Anonymous wrote:Also teachers who have IPR or Plan period first class are being assigned metal detector monitoring. They are less than thrilled.
Anonymous wrote:This was fine at our high school last year. I don't get all of the hysteria.
Anonymous wrote:Every new school year, school bus operation is problematic in the first several weeks.This may cause more challenges for students to arrive the checkpoints early enough.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Westfield had huge delays in spring when they tried this AND it was when all the seniors were off campus.
They had two doors/two screeners total. Kids were an hour late to class every day.
The buses held kids on the bus until the pre-screening let-off time then they all got off at once and got in line. It made no sense.
The one police officer who directs the traffic for the whole school was pulled to assist.
I can't imagine what the lines will
Look like with 2700+ kids and two screeners.
PWC school have much lower populations and a lot more screeners.0
DD goes to Westfield. She said the screening added a couple of minutes to her delay. I dropped her off daily, and there were a couple of days maybe where the lines were long. The traffic cop wasn't pulled off to assist more than a handful of times. If your kid is telling you that the security screening made them an hour late to class, you need to have a chat with them about that.
This is false. unless you are dropping her ridiculously early to be number one in line.
Different poster and this is not false. People were not constantly late by an hour. Stop spreading misinformation. If anything, it was a couple of minutes (and only those that always waited til the very end to show up to school).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Westfield had huge delays in spring when they tried this AND it was when all the seniors were off campus.
They had two doors/two screeners total. Kids were an hour late to class every day.
The buses held kids on the bus until the pre-screening let-off time then they all got off at once and got in line. It made no sense.
The one police officer who directs the traffic for the whole school was pulled to assist.
I can't imagine what the lines will
Look like with 2700+ kids and two screeners.
PWC school have much lower populations and a lot more screeners.0
DD goes to Westfield. She said the screening added a couple of minutes to her delay. I dropped her off daily, and there were a couple of days maybe where the lines were long. The traffic cop wasn't pulled off to assist more than a handful of times. If your kid is telling you that the security screening made them an hour late to class, you need to have a chat with them about that.
This is false. unless you are dropping her ridiculously early to be number one in line.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In the world we live in we expect instant gratification. People, especially younger, don't know how to wait for things. Yes, there might be delays but as with anything new, there will be a transition time. I have heard from school staff and parents who are at schools who already have detectors, that it takes about a week or two for everyone to get used to them and then it moves quick. So why is everyone freaking out about our poor kids having to wait in line, instead of thinking of the bigger picture, now our kids will be safer!
Gatehouse is this you....my kid was constantly losing 30-45 minutes of instructional time in History class and he was there 20 mins early. Stop talking at people you sound dumb and like you are sitting behind a comfy desk trying to make it all seem ok.
Nope I’m a parent like you with common sense. Are you talking about last year because of course they didn’t have a full fleet of metal detectors, they were testing it out. Highly doubt it took your son an hour to get through.