Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:School is very dangerous and becoming more so each month
Kids at Churchill are wielding knives this week. Next week it's MS13!
Nope, we'll keep our MS13. Right now they are less violent than the the Churchill kids.
The incident was handled properly and well by the Churchill Principal, school security, and the police; and without SRO's.
Instead of complimenting their work, you write this drivel?
Take a seat, clown.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:School is very dangerous and becoming more so each month
Kids at Churchill are wielding knives this week. Next week it's MS13!
Nope, we'll keep our MS13. Right now they are less violent than the the Churchill kids.
Anonymous wrote:Dd reported that at yesterday's pep rally kids were just up and leaving the school in huge numbers. I asked why teachers didn't stop them and she said that teachers directed them back to the stadium, but these were hoards of kids and the teachers couldn't do anything about it in such large numbers.
Sounds like Churchill needs to be handing out much stricter consequences. I don't care if kids attend pep rallies, but if they are simply ignoring teachers' directions during a normal school day, then there ought to be a penalty-- preferably a stiff one so the kids start respecting authority.
Anonymous wrote:Dd reported that at yesterday's pep rally kids were just up and leaving the school in huge numbers. I asked why teachers didn't stop them and she said that teachers directed them back to the stadium, but these were hoards of kids and the teachers couldn't do anything about it in such large numbers.
Sounds like Churchill needs to be handing out much stricter consequences. I don't care if kids attend pep rallies, but if they are simply ignoring teachers' directions during a normal school day, then there ought to be a penalty-- preferably a stiff one so the kids start respecting authority.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Haha, kids have been sneaking out of pep rally’s for years. My son and his friends used to do it all the time —- but was harder because it was indoors. Pep rally’s can be insufferable.
It's in a closed stadium. So teachers would just need to escort kids into the stadium. And any kid leaving the stadium would have to 'check out' before they left.
And there are lots of things about school that are insufferable. That doesn't mean kids get to do whatever they want.
Anonymous wrote:Haha, kids have been sneaking out of pep rally’s for years. My son and his friends used to do it all the time —- but was harder because it was indoors. Pep rally’s can be insufferable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dd reported that at yesterday's pep rally kids were just up and leaving the school in huge numbers. I asked why teachers didn't stop them and she said that teachers directed them back to the stadium, but these were hoards of kids and the teachers couldn't do anything about it in such large numbers.
Sounds like Churchill needs to be handing out much stricter consequences. I don't care if kids attend pep rallies, but if they are simply ignoring teachers' directions during a normal school day, then there ought to be a penalty-- preferably a stiff one so the kids start respecting authority.
Should the Pep Rally be a mandatory event? Some students just aren’t that into school spirit. There’s a lot of students who are disconnected especially after the 18 months of online learning.
If you want enforcement, teachers will have to take attendance and attend with a class. Students will still skip but they will be charged the unexcused absence.
Anonymous wrote:Dd reported that at yesterday's pep rally kids were just up and leaving the school in huge numbers. I asked why teachers didn't stop them and she said that teachers directed them back to the stadium, but these were hoards of kids and the teachers couldn't do anything about it in such large numbers.
Sounds like Churchill needs to be handing out much stricter consequences. I don't care if kids attend pep rallies, but if they are simply ignoring teachers' directions during a normal school day, then there ought to be a penalty-- preferably a stiff one so the kids start respecting authority.
Anonymous wrote:Knife wielding student at WJ today, too, apparently. Off campus during lunch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids goes Churchill it happened 11:35 and school started 11:30 everyone was inside. It was a Whitman kid who causes the trouble not a Churchill kid.
Sounds like it was both a Whitman and Churchill kid if the Whitman kid came to Churchill. Wow, really, someone needs to get a handle on those W schools.
Anonymous wrote:I don't want another damn thing on DCUM about how dangerous Gaithersburg, Watkins Mill, or Seneca Valley are. The fact is, there are troubled kids at every school, and things that happen at every school. Some have been more successful at keeping them quiet until recently, though.