Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MCPS waits till the police make an arrest before they will take any action. There is no effort to protect children from abuse even when something agregious as kissing a student occurs. My child said the kiss was on the forehead, so it is probably not a criminal offense, but it definitely crosses the line of professionalism expected of teachers.
So predators roam freely?
Anonymous wrote:MCPS waits till the police make an arrest before they will take any action. There is no effort to protect children from abuse even when something agregious as kissing a student occurs. My child said the kiss was on the forehead, so it is probably not a criminal offense, but it definitely crosses the line of professionalism expected of teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a disaster. And so scary for the kids - DD came home crying. She has that teacher!
Yikes.
I’m shocked they’d sweep this under the rug. The safety of students is at stake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a disaster. And so scary for the kids - DD came home crying. She has that teacher!
Yikes.
Anonymous wrote:What a disaster. And so scary for the kids - DD came home crying. She has that teacher!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That principal was replaced. The new one hasn’t even been there a year!
Churchill has both a new principal and a new school director. The new director was an elementary school principal so fixing high school problems is not his strong suit. They both are nice but ineffective in implementing change or knowing what to do.
MCPS doesn't care about fixing Churchill because of the high test scores. It doesn't matter how many times Churchill hits the news for racist activities, how many times an ambulance is called for a drug overdose, or how many times inappropriate behavior of staff is reported. It's easier to ignore problems than fixing them.
Regardless, of what the county, the principal and other admin are probably taking these things seriously. It's a matter of decency. They must feel an obligation to the kids to do better.