I doubt our school would expel. Suspension, restrictions, no phone. |
I read it more like: if the school I am at is both so lenient and has so little understanding of the likely consequences of cell phones in the hands of ten year olds, I should leave and find one that takes these issues more seriously. Some of my kids' school's parents might be dumb enough to give their children unfettered access to cell phones, but the cultural moires here help protect them from their own folly. |
Give me a break. No expulsion. 10 or 11 is when it happened with my kids (now in 20s). Stuff like this happens. They aren't ruined for life, they all just need to have a talk with a trusted adult about what sex/love is, and what it is not. About how pornography is exploitive. About how the reason its meant for adults is because they are mature enough to process what they are seeing (sometimes). And it is NOT meant for children because we don't want them to get a mixed up sense of what love and sex is.
And, every one of the kids exposed to this, WATCHING IT, knew it was the wrong thing to do and any one of them could have said something sooner - like when it first happened. So they aren't all so innocent either. I remember hearing my 12 year old tell the kid next to him on a bus (field trip, I was sitting behind him) that he didn't think what they were looking at was appropriate and they should watch something else, so it can and does happen |
That family should be out. Sorry. |
Expel and off to juvie. |
This is happening every day in schools all over the country. |
At our non DC private, the consequence was a brief suspension and the child was kicked off that team where the incident happened (at practices). The kids were 1-3 years older than your situation OP. The child sailed off to 9th grade at a well regarded private high school. |
I agree. It's the same for all offenses with a wide range of severity: sexual assault, for example. In these cases, the larger public never knows exactly what happened, and therefore, gets very upset because it can fill it the blanks with whatever it wants. |
Everyone, stop worrying what the school will or will not do. You are the parents and you need to be more on a hair trigger than the school. Ultimately, it is your children and it is your job. |
How would a kid that young pay for that? |
They are free |
There are free porn sites with very graphic video of all persuasions as close as a google search with no restrictions on who accesses them. No paying involved. |
Parents can report things to school administration but they cannot turn a boy into a school administrator unless he has the proper qualifications. |
My view is that tech should really stay out of kids hands for as long as possible. There are a lot of "dumb" phone options that just offer calling and texting. These young kids are often confused and disturbed by what they see. And easy access to porn is creating an addicted class of teens and adults alike who have unrealistic views about sex and relationships. I feel sorry for the kids exposed to this at too young of an age. Parents, get your kids dumb phones. And also keep them off social media for as long as possible. And talk to them over and over about how what they do online will never disappear. |
All this pearl clutching is ridiculous. I have three teenagers and I remember I went to a middle school sex talk where they told us that whatever you think your kids have done or seen - that was two years ago. Meaning even if you have the best parental controls in the world on your devices, the minute your kid leaves home they are exposed to open laptops, phones and computers at other people's houses.
While I agree it's not ideal for kids to see porn at 9 or 10 years old, this is the reality of the world we live in. Porn is degrading and can create unrealistic and violent ideas about sex. The solution is to TALK TO YOUR KIDS- and way earlier than you think you need to. (I also feel like this puritanical hatred of sex is strange while no one worries about taking 5th graders to R movies where people's heads get shot off not to mention video games... ahem. But that is a discussion for another day.) My kids recently told me by age 12 they had seen it all. That is with controls on their phones and on all our devices. Kids are curious about sex. The kid that showed porn to friends is not an axe murderer. I disagree about expulsion as the proper response in this situation, and know of several similar instances at our big three school where the kid was most definitely not expelled. Again- education, frank discussion, and staying calm is probably the best ways to keep your kids with a healthy view of sex. Because you can't put the genie back in the bottle. |