RE: 7-year-old boy suspended for throwing imaginary grenade (Full Version)

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LafayetteLady -> RE: 7-year-old boy suspended for throwing imaginary grenade (2/7/2013 1:03:55 PM)

To me, suspension is a joke that only really harms the parents. It isn't like "back in the day," when getting suspended would result in major discipline at home. Now it means that a parent has to take a day off from work and the kid gets a day off from school. It's really nothing more than the school not having to deal with the child for those days.





mnottertail -> RE: 7-year-old boy suspended for throwing imaginary grenade (2/7/2013 1:04:54 PM)

The resolution is to imaginarily suspend him for the imaginary use of the grenade.

Over reaction by over zealous folk. 




DaNewAgeViking -> RE: 7-year-old boy suspended for throwing imaginary grenade (2/7/2013 1:05:18 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: thezeppo

It seems like a massive overreaction, and I really don't think any self-respecting school should be punishing its children for using their imaginations. I think in the 21st century kids are growing up a lot faster, and so the cultural studie/ethics type classes should be more prominent from an earlier age. Punishing a kid of 7 for using an imaginary weapon seems like the wrong way to approach this issue, assuming one even exists

It is vital to remember that children are not born with any instinctive moral sense - someone described small children as 'cheerful sociopaths' and I can testify from grade school that that's an understatement. Whatever ethical values we develop have to be learned, and if a child's environment is filled with weapons and violence, go figure. How often have we seen news reports of neo-Nazi parents teaching their kids to ape comments about 'killing niggers and jews'? We can't start on this too early, especially with all the negative influences out there.
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PeonForHer -> RE: 7-year-old boy suspended for throwing imaginary grenade (2/7/2013 2:08:39 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Nelee
For a country that has a long history of seeing stray bullets as something that isn't nearly as dangerous as the idea of a stray boob on a television program . . .


[:D] That did make me laugh.

And before the 'You Brits are oppressing us poor Yanks again!' crowd pounces - it applies to the UK too.




defiantbadgirl -> RE: 7-year-old boy suspended for throwing imaginary grenade (2/7/2013 2:12:48 PM)

How can there be rules against anything imaginary when imaginary means does not exist? Whoever made that rule, someone should be concerned about their mental state.




cordeliasub -> RE: 7-year-old boy suspended for throwing imaginary grenade (2/7/2013 2:18:32 PM)

So....we've already pretty much sucked out all of our kids' imagination by reducing knowledge to a bunch of penciled in bubbles and removing all things creative (such as the arts) from the classroom. let's rip away the last vestiges of any type of creative thinking by sticking our collective paranoid noses into the playground imaginary games as well. And we wonder why kids don;t know how to think for themselves or solve problems anymore.....





jlf1961 -> RE: 7-year-old boy suspended for throwing imaginary grenade (2/7/2013 2:29:10 PM)

Why do I suddenly get the strange vision of Washington passing laws forbidding the following:

Playing Cowboys and Indians
Playing soldier
Having an imaginary friend
Playing house
Playing doctor as a teenager




Switcheroo1983 -> RE: 7-year-old boy suspended for throwing imaginary grenade (2/7/2013 2:33:06 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: cordeliasub

So....we've already pretty much sucked out all of our kids' imagination by reducing knowledge to a bunch of penciled in bubbles and removing all things creative (such as the arts) from the classroom. let's rip away the last vestiges of any type of creative thinking by sticking our collective paranoid noses into the playground imaginary games as well. And we wonder why kids don;t know how to think for themselves or solve problems anymore.....



There are those that would say that's part of a plan, so children grow up looking to the government for answers and not think for themselves/outside of the box and merely do as told. I'm wondering if they aren't onto something. Or schools are terrified of lawsuits (like when schools with concrete play areas in Cali banned "tag").




mnottertail -> RE: 7-year-old boy suspended for throwing imaginary grenade (2/7/2013 2:38:06 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: jlf1961

Why do I suddenly get the strange vision of Washington passing laws forbidding the following:

Playing Cowboys and Indians
Playing soldier
Having an imaginary friend
Playing house
Playing doctor as a teenager


aneurism?




