Anonymous wrote:The Poluce don’t just write a report because you want them to fyi. Certain criteria has to be met. Reports take a lot of time. Investigations have to done etc…… a lot of times with young children they let schools handle the situation.
Anonymous wrote:The Poluce don’t just write a report because you want them to fyi. Certain criteria has to be met. Reports take a lot of time. Investigations have to done etc…… a lot of times with young children they let schools handle the situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The posters who suggest calling the police because of a 2nd grader misbehaving are insane, OP. Not sure why you're paying any attention to them.
NP. We have a second grade boy in my kid's class that consistently physically assaults other students. Slaps, shoves and kicks these kids.
The only thing that has happened is the kid gets sent to the office for a few minutes and then gets to come back and terrorize the class again. How long do we let a kid just keep on doing this?
Anonymous wrote:The posters who suggest calling the police because of a 2nd grader misbehaving are insane, OP. Not sure why you're paying any attention to them.
Anonymous wrote:The posters who suggest calling the police because of a 2nd grader misbehaving are insane, OP. Not sure why you're paying any attention to them.
Anonymous wrote:I think the thing that made PPs suggest filing a police report is that it went beyond words and child was assaulted.
Schools (participate FCPS) do too little to response to address/correct physical violence in the classroom. And having a police report on file will not only encourage the school admins to act, but it may also trigger an investigation of CPS if they feel that it is warranted.
It’s not okay for a child to be permitted to hit, kick, or choke another child, whether inside or outside of school. And that behavior comes from somewhere. Police report will allow someone to follow up on what the underlying home issue is.