Anonymous wrote:MCPS did this for the schooling side of it. They sent the most troubled students to their own school in Rockville. The problem was, the composition of this school was disproportionately students of one particular gender, and two particular races. It was not seen as equitable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I keep hearing that juvenile offenders are being released from juvie because of lack of space. Most of these kids are lacking discipline, proper adult supervision, and are truants. Why aren't courts ordering that they be sent to military schools instead?
Those schools aren’t free. You want to pay $30k a year for criminals to go to school? If you do, you won’t find many others who do.
Hard labor camps for violent youth offenders would be better.
This. The system is fine as it is. We just need to spend a lot more money on DEI programs until kids who don't want to learn magically decide they want to learn.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because they don’t meet admissions criteria. Military schools aren’t a substitute for juvenile detention.
I guess that's my point, why not transition to a military school model that is focused on discipline, structure, but also college preparation?
Because your solution has no basis in data, just 70s sitcom plots
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I keep hearing that juvenile offenders are being released from juvie because of lack of space. Most of these kids are lacking discipline, proper adult supervision, and are truants. Why aren't courts ordering that they be sent to military schools instead?
Those schools aren’t free. You want to pay $30k a year for criminals to go to school? If you do, you won’t find many others who do.
Anonymous wrote:I keep hearing that juvenile offenders are being released from juvie because of lack of space. Most of these kids are lacking discipline, proper adult supervision, and are truants. Why aren't courts ordering that they be sent to military schools instead?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because they don’t meet admissions criteria. Military schools aren’t a substitute for juvenile detention.
I guess that's my point, why not transition to a military school model that is focused on discipline, structure, but also college preparation?
Anonymous wrote:Because they don’t meet admissions criteria. Military schools aren’t a substitute for juvenile detention.