WantsOfTheFlesh -> RE: 7-year-old boy suspended for throwing imaginary grenade (2/7/2013 2:41:04 PM)

hope da school ban on imaginary weapons don't extent ta adults least during da PTA meetings.




ISODoormat -> RE: 7-year-old boy suspended for throwing imaginary grenade (2/7/2013 2:54:41 PM)

a rule saying no fighting and no weapons
this means no superhero or even real hero games? we had no fighting rules when I was a kid, it meant don't punch the guy who made fun of your corduroy slacks you bought at JC Penny and no weapons meant don't bring a baseball bat or toy gun to school

people forget children grow and learn
we do need to stem the culture of violence prevalent in our society, but we do not need to do so with ridiculous acts such as this




Zonie63 -> RE: 7-year-old boy suspended for throwing imaginary grenade (2/7/2013 2:59:28 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: jlf1961

quote:

A second-grade boy has been suspended from a Colorado elementary school for throwing an imaginary grenade during a game of make-believe with his classmates Friday.

Alex Evans, 7, who attends Mary Blair Elementary in Loveland, said he was playing a game called Rescue the World.

“I was trying to save people and I just can’t believe I got dispended,” Alex told KDVR.com.

The school has a list of absolutes that states no weapons, real or imaginary, and no fighting.

“Honestly I don’t think the rule is very realistic for kids this age,” Alex’s mom, Mandie Evans, told KDVR.

Check this out.


Okay the bubble gun incident actually had a weapon, of sorts, and only lethal if the bubble somehow contained a toxic gas.

Now would someone explain the lethality of an imaginary object with no mass, explosive, substance or anything other than air molecules taking up the space in which this weapon would have occupied?



Apparently, there's a bit more to this story than what's written in the article you linked.

http://www.reporterherald.com/news/loveland-local-news/ci_22535410/loveland-schools-now-guarded-about-reason-suspension

quote:

Mandie Watkins said she received a phone call from Mary Blair Elementary principal Valerie Lara-Black on Friday afternoon, informing her that her second-grade son, Alex Evans, had been suspended for throwing an imaginary grenade during recess on the playground.

"He was not suspended for having an imaginary weapon," Hausmann said. "The district itself has never expelled or suspended a student for having an imaginary weapon."

On Tuesday, the district pointed to a list of "absolutes" from Mary Blair Elementary, which Superintendent Stan Scheer said is an enhancement of the district's general school of conduct. Those absolutes include no weapons, real or play, and that a third violation of absolutes constitutes a formal suspension.

Hausmann said he was unable to comment on the specifics of the suspension itself, citing the Family Education Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) through the U.S. Department of Education.

"This is a much more complicated issue than has been portrayed," Hausmann said.

But Watkins, who had a meeting Wednesday with Lara-Black and Director of Elementary Education Paul Bankes to discuss the suspension, maintains that the principal told her Friday that the suspension was due to the imaginary grenade.

During Wednesday's meeting, Watkins alleges that Lara-Black changed her story, saying that Alex had been throwing rocks on the playground and that adult and students had provided accounts to that effect. When Watkins asked to see such statements, she says they were not provided to her.

When Watkins asked Alex about the incident last week, she says he told her essentially what Lara-Black relayed: He threw the pretend grenade at an imaginary box that had something evil inside.

Watkins said she asked her son again on Wednesday what happened and if he had thrown rocks. He maintains he was just trying to save the world from evil with the imaginary weapon.

"My son's story has not changed even once," Watkins said. "(The school has) been very inconsistent in my opinion. Honestly, my son has been the most consistent person in this situation."

