Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids were milling around and talking, not even fazed. They are so desensitized to incidents in the school, they weren’t even reacting.
That is super concerning.
Parent of younger child in Wilson feeder.
I think it’s fair to say most teens are unfazed by a lot these days regardless of what school they’re at, whether it’s in McLean, Anacostia or Tenleytown. What exactly do you think they’re all looking at on their phones all the time—kittens playing with yarn?
Hope the kid is okay. Will ask DD about it.
That’s not ok that kids are unfazed. It’s trauma or mental illness or something else but it’s not normal
Anonymous wrote:How exactly is this the school systems fault??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids were milling around and talking, not even fazed. They are so desensitized to incidents in the school, they weren’t even reacting.
That is super concerning.
Parent of younger child in Wilson feeder.
I think it’s fair to say most teens are unfazed by a lot these days regardless of what school they’re at, whether it’s in McLean, Anacostia or Tenleytown. What exactly do you think they’re all looking at on their phones all the time—kittens playing with yarn?
Hope the kid is okay. Will ask DD about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids were milling around and talking, not even fazed. They are so desensitized to incidents in the school, they weren’t even reacting.
That is super concerning.
Parent of younger child in Wilson feeder.
Anonymous wrote:Kids were milling around and talking, not even fazed. They are so desensitized to incidents in the school, they weren’t even reacting.
Anonymous wrote:Terrible.
Sounds like they knew the victim and were stalking him/her. Otherwise how would they have known the students were leaving 15 minutes early?
Hopefully they will catch them.