Very few in the county are maga. These issues have been going on for years. Nothing new. |
Finally. This county pushed too far left, and we got out of control students. Now, we are going back to the middle regards to discipline.
https://wjla.com/news/local/montgomery-county-public-schools-mcps-bomb-threats-weapons-on-campus-and-assaults-on-staff-bethesda-chevy-chase-high-school-lockdown-counseling-services-behavior-intervention-programs-weapons-related-incidents-alternative-learning-options
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Good that physically assaulting teachers will now be considered a serious offense, but WHY isn’t physically assaulting OTHER STUDENTS also reclassified as a Level 4 or 5 violation? Student safety is EQUALLY as critical as the safety of school staff. Administrators in Rockville MUST correct this ERROR. |
Take it up with the BOE. |
STUDENT — SAFETY — MATTERS Why doesn’t the Montgomery County BOE agree? |
Hi folks - OP here.
Reminder, this is a question is about protecting children's safety while in elementary school. I would think that there is a case to be made for 2-3 armed police officers on school grounds during the core school day -- one surveilling in the parking lot, 2-3 around the recess area surveilling for any would-be shooters Every Jewish preschool in the area, for instance, seems to have 1-2 armed County police officers by the front door during school hours. Why can't the same be offered for our elementary schools, which have 5-15x the number of students as these preschools? (Serious question - what would it take for this to be possible)? |
The politicians don’t think MCPS needs them when asked. It would make a lot of sense. |
Most of the BOE don’t have kids in mcps. They are out of touch. |
That’s not in the budget. Public schools are legally required to follow more regulations and provide more services than private preschools are. It’s a lot easier for the preschool to raise their rates to cover security than it is for a public school system to get more tax dollars for the same. Plus, public schools generally have much larger properties to patrol. |
Because they're more interested in: 1) Protecting Marcus Jones and enabling him to collect a paycheck 2) Protecting Taylor and failing to hold him accountable 3) Protecting the "reputation" of MCPS and prioritizing student safety means acknowledging the safety incidents they have and haven't successfully suppressed 4) Shifting the blame to others, i.e. Parents, HHS, DJS, MCPD rather than holding themselves accountable 5) Protecting the unions; in this instance, MCAAP, who wants to pretend that principals aren't part of the safety problem here |
1000% little oversight amongst principals is a huge issue. Central office needs to get them in line. There is no excuse to falsify data by underreporting or trivializing violent incidents in schools. |
A lot of it comes from central office. |
Every bit of middle and high school violence MUST be documented, including the CONSEQUENCES given to the PERPETRATORS.
These kids aren’t toddlers any more learning how to use their words. NO amount of physical AGGRESSION should be tolerated in our schools, without CONSISTENT CONSEQUENCES. Records of PUBLIC school VIOLENCE must be accessible by the community, of course with names redacted. This is the only way to hold central office employees and principals accountable. WE are PAYING these people to keep OUR CHILDREN safe from ASSAULT in school. NO MORE HIDING the SCHOOL VIOLENCE. |
True…… but then why are schools so vastly different in approaches to how they treat teachers and students? MANY MANY administrators are outright bullies. The lack of professionalism amongst these adults is atrocious. Do something Central. You are losing dedicated, passionate, hardworking teachers and staff. The morale is very very low. This affects everyone and all outcomes when schools are dysfunctional. |
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