Anonymous wrote:Maybe they’ll pass out lanyards when they give them their new student IDs. That’s what our middle school did last year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's no rigor behind it. They don't scan or check every kid individually. They just rely on admin and security to eyeball the kids as they come in. As you can imagine, there is enough admin and security to do this thoroughly for all kids so some kids can and do get by the so-called ID badge entry requirement.
Richard Montgomery's student newspaper quoted a student who pointed out how easy it was to bypass the ID requirement and still get into the school: https://thermtide.com/18687/news/rm-ramps-up-hallway-security-measures/
Meanwhile, other students think the cards could be a good thing but are not used properly. “I think [the ID cards] would help. However, I do think security does a bad job of checking them. Today I walked into school without showing my ID card because there was no security guard there,” sophomore Coby Ritter said. “If the ID cards implemented it right it will go well but that takes effort.”
MCPS isn't a jail.
Anonymous wrote:There's no rigor behind it. They don't scan or check every kid individually. They just rely on admin and security to eyeball the kids as they come in. As you can imagine, there is enough admin and security to do this thoroughly for all kids so some kids can and do get by the so-called ID badge entry requirement.
Richard Montgomery's student newspaper quoted a student who pointed out how easy it was to bypass the ID requirement and still get into the school: https://thermtide.com/18687/news/rm-ramps-up-hallway-security-measures/
Meanwhile, other students think the cards could be a good thing but are not used properly. “I think [the ID cards] would help. However, I do think security does a bad job of checking them. Today I walked into school without showing my ID card because there was no security guard there,” sophomore Coby Ritter said. “If the ID cards implemented it right it will go well but that takes effort.”
Anonymous wrote:This was piloted at a few high schools last year and is rolling out to all schools this year.
Meanwhile, other students think the cards could be a good thing but are not used properly. “I think [the ID cards] would help. However, I do think security does a bad job of checking them. Today I walked into school without showing my ID card because there was no security guard there,” sophomore Coby Ritter said. “If the ID cards implemented it right it will go well but that takes effort.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our new principal just sent this out in the weekly communications:
Student IDs: This year student IDs must be visible throughout the day, particularly when students are in the hallways. Students may wear their id on a lanyard, clip it to their clothing, or attach it to their backpack. Underclassmen pictures will be taken on 09/06-09/11, which means we expect to fully enforce this rule as of 09/16. As always, student ids will be required to attend school events.
This is new for our school.
Question: Do other schools implement this? Does it actually work? What are the consequences if kids do not comply?
I hope it's happening at middle schools too. It's helpful for security purposes. Not sure why clipping to a backpack is OK, though. Backpacks are in the lockers at our school during the school day.
Anonymous wrote:Our new principal just sent this out in the weekly communications:
Student IDs: This year student IDs must be visible throughout the day, particularly when students are in the hallways. Students may wear their id on a lanyard, clip it to their clothing, or attach it to their backpack. Underclassmen pictures will be taken on 09/06-09/11, which means we expect to fully enforce this rule as of 09/16. As always, student ids will be required to attend school events.
This is new for our school.
Question: Do other schools implement this? Does it actually work? What are the consequences if kids do not comply?