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Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS)
Reply to "Restorative Justice is struggling to show success in MCPS according to students, parents"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]https://moco360.media/2023/02/28/mcps-students-data-suggest-failing-grade-for-restorative-justice-practices/ [quote]Montgomery County Public Schools is in the middle of formally assessing the success of its social justice-inspired approach to conflict resolution in cases of school bullying, violence and hate bias using state-provided metrics. Data indicates that MCPS efforts to adopt a restorative justice model may not have been effective, while students and parents question the success of its approach to conflict resolution. The school district describes restorative justice as “an approach to building community, self-care, and conflict resolution.” The approach was first adopted in 2019 after the state passed regulations requiring schools to employ more trauma-informed practices. Within this model, principals can request a member of the central office restorative justice team to be deployed to schools as incidents arise[/quote][/quote] Restorative justice isn't struggling at all. Parents who lack access to any data are skeptical of these new methods.[/quote] [b]Please come to my 4th grade classroom any day, stay for a day or a week, and try repeating that. Make sure you also speak to the students who don’t feel safe. A child brought a knife to school last week and said he was sorry and it was an “accident” that the knife slipped into his bag. Well that’s what he told admin to appease them even after bragging to the students that he had it. He had to stay in the office for 1/2 a day but don’t worry he still got lunch and recess with his scared classmates. The scared class had a circle and was told to understand that it was an accident. The same child beats up other children multiple times a week. The class is told to accept that he is trying to communicate his frustration. To be clear, the frustration he has is that he is being asked to do work. In our grade, there are 3 others that are also scary- 1 in each class. But they go into the halls and create massive havoc. Teachers are not okay with being told that everything is fixed and fine because we’ve had a circle.[/b] [/quote] Why do Democrats keep voting for this crap?[/quote] Wow I could have written a very similar post about my own MCPS elementary school. Me and my students have all been hit, kicked, cussed out, etc. by a couple of kids in my class. None have ever been sent home or suspended. It's always a visit to the office and then right back to class. It amazes me that I don't get parent emails nightly asking me WTF is happening in my room. I sometimes wonder if my students are so used to this toxic behavior it doesn't phase them after the initial incidents occur. [/quote] I am an MCPS parent and DH and I have both emailed admin about violent incidents that our kids have reported in ES. It has become clear that there is nothing admin can really do. So, we don’t keep emailing the teacher. It’s just a waste of her time, IMO. Doesn’t mean we’re not concerned. It stinks![/quote]
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