Quote:
Originally Posted by Gemini Cricket
It depends on where the drawing was. If it's on homework to turn in to a teacher as this kid did, yes. On a test, yes. If it was his own journal or at home or in an art class, no.
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See, this is where I part completely with you. For all of the reasons CP listed above. A drawing of a gun in isolation, with no other behavioral indicators of a problem, should not be enough to warrant suspension. If the teacher talks to him and he gets defiant about it, absolutely. If a teacher or counselor has warned him not to do it again and he does it again, suspend his ass. If a counselor talks to him and learns that he's dealing with some issues at home...no, scratch that, that should prompt more counseling, NOT punishment.
Going straight to punitive measures for a simple act of expression, even somewhat inappropriate expression, with zero attempt at resolving it with
communication is a recipe for disaster. It's telling ALL students, not just this one, that they will not be listened to, that they need to be
afraid that what they might say or express will get them in trouble. That, to me, is the kind of thing that leads to Columbine.