Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seriously, this is not your business.
I have had an ambulance called to school because my kid broke their arm in a freak accident. Other children’s medical situations are not the business of the entire community.
I disagree, in that there is a happy medium between protecting student privacy and still informing the community. My child has a serious chronic illness, and if one day a message goes out about her, I won't mind at all - I know it will not contain any private information about her disease. Given the heightened state of alert since the Wooton shooting, I think ambulances at any high school should be explained.
Any time something happens at any private or public school, there's always a post admonishing us to mind our business and saying that nothing should be discussed. I don't understand posters like this. The community needs to know a minimum amount of info to prevent rumors and wrong assumptions.
Ok, what if your child has a mental health issue and injured themselves? Would you be fine with that being shared with the community? I appreciate that there are some medical conditions where families might not care so much about privacy but you have to have a consistent set of rules or it doesn’t work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seriously, this is not your business.
I have had an ambulance called to school because my kid broke their arm in a freak accident. Other children’s medical situations are not the business of the entire community.
I disagree, in that there is a happy medium between protecting student privacy and still informing the community. My child has a serious chronic illness, and if one day a message goes out about her, I won't mind at all - I know it will not contain any private information about her disease. Given the heightened state of alert since the Wooton shooting, I think ambulances at any high school should be explained.
Any time something happens at any private or public school, there's always a post admonishing us to mind our business and saying that nothing should be discussed. I don't understand posters like this. The community needs to know a minimum amount of info to prevent rumors and wrong assumptions.
Anonymous wrote:Remember that time that MCPS senior leadership made up lies to smear a popular teacher at B-CC?
Why would anyone believe anything communicated by MCPS about B-CC?
Are we just guessing they’ve decided to be truth tellers now?
Anonymous wrote:It's hard to know if these are medical emergencies or covered up drug overdoses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seriously, this is not your business.
I have had an ambulance called to school because my kid broke their arm in a freak accident. Other children’s medical situations are not the business of the entire community.
I disagree, in that there is a happy medium between protecting student privacy and still informing the community. My child has a serious chronic illness, and if one day a message goes out about her, I won't mind at all - I know it will not contain any private information about her disease. Given the heightened state of alert since the Wooton shooting, I think ambulances at any high school should be explained.
Any time something happens at any private or public school, there's always a post admonishing us to mind our business and saying that nothing should be discussed. I don't understand posters like this. The community needs to know a minimum amount of info to prevent rumors and wrong assumptions.
Anonymous wrote:It's hard to know if these are medical emergencies or covered up drug overdoses.
Anonymous wrote:Seriously, this is not your business.
I have had an ambulance called to school because my kid broke their arm in a freak accident. Other children’s medical situations are not the business of the entire community.
Anonymous wrote:Where did Dr. Mooney go?
Anonymous wrote:Seriously, this is not your business.
I have had an ambulance called to school because my kid broke their arm in a freak accident. Other children’s medical situations are not the business of the entire community.