Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MCPS doesn't want any of the issues to be leaked. Once law enforcement is involved, MCPS can no longer cover anything up.
Our high school principal downplays all the violence at our school. When kids circulated a video of him trying to break up a pretty bad fight, his focus was on disciplining those kids who took the video.
One of the downsides of banning phones (other than kids not being able to get help during school shootings or communicate with parents) is that violent attacks are not documented. Without evidence, victims will never get any kind of justice and the crime stats will plummet. These principals do not want to deal with the issues and MCPS provides few, if any, resources anyway.
The principals know there is no help for them so they just downplay it all at this point.
YUP! This is the answer.
I think that's an exaggeration. Do you have any evidence that supports this? It sounds more like a conspiracy theory being pushed by someone who is bitter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MCPS doesn't want any of the issues to be leaked. Once law enforcement is involved, MCPS can no longer cover anything up.
Our high school principal downplays all the violence at our school. When kids circulated a video of him trying to break up a pretty bad fight, his focus was on disciplining those kids who took the video.
One of the downsides of banning phones (other than kids not being able to get help during school shootings or communicate with parents) is that violent attacks are not documented. Without evidence, victims will never get any kind of justice and the crime stats will plummet. These principals do not want to deal with the issues and MCPS provides few, if any, resources anyway.
The principals know there is no help for them so they just downplay it all at this point.
YUP! This is the answer.
Anonymous wrote:If a youth is violent in a public place, he or she is subject to arrest, juvenile court, community service, probation, or detention. Parents are typically required to participate in legal proceedings, family counseling, and pay restitution. However when it happens in school there are no such consequences only “restorative practices.”
School is a public place and youth and their parents must be subject to the same consequences they would face if they punch a stranger at Wendy’s as they would if they punch one of their peers at school.
Anonymous wrote:Meanwhile last year after a bomb threat was called in and MCPD showed up in tactical gear with guns, MCPS and MCPD got flak for traumatizing the kids with the response. Yet you are advocating MCPS have police show up for every fight in HS.
Anonymous wrote:MCPS doesn't want any of the issues to be leaked. Once law enforcement is involved, MCPS can no longer cover anything up.
Our high school principal downplays all the violence at our school. When kids circulated a video of him trying to break up a pretty bad fight, his focus was on disciplining those kids who took the video.
One of the downsides of banning phones (other than kids not being able to get help during school shootings or communicate with parents) is that violent attacks are not documented. Without evidence, victims will never get any kind of justice and the crime stats will plummet. These principals do not want to deal with the issues and MCPS provides few, if any, resources anyway.
The principals know there is no help for them so they just downplay it all at this point.
Anonymous wrote:MCPS and police have signed an agreement to keep police out of schools. MCPS is their own kingdom. The Board of Education doesn’t want the bad publicity and the County Council agrees. Bad news impacts property values.