Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think there are a lot of interesting questions about what private schools owe their students? ethically, and the ways in which their rhetoric and reality are not aligned.
That said I thought the article was pretty irresponsible. It was heartbreaking and I get why they ran it, but I don’t think it was the right call.
The school blew it on the article. Just blew it so badly that I can’t even believe it. How could a school so rich be so bad at PR? It’s shocking.
What are you talking about ?
The article is not a school public relations (PR) piece.
Elite schools are not a substitute for professional counseling by a certified, licensed therapist.
My impression is that the parents were in denial and failed to get the proper, needed counseling for their son and now want to blame the son's suicide on a school that he left 3 months before. The parent's probably thought that the prestigious school would settle rather than endure bad publicity. It looks like the parents are at fault, not the school.
The school had a chance to comment. They had a chance to express a sense of responsibility without culpability. A kid who was in their care is dead. They come across as cold and unfeeling. They blew it, from a communications perspective.
The school did the right thing by not commenting on an issue that is in litigation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think there are a lot of interesting questions about what private schools owe their students? ethically, and the ways in which their rhetoric and reality are not aligned.
That said I thought the article was pretty irresponsible. It was heartbreaking and I get why they ran it, but I don’t think it was the right call.
The school blew it on the article. Just blew it so badly that I can’t even believe it. How could a school so rich be so bad at PR? It’s shocking.
What are you talking about ?
The article is not a school public relations (PR) piece.
Elite schools are not a substitute for professional counseling by a certified, licensed therapist.
My impression is that the parents were in denial and failed to get the proper, needed counseling for their son and now want to blame the son's suicide on a school that he left 3 months before. The parent's probably thought that the prestigious school would settle rather than endure bad publicity. It looks like the parents are at fault, not the school.
The school had a chance to comment. They had a chance to express a sense of responsibility without culpability. A kid who was in their care is dead. They come across as cold and unfeeling. They blew it, from a communications perspective.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think there are a lot of interesting questions about what private schools owe their students? ethically, and the ways in which their rhetoric and reality are not aligned.
That said I thought the article was pretty irresponsible. It was heartbreaking and I get why they ran it, but I don’t think it was the right call.
The school blew it on the article. Just blew it so badly that I can’t even believe it. How could a school so rich be so bad at PR? It’s shocking.
What are you talking about ?
The article is not a school public relations (PR) piece.
Elite schools are not a substitute for professional counseling by a certified, licensed therapist.
My impression is that the parents were in denial and failed to get the proper, needed counseling for their son and now want to blame the son's suicide on a school that he left 3 months before. The parent's probably thought that the prestigious school would settle rather than endure bad publicity. It looks like the parents are at fault, not the school.
The school had a chance to comment. They had a chance to express a sense of responsibility without culpability. A kid who was in their care is dead. They come across as cold and unfeeling. They blew it, from a communications perspective.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think there are a lot of interesting questions about what private schools owe their students? ethically, and the ways in which their rhetoric and reality are not aligned.
That said I thought the article was pretty irresponsible. It was heartbreaking and I get why they ran it, but I don’t think it was the right call.
The school blew it on the article. Just blew it so badly that I can’t even believe it. How could a school so rich be so bad at PR? It’s shocking.
What are you talking about ?
The article is not a school public relations (PR) piece.
Elite schools are not a substitute for professional counseling by a certified, licensed therapist.
My impression is that the parents were in denial and failed to get the proper, needed counseling for their son and now want to blame the son's suicide on a school that he left 3 months before. The parent's probably thought that the prestigious school would settle rather than endure bad publicity. It looks like the parents are at fault, not the school.
Anonymous wrote:Incredibly sad story. Despite it being the Great Read I felt like there was a lot left out. It seems like the school had been trying to counsel the student out for awhile. It is sad that the parents and school couldn’t work together to identify a more appropriate option and encourage the boy that he could have a good experience there. Suicide is impulsive though so it is very hard to draw a straight line between his dismissal and death, especially when other things like COVID were going on. Mainly it is just tremendously sad.
Anonymous wrote:This seems like a tragic case of misplaced grief. The school is damned if they do/don’t. If they kept him on and he starts failing all classes he’s obviously going to struggle mentally as well. I think the parents feel massive guilt and need to find someone to blame. It’s a tragic situation but I dont think a school can be expected to convert itself to one that caters to special needs because of a single student. There are multiple privates that support kids with learning disabilities that he could have thrived at.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a terrible tragedy and I feel for the parents but don’t understand why they insisted on keeping him at the school after the school told them years earlier that it couldn’t accommodate him. It seems like in their grief they are looking for someone to blame.
They also kept their older son at the school even after the tragedy happened. No way in the world would I not be pulling my kid immediately.
Anonymous wrote:This seems like a tragic case of misplaced grief. The school is damned if they do/don’t. If they kept him on and he starts failing all classes he’s obviously going to struggle mentally as well. I think the parents feel massive guilt and need to find someone to blame. It’s a tragic situation but I dont think a school can be expected to convert itself to one that caters to special needs because of a single student. There are multiple privates that support kids with learning disabilities that he could have thrived at.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a terrible tragedy and I feel for the parents but don’t understand why they insisted on keeping him at the school after the school told them years earlier that it couldn’t accommodate him. It seems like in their grief they are looking for someone to blame.
They also kept their older son at the school even after the tragedy happened. No way in the world would I not be pulling my kid immediately.
Anonymous wrote:It’s a terrible tragedy and I feel for the parents but don’t understand why they insisted on keeping him at the school after the school told them years earlier that it couldn’t accommodate him. It seems like in their grief they are looking for someone to blame.