\Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You all should try Hardy. I know that lots of you will jump in with Hardy hate, but it is a warm, welcoming bully-free zone. Principal Pride and the admin team do a fantastic job of getting all the kids working together and supporting each other.
According to the statistics Hardy has a 20% suspension rate... guess that is how they deal with issues... send the kids home
Actually it's 9.8% at Hardy.
Since someone will ask, it's 3.1 at Deal.
Both are well below the DCPS rate of 21%.
From learndc.org.
What does a 10% suspension rate mean? 1 in 10 kids have been suspended for at least a day that year? That's pretty scary of 10% of kids are misbehaving so badly as to get suspended.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You all should try Hardy. I know that lots of you will jump in with Hardy hate, but it is a warm, welcoming bully-free zone. Principal Pride and the admin team do a fantastic job of getting all the kids working together and supporting each other.
According to the statistics Hardy has a 20% suspension rate... guess that is how they deal with issues... send the kids home
Actually it's 9.8% at Hardy.
Since someone will ask, it's 3.1 at Deal.
Both are well below the DCPS rate of 21%.
From learndc.org.
What does a 10% suspension rate mean? 1 in 10 kids have been suspended for at least a day that year? That's pretty scary of 10% of kids are misbehaving so badly as to get suspended.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You all should try Hardy. I know that lots of you will jump in with Hardy hate, but it is a warm, welcoming bully-free zone. Principal Pride and the admin team do a fantastic job of getting all the kids working together and supporting each other.
According to the statistics Hardy has a 20% suspension rate... guess that is how they deal with issues... send the kids home
Actually it's 9.8% at Hardy.
Since someone will ask, it's 3.1 at Deal.
Both are well below the DCPS rate of 21%.
From learndc.org.
Anonymous wrote:A++ trolling
Anonymous wrote:Yes have noticed increase in bullying. Yes kids think if they complain and bully is a minority that will impact school response. Perhaps not true. But perception among kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You all should try Hardy. I know that lots of you will jump in with Hardy hate, but it is a warm, welcoming bully-free zone. Principal Pride and the admin team do a fantastic job of getting all the kids working together and supporting each other.
According to the statistics Hardy has a 20% suspension rate... guess that is how they deal with issues... send the kids home
Anonymous wrote:You all should try Hardy. I know that lots of you will jump in with Hardy hate, but it is a warm, welcoming bully-free zone. Principal Pride and the admin team do a fantastic job of getting all the kids working together and supporting each other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:First, classroom management. Bullying only survives with an audience.
You can't have classroom management if there is no discipline conning from the top. No suspensions is ridiculous. Frankly, there need to be military sargeants enlisted to scare these student straight
Anonymous wrote:First, classroom management. Bullying only survives with an audience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yep.
Just speaking from experience, but there is a kid in my son's grade that came from a charter and is an absolute monster. Just loud, pushy, physically violent, and unable to keep up at grade level. He seriously has mental and emotional issues and despite the fact I have personally brought it up with the teachers.
They also are racist. It was heavily implied that the reason they refused to intervene or call the cops (which was 100% appropriate) was because the bully was Black and they didnt want to stir the pot.
Luckily DS will be going to a private school for seventh grade where discipline is taken very seriously and such trouble makers would certainly not be able to get in.
Speaking of racist (and classist)![]()