The local advocacy group Liberty Watch released a statement on Wednesday chastising the district for not adhering to their own discipline rules. In the district's discipline code, a section "classroom removal/suspension/expulsion/denial of admission," calls for an informal hearing and disciplinary notice.

Hausmann said there was due process in the disciplinary action.

"The community is already frustrated with the lack of transparency and accountability in the district and this situation highlights the resistance of the administration to be open and honest with the community," Liberty Watch director Nancy Rumfelt said in a statement.

According to Watkins, the school never notified her about any violent or threatening behavior from Alex, but on Wednesday, Lara-Black reportedly cited emails that the teacher had sent to Watkins about such behavior. Watkins says it's untrue, and was not provided with copies of the alleged emails.

Watkins plans to formally remove Alex as well as her fourth-grade daughter from Mary Blair Elementary. She is waiting for copies of her children's records, which have not yet been provided by the school.

Despite removing her kids from Mary Blair, Watkins is still hoping that the school changes their "absolutes" policy and Liberty Watch has also called on the district to review the list, saying that the absolutes punish imagination and creativity.




cordeliasub -> RE: 7-year-old boy suspended for throwing imaginary grenade (2/7/2013 3:51:09 PM)

Sounds like the school is playing a non-imaginary game of CYA




Aylee -> RE: 7-year-old boy suspended for throwing imaginary grenade (2/7/2013 4:26:53 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: DaNewAgeViking

It is vital to remember that children are not born with any instinctive moral sense


That is not true and there have been studies with babies showing that.




Rule -> RE: 7-year-old boy suspended for throwing imaginary grenade (2/7/2013 4:40:16 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: mnottertail
The resolution is to imaginarily suspend him for the imaginary use of the grenade.

[sm=goodpost.gif]




Rule -> RE: 7-year-old boy suspended for throwing imaginary grenade (2/7/2013 4:51:37 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Aylee
quote:

ORIGINAL: DaNewAgeViking
It is vital to remember that children are not born with any instinctive moral sense

That is not true and there have been studies with babies showing that.

You are both right to a degree:

There are people that are born with a conscience and most of them will still have that faculty when they are adults; in most adults that faculty will be mature, whereas in a number of other such adults it will be in the same immature state as it was in their childhood.

There are other people that are born without that faculty and that will never have that faculty; these will have to rely on the crutches of philosophy and law and religion and custom and on what they were taught by their parents.




Level -> RE: 7-year-old boy suspended for throwing imaginary grenade (2/7/2013 4:52:08 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: cordeliasub

Sounds like the school is playing a non-imaginary game of CYA


Exactly.

The over-wrought hand-ringers realized they were looking like tools, and don't like it.




Shoedaddy -> RE: 7-year-old boy suspended for throwing imaginary grenade (2/7/2013 4:55:56 PM)

Man Shot For Drawing Imaginary Gun




LafayetteLady -> RE: 7-year-old boy suspended for throwing imaginary grenade (2/7/2013 5:22:11 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Level


quote:

ORIGINAL: cordeliasub

Sounds like the school is playing a non-imaginary game of CYA


Exactly.

The over-wrought hand-ringers realized they were looking like tools, and don't like it.


I disagree. The number of parents who have children that misbehave and they claim to be oblivious is amazing in a school system. This was the third time the kid got in trouble, so they spoke to him before about it. He didn't learn, mom ignored the emails and didn't explain to child further. Done deal.




Alwaysmylove -> RE: 7-year-old boy suspended for throwing imaginary grenade (2/8/2013 6:45:41 AM)

There are not enough facts out to agree or disagree. While there are oblivious parents, there are also plenty of overreaching administrators.

I'm sorry, but for this kid to get the same punishment as an older kid who bullied a classmate, giving him a concussion that led to seizures and an induced coma says something is seriously wrong with our education system.

Link to the bullying story: http://gma.yahoo.com/blogs/abc-blogs/bullying-attack-leaves-11-old-coma-213221930--abc-news-topstories.html

(Note the two day suspension)




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