Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:While some of you celebrate what’s going on as a win, here's a little dose of reality. There are students in FCPS now telling their teachers and counselors that they will kill themselves if they get deported to a country they have never lived in/do not remember living in. Regardless of whether you feel that those kids and their families “deserve” this, the teachers and counselors now have to divert time and resources to dealing with the kids who are now in crisis. Not only does this lead to more teachers and counselors wanting to quit, but it also means less time and resources for your kid. And no, it doesn’t matter whose fault this is. Your kid will suffer either way. I hope you’re happy.
Stop making stories up.
Not made up. I was with some people last night who work in FCPS high schools and this is what they are seeing and hearing. There are a lot of kids in crisis for various reasons, and now here’s a new one.
People need to develop some resilience
Not exactly a realistic plan for teenage brains. You can’t just snap your fngers and make it so.
I know some of you can’t understand this because you lack empathy, but most people who work in schools WANT to help kids who are struggling regardless of whether the district has “tasked” them with this as a “social service” or not. Unlike you they care about the kids. Maybe if you took any time to talk with them you would understand how protective they feel over the vulnerable kids. They’ve probably helped your kid during the school day in some way you aren’t even aware of. Your little right wing fantasy land is not reality and you don’t have as much control over this as you think.