Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. The attacking student wrote a note and asked another student to give it to DD the next morning. The main points of the note states that 1. NOT going to apologize, and 2. appreciate DD if not to tell anyone about the attack. By that time, we already e-mailed an attack report to the principle the night before.
I hope you gave this note to the principal as well.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. The attacking student wrote a note and asked another student to give it to DD the next morning. The main points of the note states that 1. NOT going to apologize, and 2. appreciate DD if not to tell anyone about the attack. By that time, we already e-mailed an attack report to the principle the night before.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You may not be entitled to the details of how the other child was disciplined, OP. The administration may only tell you "We handled it", and you'll have to accept that. Legally, there are things that schools cannot discuss with parents about children who are not their own.
OP here. I am OK with not being informed with the details of disciplinary action, as long as there is one. The kids would know about it, and eventually I would know. My concern is if the school doesn't give disciplinary action. It is not to punish for punishment. I hope the punishment will get the student to think twice before swinging her/his fist the next time the impulse takes charge. What is the next step if the school does not take action in a day or two?
Anonymous wrote:DD was physically attacked (some punches) by another student. It hurt but not to the point that leaves marks. We filed a complaint to the principle, the counselor, and the home room teachers. I hope they are sorting things out as I type. The attacking student did not apologize, and does not regret the action. What do MCPS elementary school's routine of handling situation like this?
Anonymous wrote:You may not be entitled to the details of how the other child was disciplined, OP. The administration may only tell you "We handled it", and you'll have to accept that. Legally, there are things that schools cannot discuss with parents about children who are not their own.
Anonymous wrote:Why can't kids fight like they used to?
This is creating such a bad situation and what causes the kids to go off the deep end and shoot the places up. nobody ever shot up a school back in the day. Let kids be kids, let the smart kids be smart, let the dumb ones be dumb, and let the cool kids be cool, and let the geeks be geeks. Stop trying to force everyone to get along. It is human nature to sort things out naturally like wild animals,
Anonymous wrote:Why can't kids fight like they used to?
This is creating such a bad situation and what causes the kids to go off the deep end and shoot the places up. nobody ever shot up a school back in the day. Let kids be kids, let the smart kids be smart, let the dumb ones be dumb, and let the cool kids be cool, and let the geeks be geeks. Stop trying to force everyone to get along. It is human nature to sort things out naturally like wild animals,
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks 11:07. I believe middle school handle these differently. DD is in elementary school. Student involved is 10-11 yo. The principle and the counselor talked with the attacking student yesterday, and there was no denied of the attack. However, I have not heard about disciplinary action so far. Is it recommended to wait for a day or two to let the school to act? If the school doesn't act, what is the next step?
Why can't kids fight like they used to?
This is creating such a bad situation and what causes the kids to go off the deep end and shoot the places up. nobody ever shot up a school back in the day. Let kids be kids, let the smart kids be smart, let the dumb ones be dumb, and let the cool kids be cool, and let the geeks be geeks. Stop trying to force everyone to get along. It is human nature to sort things out naturally like wild animals,