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Kids With Special Needs and Disabilities
Reply to "public middle school -- how to carry accommodation tools from room to room?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Wow--no purses? So they expect you to put a pad or two into a pencil holder in your binder? This seems to me totally ridiculous for a twelve year old. And then the girls take their binders into the bathroom stall with them? That's so disgusting! Yikes. I hate how public schools have become like prisons. I mean, I went to a middle school where there were girls with knives in their boots, but honestly I would take my chances with the girls with knives rather than have to carry pads around in my trapper keeper! And what about things like Kleenex or chapstick? I also wish all the girls didn't wear leggings or athletic wear....they should wear cargo pants to carry the stuff they would put in the backpack! [/quote] The no backpacks rule is a practical one. [b]There is not enough room in the halls for kids and backpacks when they are changing classes. [/b] No backpacks allow for more room. In HS, they are allowed backpacks. (At least that is the way it went with my children)[/quote]That seems like a really stupid rationale. Middle schoolers are smaller than high schoolers, and, unless middle school hallways are appreciably narrower than high school (which ours are not), it would make more sense to ban backpacks for high schoolers. And, to get all back-in-my-day-uphill-both-ways-in-the-snow, we managed the halls of an overcroweded, built-in-the-50s middle school just fine with a backpack. Having to carry all your shit with you in your hands would be more of a pain in the ass, and it wasn't always possible to hit your locker between every class. Our kid also has an assistive technology accommodation, and I do not want the laptop/iPad in his hands in the hallways rather than secured in a backpack. That's just a cracked screen waiting to happen, Otterbox or not.[/quote]
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