Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dear OP - is there some kind of a student honor council in your school, where people are brought to for cheating? I could file a complaint there after informing the coach that you intend to pursue that route. Copy the school principal and the assistant principal on the letter of complaint which should include all the emails as well as what your daughter was told in person. You should interview your daughter about the sequence of events, and save it in a dated e-stamped document, to make contemporaneous testimony.
Save this post, too. It is timed and dated.
I would, without a doubt, encourage your daughter to quit the team. If the school does the right thing, the team should be disbanded for the season anyway after this event is made public, or at least the JV should be. The two girls who organized the prank should be made ineligible for school sports, with a note on their transcripts. I would not accept anything less as a parent. If those or similar terms are not met, I would contact the news media .
Also, do not hesitate to contact the celebrity athlete in question. I would fully expect that he or she would want to vindicate the situation.
This is over the top and vindictive. Yes, it was horribly cruel, but the girls involved are nonetheless kids without fully developed brains. It’s one thing to bench them from a few games and another to try to keep them out of college.
Anonymous wrote:A one off mean prank isn’t bullying unless there is a pattern or history behind it.
I’m not sure what you think the school will be able to do about something that occurred off school grounds at a private event.
Your best bet is talking to the girls’ parents. They were probably told that she was busy or sick or something.
Anonymous wrote:I can’t believe so many people are calling this bullying. This is why a lot of people don’t even take the term seriously anymore.
Look, kids do stupid sh*t. They do pranks. I’ve pranked people and I’ve been pranked. At their age they really don’t necessarily understand how a spur of the moment dreamed up joke-prank could be really hurtful but it’s not bullying. They aren’t thinking of the future feelings your daughter would feel. Teens don’t think ahead like that; it’s science. I mean come on. What are we teaching our kids? Every time they get hurt feelings let’s run to mommy who’s going to call everyone within a 20 mile radius?
You’re going to make her look stupid twice getting all these people involved. That is the honest to god truth. I agree with the posters that the best thing to do is laugh it off and rise above. I’ve been on teams were the other girls went I. My bag and did things with my underwear—like that’s humiliating for a preteen/teenage girl!! I didn’t cry to my mom and I sure as sh*t didn’t get the school involved. I laughed about it even though I was really embarrassed. I wasn’t excluded after that. I was still friends with the girls. I am still friends with them 20+ years later.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The scale of the cruelty (massive) does not determine the scale of your parental reaction. The coach should kick the instigators off the team. But there's nothing you can do. You need the other adults in this equation to mete out the punishment (which should be massive too).
A coach at a public school won’t be able to punish them for behavior that occurred at a non school event. Not sure if OP’s kid is in private.
Of course, the coach can! Behavior outside of school can definitely impact students' ability to participate in school extra-curriculars. Where have you been?
Only when it’s illegal (like underaged drinking).
I’m a teacher and I’ve heard of stories like this brought to school (cases of bullying though I don’t think this qualifies unless there is a pattern here) and there was nothing the school could do. They can only punish kids for behavior that occurs at school or on school grounds.
Anonymous wrote:A one off mean prank isn’t bullying unless there is a pattern or history behind it.
I’m not sure what you think the school will be able to do about something that occurred off school grounds at a private event.
Your best bet is talking to the girls’ parents. They were probably told that she was busy or sick or something.
Anonymous wrote:Dear OP - is there some kind of a student honor council in your school, where people are brought to for cheating? I could file a complaint there after informing the coach that you intend to pursue that route. Copy the school principal and the assistant principal on the letter of complaint which should include all the emails as well as what your daughter was told in person. You should interview your daughter about the sequence of events, and save it in a dated e-stamped document, to make contemporaneous testimony.
Save this post, too. It is timed and dated.
I would, without a doubt, encourage your daughter to quit the team. If the school does the right thing, the team should be disbanded for the season anyway after this event is made public, or at least the JV should be. The two girls who organized the prank should be made ineligible for school sports, with a note on their transcripts. I would not accept anything less as a parent. If those or similar terms are not met, I would contact the news media .
Also, do not hesitate to contact the celebrity athlete in question. I would fully expect that he or she would want to vindicate the situation.
Anonymous wrote:This is bizarre, I am guessing there was drama between your daughter and other girls on the team well before this event. Who knows what the dynamics were but obviously your daughter was targeted for a reason. In addition, everyone else on team was okay with her not coming either. She must have already been on the periphery of the group. I am curious about what she meant by them being her friends - maybe they were more just teammates. This wasn't a prank...what is the prank part? This was them being catty and mean and not inviting her to a fun event. It isn't bullying either by definition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The scale of the cruelty (massive) does not determine the scale of your parental reaction. The coach should kick the instigators off the team. But there's nothing you can do. You need the other adults in this equation to mete out the punishment (which should be massive too).
A coach at a public school won’t be able to punish them for behavior that occurred at a non school event. Not sure if OP’s kid is in private.
Of course, the coach can! Behavior outside of school can definitely impact students' ability to participate in school extra-curriculars. Where have you been?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The scale of the cruelty (massive) does not determine the scale of your parental reaction. The coach should kick the instigators off the team. But there's nothing you can do. You need the other adults in this equation to mete out the punishment (which should be massive too).
A coach at a public school won’t be able to punish them for behavior that occurred at a non school event. Not sure if OP’s kid is in private.