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mikekle
Guest
In todays schools, JUST a picture of ANY gun is enough to get that kid expelled! LOL its sad, but true.Not a weapon.
A picture of a weapon.
In todays schools, JUST a picture of ANY gun is enough to get that kid expelled! LOL its sad, but true.Not a weapon.
A picture of a weapon.
Yeah, no kidding. Like the boy who chewed a poptart into the shape of a gun, or the boy who was playing cops and robbers or whatever during recess and used his finger as a gun and said “bang, bang!” Each kid received a temporary suspension for his “offense.”In todays schools, JUST a picture of ANY gun is enough to get that kid expelled! LOL its sad, but true.
No, 13 pages!We’re doing TWELVE pages of comments on a backpack?![]()
This is what I have on my car : )That would be a good one to have the bullies backing off a step or two. maybe a few of them might even offer up their lunch money without having to be told to do so.
This is what I have on my Tahoe : )You mean a like a backpack with a giant one of these?
http://www.politicspa.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/NRA-logo1.jpg
My response would be no different. I would also not allow my 9 yr old child to wear a pro-life sticker to school.Good for the school.
I wonder how folk’s opinions would vary if a child was being bullied and asked to remove a Pro Life sticker from their bag. I am thinking the response would be quite different.
No the mother did not put a target on him. That is the wrong idea, and this kind of thinking is why bullying has got out of hand. Bullies find every excuse in the book to pick on another person or child. They need to be kicked out of school and their parents need to find another way to educate them. Start holding them responsible and hitting the ole pocket book and I bet a lot of this nonsense will stop.I cannot stand bullies, I bullied from first grade till tenth grade. Once you are labeled, unless you change schools and possibly whatever causes the bullying, you’re stuck. I remember I finally caved and got stylish clothes one year. I was then made fun of for *trying *to fit in.
That said, a Rainbow Dash backpack?! Seriously? The children should not bully, but the mother glued the target on him by allowing him to wear it.
At least this would keep the prisons well stocked.No the mother did not put a target on him. That is the wrong idea, and this kind of thinking is why bullying has got out of hand. Bullies find every excuse in the book to pick on another person or child. They need to be kicked out of school and their parents need to find another way to educate them.
I agree.My response would be no different. I would also not allow my 9 yr old child to wear a pro-life sticker to school.
I wouldn’t let my kid wear that either if it caused him/her so much trouble. Kids bully for enough other reasons so why invite bullying for things you CAN control? Kids have enough to deal with without unnecessary pressures that can be avoided. Let kids be kids, I want my kids to remember a happy childhood. No need for kids to be bullied for political stands or things like that. Let them be kids.Good for the school.
I wonder how folk’s opinions would vary if a child was being bullied and asked to remove a Pro Life sticker from their bag. I am thinking the response would be quite different.
Yeah I think all schools should have uniforms to eliminate a lot of the pressure around how kids dress or who has nicer clothes or what kinds of bags kids carry etc. Let them all dress the same.In my children’s school, a number of years ago children were getting into arguments over pokemon cards.
The school did 2 things. It disciplined the kids who were fighting and banned the cards from everyone.
I think the school could have handled it that way, so it wasn’t just this boy who could not have the backpack.
A universal rule would not have put this kid in the spotlight, it might have defused the situation.
In my grammar school we had two choices of school bag. A maroon one with gold lettering of the school logo, and a white one with a maroon logo.![]()
My junior and senior schools had uniforms. Am I correct in saying in America you don’t as a rule? It certainly made getting up in the morning and deciding what to wear a simple matter. The mother should have taken the bag away from her child, his foremost memory of his school days I would imagine, are always going to be centred around this unhappy event.Yeah I think all schools should have uniforms to eliminate a lot of the pressure around how kids dress or who has nicer clothes or what kinds of bags kids carry etc. Let them all dress the same.
Or as I asked, if a student who claimed he or she was gay was asked not to advertise their homosexuality to avoid bullying?Good for the school.
I wonder how folk’s opinions would vary if a child was being bullied and asked to remove a Pro Life sticker from their bag. I am thinking the response would be quite different.
Interesting. I specifically try very hard to make sure my daughters and sons are confident enough to stick out. I have geeky brains, and some have been labeled a “teacher’s pet”. I see nothing wrong with that and refuse to teach them to conform. We’re a six child Catholic family living on the verge of poverty with strict media standards. No matter what “item” or “style” I was able to buy for them I doubt they’d “fit in”. Now if one of my kids wants a popular item and it fits within our limited budget - sure, they get it. And if one wanted to carry a “gender inappropriate” backpack, I’d discourage it but allow it if they insisted - and they said they could handle any comments.I tried very hard to make sure that my daughters wore clothing and accessories that “fit in” with all the other girls in their schools. They didn’t wear suggestive clothing (neither did most of the other girls), or anything with violent messages, but they were in style and up to date with the trends.
And I trained my daughters to behave correctly around others. I made it clear to them that acting like a geeky brain, or acting stuck up, or telling tales, or tattling, or being a “teachers’ pet” were sure-fire ways to drive other children AWAY from them.
So yes, parents play the major role in bully-proofing a child. As I said in my note, no WAY would any son of mine have ever carried a girl’s backback. I agree with you that we shouldn’t be trying to change other children.
You are so correct. We were taught as children 1. to never bully a soul or count on consequences 2. to come to the defense and protection of those being bullied if need be and3. to report bullying. If the teacher/school did nothing we let our parents know and my father would go to the school himself and make sure the Principal was well advised of the problem even if it was not his own child getting bullied.I also find it interesting that the currently preferred and promoted way of dealing with bullies here hasn’t been mentioned much in this discussion. That’s for bystanders to speak up (I did see that in the pink shirt post). So that’s what I’m working on for my kids now - that if they see bullying, be the person to speak up and redirect the attention.
Right, most public schools have no uniform which I think they all should. So much drama goes on in schools especially junior high and high school that centers around who’s wearing what. Yes a uniform makes it easier and less drama.My junior and senior schools had uniforms. Am I correct in saying in America you don’t as a rule? It certainly made getting up in the morning and deciding what to wear a simple matter. The mother should have taken the bag away from her child, his foremost memory of his school days I would imagine, are always going to be centred around this unhappy event.