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mommyof4
Guest
Our school does not ban children from having an accout, but they do block the site from the school server.
You know when you mention it that way I often wonder if not only is it not legal that they can enforce that but that they could committing an illegal act and be subjected to criminal/legal proceedings.The big question is:
How do they know that I have a myspace account?
How do they know my username on myspace?
Do they have Secret police/spys on every corner the way they do in Cuba reporting what we do inside our home to fidel?
Unless they are spying inside my house, they will never know my myspace account, thats how it should be too.
Don’t ask if I have myspace, Don’t tell them you do.
Suspend someone who uses it at school., Yes this is appropriate.
If it doesnt go on at school, its not relevant and the only way they will find out about it will be by spys or gossip. Both of which are unchristian, and do have a certain ring of totalitarian/facist/communist ideas. Myspace may be a terrible site generally speaking, I hate it in many ways and discourage it as well but its not possible to monitor who uses it.
Remember Rupert Murdoch does own Myspace, what else does he own? Oh, Fox news too! WOW “conservative news” and pornographic web site? what a combination. Thats the USA for us, Corporate manipulation all the way.
Agreed. Don’t like the rules, don’t let the door hit your bum on the way out.It is a private school. If they don’t like it, they can send their children to a secularized school.
True but we are a nation of Laws and being a Private School does not make one above the law.Agreed. Don’t like the rules, don’t let the door hit your bum on the way out.
Sure they can. The Catholic Church tells us not to commit adultery. Are we going to answer by saying - I won’t commit adultery at church where you can make the rules but don’t tell me what I can or can’t do in my own home. Adultery isn’t illegal and I can do it if I want.Schools can make all the rules they want to in regard to what goes on IN SCHOOL TIME. But after school is over and the kids are at home then they don’t have any say whatsoever.
You’re mixing apples and oranges. You’re talking about a parish expecting its adult employees to refrain from acts which are inherently immoral and which violate church teaching – this thread is about a school principal telling parents of its students what the parents can and cannot allow their children to do in the privacy of the family home. And, the specific activity mentioned here is something that can be performed legally and morally and without violating Catholic teaching (unlike your examples of homosexuality, illicit drug use and alcohol abuse).Sure that’s one answer. But then why be Catholic.
How about a catechist? When they’re teaching catechism, as long as they teach only what Catholicism teaches - but the Church can’t say nor expect that when the catechist isn’t at church/school teaching, well then it’s ok for them to shack up w/ their gay lover and do pot and get drunk every night?
And obviously you don’t care about the rights of the 7th and 8th graders that can have one legally…ok, i’ll say it again…K-8 school. only a small percentage of students could legitimately have a myspace account (students who turn 14).
i’m not terribly concerned about the “rights” of a 5th grader who lies about their age in order to have a myspace account.
Yes they can have one legally, but that does not mean that the school has to allow them to remain if they do have one. If is a private institution, they are allowed to have their own rules of association. It is settled case law (i.e. the Boy Scouts)And obviously you don’t care about the rights of the 7th and 8th graders that can have one legally…
I think the keyword here is “should” and balanced is another word that should be discussed here. The issue here is one of principal. It doesn’t matter if it affects 1 student or 500 students. If a school wishes to be so private and assert its “privateness” devoid of outside influence or control then perhaps the State should accommodate and refuse to acknowledge the validity of its academic credits and grades.Yes they can have one legally, but that does not mean that the school has to allow them to remain if they do have one. If is a private institution, they are allowed to have their own rules of association. It is settled case law (i.e. the Boy Scouts)
The private elementary school (K-8) I went to (years ago!) banned all birthday parties or other parties during the school year. They said it distracted the students. Students were also not allowed to date each other - during school or otherwise.Despite Myspace being a problem…it should not be in the rights of the school to prevent children from using the website at home. Ban it from school, but their authority does not extend to their house.
I think parents exercise their role as primary educators by selecting appropriate schools for their children. A school is not violating Church teaching for making policies to protect its children. If parents have a problem with a school – they are free to find another institution more in line with their educational philosophies. Again, parents exercise their role as primary educators by selecting appropriate schools for their children.I think this is inconsistent with the Church’s teaching on the parents’ being the primary educators of thier children but I am not sure that this is outside the school’s authority.
Yes we do have full funding for Catholic Schools but we also have Private Schools too. Also regarding Private Schools they do have to comply with teaching the basic curriculum.ChildofMary: BTW, I understand things are different in Cananda where some of the funding for Catholic schools comes from the government but in the US, private schools are not bound to follow the same laws as public school regarding school rules and even what is taught. Each state is different, of course.
Well parents don’t send kids to school for the school to raise them. After all parents are more than just egg and sperm donors to be pawns of the State or School. As for sacred responsibility it falls on the parents not on the school.The private elementary school (K-8) I went to (years ago!) banned all birthday parties or other parties during the school year. They said it distracted the students. Students were also not allowed to date each other - during school or otherwise.
I think the benefit of private schools is that they CAN make rules like these. I can certainly understand the logic behind banning myspace accounts. And clearly the ban has to extend to home use to have any effect.
Hopefully parents who entrust a school with the sacred responsibility of training their children (and pay tuition to boot!) will uphold the institution’s rules in their homes. Otherwise, what is the point of picking that school? If you disagree with the institution, why are you entrusting your child to them?
I think there is more to parental responsibility than just “choosing” a school. A school can most certainly violate Church teaching by becoming its primary educator when it tells what can go on in the home or not. Nowhere does it say in ANY CHURCH DOCUMENT that the exercise of primary educators shall consist SOLELY of selecting a school.I think parents exercise their role as primary educators by selecting appropriate schools for their children. A school is not violating Church teaching for making policies to protect its children. If parents have a problem with a school – they are free to find another institution more in line with their educational philosophies. Again, parents exercise their role as primary educators by selecting appropriate schools for their children.
Let me say first that my kids aren’t old enough to be on the computer and when they are the computer will be in neutral territory in the house.Schools can make all the rules they want to in regard to what goes on IN SCHOOL TIME. But after school is over and the kids are at home then they don’t have any say whatsoever.
That’s the point – the school has stepped outside of educational philosophy and into an area that belongs to the parents – protecting their children. We entrust the school to keep children safe during school hours, to and from school if they ride the bus, and during school sanctioned extracurriculars. Outside of that, protection of the children is a parental duty.I think parents exercise their role as primary educators by selecting appropriate schools for their children. A school is not violating Church teaching for making policies to protect its children. If parents have a problem with a school – they are free to find another institution more in line with their educational philosophies.
andI think there is more to parental responsibility than just “choosing” a school. A school can most certainly violate Church teaching by becoming its primary educator when it tells what can go on in the home or not. Nowhere does it say in ANY CHURCH DOCUMENT that the exercise of primary educators shall consist SOLELY of selecting a school.
***Exactly. ***Well parents don’t send kids to school for the school to raise them. After all parents are more than just egg and sperm donors to be pawns of the State or School. As for sacred responsibility it falls on the parents not on the school.
Last I checked having a Myspace wasn’t a mortal sin.Yes they can have one legally, but that does not mean that the school has to allow them to remain if they do have one. If is a private institution, they are allowed to have their own rules of association. It is settled case law (i.e. the Boy Scouts)