I hope your kids turn out more enlightened and less of an a$$ than you. |
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It depends on training. In our elementary the SRO is better trained in de-escalation than our special ed staff. They offered to testify against the faculty for inappropriate restraints used on autistic kids.
But if SROs are untrained, I would worry. |
I'm an ass because I oppose the school-to-prison pipeline? Interesting. |
I work in education and have seen multiple SROs deal "ineffectually" at best with younger and special needs children. https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/briannasacks/florida-school-officer-fired-arresting-6-year-old https://www.courthousenews.com/moms-complain-of-school-cops-handcuffing-kids/ https://eji.org/news/family-sues-pittsburgh-public-school-for-abusing-and-handcuffing-7-year-old-child/ https://foxsanantonio.com/news/local/7-year-old-student-with-autism-taken-from-school-in-handcuffs-09-18-2019 https://trib.com/news/local/education/a-9-year-old-autistic-student-was-handcuffed-at-a-casper-school-now-the-feds/article_83cc6a5f-9c82-5c56-8282-2e6901df4d99.html I could go on and on and on. |
| I think schools need better trained personnel to deal with physical issues. Also schools should be given a chance and time to implement better discipline programs. Parents stepping it up would help too. |
NP but the social workers are probably afraid of the adults when they do home visits. My sister worked for Child Protective Services in NYC for awhile and she was in some really dangerous situations. |
The schools I attended were arresting kids regularly in elementary and beyond. |
You're an ass for realizing that not everyone has this option and your response is tone deaf. |
My response (to the teacher who fears dismantling the school-to-prison pipeline) that I will do whatever I can to protect my biracial kids from the school-to-prison pipeline is tone deaf? Ok. |
11 year olds have families. I have made unannounced home visits in some rough neighborhoods. Unannounced because I did not have a working phone number for anyone in the household. It would have been great to be able to tell a SRO where I was going, when I expected to be back, and to have their number on speed dial. Similarly, I have had to call the school police to transport students in emergency situations. It would have been a bonus to be able to do this with officers who were familiar, positive figures to the students. (DP) |
Then she’s dealing with a different circumstance than school settings. Social workers making home visits should have police protection if they feel it is necessary. Most teachers in their classrooms do not need armed guards. Even in alternative schools. |
| We just call the regular cops. |
Oh and we usually have more issues with the crazy parents than the students. |
What professionals are going to stop two kids trying to kill each other in a class, do tell? |
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But imagine what your school could do with training, hiring more social workers, more teachers for smaller classes and more skills appropriate remediation, more space, more extra curriculars to make school interesting, more edible foods. The Mayor of LA was talking about reducing millions off the Police budget and it Would not make a dent. Seattle is proposing an 11 million dollar increase to the police budget for next year (wel, was before this). Albany (I think) announced cutting its SRO contract - at 1 million dollars. Can you imagine what your school could do with it a share of 1 million, 11 million, 44 million dollars??
And imagine if kids and families experiencing trauma or mental health concerns had community resources they could access (instead of a 7 month wait for kids who have already attempted suicide once to be seen regularly by a mental health service). And imagine if there was not food instability or housing instability or other family stresses. How would kids show up to school then? Again, what could homeless youth services do with 1 million or 11 million dollars. And then you would actually just get to teach. |