Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - that is what happened because that is what the teacher emailed me. She did not even bother talking with my kid she just emailed me and said she has a detention. I am not excusing any behavior or questioning consequences I just want to know if this is "reportable" when the discipline question is so vaguely worded on some applications and no it does not go on transcript.
I asked above but you didn't answer. Why would she leave class early to look at posters in the hall?
Anonymous wrote:OP here - that is what happened because that is what the teacher emailed me. She did not even bother talking with my kid she just emailed me and said she has a detention. I am not excusing any behavior or questioning consequences I just want to know if this is "reportable" when the discipline question is so vaguely worded on some applications and no it does not go on transcript.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - that is what happened because that is what the teacher emailed me. She did not even bother talking with my kid she just emailed me and said she has a detention. I am not excusing any behavior or questioning consequences I just want to know if this is "reportable" when the discipline question is so vaguely worded on some applications and no it does not go on transcript.
How could she talk with your kid if your kid left class before it ended?
She never did speak with my daughter. I just got an email after school ended telling me the teachers version of the story and the resulting punishment. She still has yet to speak directly with my daughter about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - that is what happened because that is what the teacher emailed me. She did not even bother talking with my kid she just emailed me and said she has a detention. I am not excusing any behavior or questioning consequences I just want to know if this is "reportable" when the discipline question is so vaguely worded on some applications and no it does not go on transcript.
How could she talk with your kid if your kid left class before it ended?
Anonymous wrote:OP here - that is what happened because that is what the teacher emailed me. She did not even bother talking with my kid she just emailed me and said she has a detention. I am not excusing any behavior or questioning consequences I just want to know if this is "reportable" when the discipline question is so vaguely worded on some applications and no it does not go on transcript.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Appeal. This is BS.
Insist on a meeting, and at that meeting make it clear that you intend to escalate this issue to the cluster principal if it does not go away. Implicate that you intend to ask whether the discipline was consistent with past practice at the school, and in particular if a boy would have received the same treatment.
Be open to a lesser disciplinary consequence, because your goal is to make this go away.
I can't answer your question, but I would fight the detention - what a ridiculous teacher.
It does if it goes on her transcript. If it does, and if she’s in public school, you have appeal rights which can extend for a long time if you really drag it out and make it as painful as you can for the school and the teacher. If it’s still under appeal when she graduates, then no need to report
Am I the only one who sees the connection between these responses and the other threads about how MCPS is going down the toilet /teachers have low morale because students lack discipline?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter got a detention today for leaving class 2 minutes before the dismissal bell, she was out in the hall looking at posters. Does this need to be reported as a disciplinary action? Last semester as a senior.
Is your understanding of what happened based solely on your child’s explanation?
+1 Do you all believe everything that comes out of your kid's mouth at first pass? Because I find that kids tend to emphasize/deemphasize as needed to support the most positive outcome for themselves. And that's not even including the kids who will flat out lie to CYA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter got a detention today for leaving class 2 minutes before the dismissal bell, she was out in the hall looking at posters. Does this need to be reported as a disciplinary action? Last semester as a senior.
Is your understanding of what happened based solely on your child’s explanation?
Anonymous wrote:Appeal. This is BS.
Insist on a meeting, and at that meeting make it clear that you intend to escalate this issue to the cluster principal if it does not go away. Implicate that you intend to ask whether the discipline was consistent with past practice at the school, and in particular if a boy would have received the same treatment.
Be open to a lesser disciplinary consequence, because your goal is to make this go away.
I can't answer your question, but I would fight the detention - what a ridiculous teacher.
It does if it goes on her transcript. If it does, and if she’s in public school, you have appeal rights which can extend for a long time if you really drag it out and make it as painful as you can for the school and the teacher. If it’s still under appeal when she graduates, then no need to report
Anonymous wrote:My daughter got a detention today for leaving class 2 minutes before the dismissal bell, she was out in the hall looking at posters. Does this need to be reported as a disciplinary action? Last semester as a senior.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I got in three fist fights in high school and in one of them, sent a boy to the hospital. I happily skipped along to college no problem.
You sound like a jerk, who is still “happy” about his delinquency.
What a shame.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter got a detention today for leaving class 2 minutes before the dismissal bell, she was out in the hall looking at posters. Does this need to be reported as a disciplinary action? Last semester as a senior.
Assuming this is a serious question, NO! I've known kids that were caught sharing answers for tests get away with no consequences.