Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher and personally, I’ve worked with good SRO’s (or at least not bad ones) but I can’t lie, I hate the optics of having a COP in our school. It just sucks. We aren’t a prison. We don’t need LEO there and it is deeply uncomfortable for some kids. I agree they shouldn’t be in schools.
Why is there no middle ground or more creative thinking than yes SROs or no SROs? Why do SROs have to be in full police uniform (though i believe SROs can serve to build relationsihps and trust between students and the police)? If the uniform is so intimidating, make them plain clothes officers. Give them some roles in the school that foster a positive image and foster positive relationships with the kids, especialy the at-risk kids (helping out in classrooms, an after-school club, helping out in PE classes, whatever.
My 13 y/o daughter brought this topic up recently and she thinks it's stupid to get rid of them.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher and personally, I’ve worked with good SRO’s (or at least not bad ones) but I can’t lie, I hate the optics of having a COP in our school. It just sucks. We aren’t a prison. We don’t need LEO there and it is deeply uncomfortable for some kids. I agree they shouldn’t be in schools.
Anonymous wrote:All these people talking about a school to prison pipeline, should be aware that TrayVon Martin should have been in jail when he was shot, except the school had a special program in place to end the school to prison pipeline.
The superintendent won a major national award, and a similar plan was done in a neighboring district. Another kid who should have been in jail, because they were trying to avoid the school to prison pipeline, was instead merely expelled/suspended, and he ended up shooting people at Parkland High School.
Anonymous wrote:The above poster seems only to have seen the uniform, which is exactly the type of intolerance that we're supposed to be working against. It reflects poorly on all adults in our school community when someone spouts that type of bias to children.
The students at our school respect our SRO and appreciate the SRO's presence in our building. As another poster pointed out, students are worried about violence against them by an outsider and the students find the presence of an SRO reassuring and calming.
Anonymous wrote:The above poster seems only to have seen the uniform, which is exactly the type of intolerance that we're supposed to be working against. It reflects poorly on all adults in our school community when someone spouts that type of bias to children.
The students at our school respect our SRO and appreciate the SRO's presence in our building. As another poster pointed out, students are worried about violence against them by an outsider and the students find the presence of an SRO reassuring and calming.
Anonymous wrote:This is a big mistake....SROs help students who are being cyberbullied and are the victims of theft from other students. And, (800-pound elephant in the room) if there was a shooting, you would want them there.