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€uromeinke, FEJ. and Ghoulish Delight RULE!!! NA abides. |
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#1 |
I Floop the Pig
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Student suspended over cell call from mom in Iraq
So a kid gets a call from his mom, serving in a Iraq, at school during school hours. The school's policy is that students are allowed to carry cell phones, but not allowed to use them during school hours. When a teacher told him to hang up he refused, and apparantly used profanity, and possibly more. They were considering arresting him for disorderly conduct, but suspended him for 10 days instead.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7762540/ My thoughts? Shame on the mother. You don't do something that will force your child to break school rules. I don't care where you are or what you're doing, and I don't care if it was the only chance she had to call. Unless it's an emergency, that's a horrible message to send a kid in school. "You can break the rules as long as you have a good selfish reason to." She never should have called during school hours.
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#2 |
Cruiser of Motorboats
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My guess is that maybe, had the kid calmly and politely explained the situation, there might have been a different outcome. He was suspended for swearing at the teacher, not for using the cell phone. Perhaps, he tried the polite route and became irate when it didn't work, I don't know, but it sounds like he didn't handle the situation well and now the teacher is being made out to be the villian.
As far as the mother making the call during school, the possibility does exist that the times she can make personal phone calls are few and far between. |
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#3 | ||
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#4 |
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I think there are exceptions to every rule, and a phone call from a parent who is deployed into a war zone should certainly qualify. And to say that the mother was teaching a poor lesson that it was OK to break school rules as long as it is convienent... Maybe she didn't realize that her son was in school. There is a massive time/day change between there and here.
Should the kid be suspended for swearing or the disorderly conduct? Sure, if that breaks school rules. But these school rules that are so black and white... Life isn't black and white, it is shades of gray and that needs to be brought back into the school system or we're going to raise a generation of kids who only see things as black and white. Same thing with zero tolerance. Bringing Tylenol to school receives the same [school] punishment as bringing a weapon to school. |
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#5 |
Beelzeboobs, Esq.
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Clearly some people have never learned the utility of the "mommy note." For example, in jr. high we were only allowed to eat during lunch -- no food or drink at any other time of day. I'm slightly hypoglycemic and have to eat small snacks more regularly throughout the day or I get dizzy spells and pass out. A note from mom was all it took for me to be allowed to nibble some crackers and cheese at my locker between classes. In high school, we weren't permitted to use the bathroom at all between classes. I wasn't a big fan of using those bathrooms at ALL anyhow, and I was in honors classes where the teachers assumed that we were responsible and if we said we needed to go then we actually needed to go and weren't fooling around. But I carried a note from mom anyhow. Oh, and a note that I was allowed to have Advil whenever I wanted.
You'd think that a note from mom in this case, planned in advance, could handle things. If it were me, I would have talked to the principal in advance, let him know I was being deployed and that I knew of the school policy, but that I would have to take phone call opportunities whenever they arose. Or maybe my school administrators were just afraid of my mom. That's entirely possible.
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#6 |
scribblin'
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If his mother is in Iraq right now, chances are the kid is having a rough emotional go of it. If children act out because they can't get enough attention from a parent in the room, imagine how they'd act out of they weren't getting enough attention from a parent who is risking her life halfway across the globe?
I agree that there are better ways that this could be handled by all, especially the mother (but I agree that the time difference might be confusing or the mother might have very limited opportunity.) But I'd imagine that if I were sixteen and talking to my mother-- whose safety is not assured-- on the phone for the first time in weeks, I'd be emotional enough that I'd have trouble controling myself if someone tried to separate me from her again. And I'm fairly well-balanced. |
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#7 |
I Floop the Pig
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But where do you draw the line? Unless it's a case of a student's health, as in Prudence's case, making an exception for this student opens a loophole that's too big to deal with. "My parents are divorced and my dad lives on the oppisite coast so I never get to see him and he works odd hours so he can't call often," for instance. That's just off the top of my head. I'm sure there are plenty of enterprising students who could come up with other excuses.
Exceptions should be made for vital situations. Receiving a "how are you doing" phone call is not a vital situation. Yes, we're all used to being connected to everyone all the time, but believe it or not, people once survived in this world without being able to instantly contact everyone they know at all times. At the very least, she should have called the school and asked permission, not simply called the kid directly, assuming they are somehow a special case that can just ignore the rules for their own convenience. It's disruptive. And going on pure conjecture, based on the kid's reaction, I'm guessing this isn't the first time he's learned the lesson that the rules don't apply to him. If he had simply appologized and dealt calmly with the teacher, it wouldn't have been an issue. But that kind of over reaction is symptomatic of someone who has not been taught to respect authority.
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#8 |
ohhhh baby
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I have to disagree with my husband on this.
I can't imagine the amount of stress a child with a mother deployed feels. Deployments are for LONG periods of time. Do you know how long 6 months is to a 17 year old? Can you imagine having your mother taken away to a war zone? I think I'd do exactly what the kid did - swear at the teacher for actually trying to tell me I can't talk to my mom that was torn away from me. BTD is right about timezone stuff too. If you get one chance to call your kid, you take it. Comparing a divorced parent's calls to this is just silly, IMHO.
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#9 |
scribblin'
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I'm not saying the rules aren't justified. I am saying that I feel bad for the kid, who's surely having a hard time if he's that upset about a call from his mother.
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#10 | ||||
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Oh, and you can be sure that I'd be swearing up a storm at the person trying to tell me to get off the phone with my deployed parent or loved one. Last edited by BarTopDancer : 05-06-2005 at 04:23 PM. |
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