time-out area and urinated on the floor? “an 8-year-old boy in a special-education class was charged with disorderly conduct this fall for his behavior in a time-out room: urinating on the floor.”
The judges will also agree that the schools are finding an easy way out on problems that can be dealt with in the school itself. “Arrests in the past year or so include two middle school boys whose crime was turning off the lights in the girls’ bathroom and an 11-year-old girl who was arrested for “hiding in the school and not going to class,” according to the police report, which also noted, “The suspect continuously does not listen in class and disrupts the learning process of other students.” “ The school didn’t need to arrest the two boys for switching off the lights and specially not arrest and handcuff a 11-year-old girl. In our school the girl would have gotten a harsh detention and the two boys would be in no trouble whatsoever.
As James Ray has said in your article, that system is “demonizing” the students. The students will start hating the school even more making them be ruder, more violent and more revolting towards the teachers and even their parents. “Experts say the growing criminalization of student misbehaviour can be traced to the broad zero-tolerance policies”. If you teach kids that they have no rights whatsoever, then kids will eventually view, as they grow older, that their elders and peers are undeserving of rights as well. Zero-tolerance policies teach children that the United States is NOT the land of the free. At our school we had a class revolution against our school uniform, if the teachers would bring the police it would make the whole school revolt and would end up in the news as the biggest scandal of the year.
When we read the article in class I was shocked by the fact that the mother of the handcuffed daughter supported the Juvenile Detention Center. “I told them if she didn’t want to go to school, put her in the detention center.” I cannot believe that a mother can accept that the daughter should be handcuffed and put in a detention center which actually is what the small girl wanted in a way. She didn’t want to have lessons, and she achieved it! “What has also changed, Dr. Steinberg said, is that principals are less able to depend on parents to enforce the discipline schools mete out. "I think in the past the threat of getting in touch with a kid's parents was often enough to get a kid to start behaving," he said. "Now, kids feel parents will fight on their behalf." Well, there it is. Unless you work with today's PARENTS, you don't know. You just don't know. Between them and the teachers' unions, we have spawned some serious problems in school systems. Why would a kid behave when parents are worse than the kids? And why would teachers bother to have high standards when parents attack them? and why would teachers' unions want to do anything than what they are doing when they get away with protecting incompetent teachers who don't care about what kids learn?
I just believe that some people have to put their brain in action and acknowledge the fact that these detention centers do not help in any way.


69 posted on 11/10/2005 6:51:59 AM PST by Alexa O. (My name is Alexanders ans i do not know why it came out as Alexa)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson