Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have drilled into my children that they are not to share food or take food from ANYONE, not even their best friends or teachers.
I have too. And then my kid had a terrible headache last week and took something from a friend. I got her some tylenol to keep in her bag along with some protein bars just in case. It can happen to any of us though.
This is against MCPS policy and she could get in trouble if she gets caught taking painkillers at school, FYI.
Ooooh
Then what?
Nothing
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have drilled into my children that they are not to share food or take food from ANYONE, not even their best friends or teachers.
I have too. And then my kid had a terrible headache last week and took something from a friend. I got her some tylenol to keep in her bag along with some protein bars just in case. It can happen to any of us though.
This is against MCPS policy and she could get in trouble if she gets caught taking painkillers at school, FYI.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have drilled into my children that they are not to share food or take food from ANYONE, not even their best friends or teachers.
I have too. And then my kid had a terrible headache last week and took something from a friend. I got her some tylenol to keep in her bag along with some protein bars just in case. It can happen to any of us though.
Anonymous wrote:I have drilled into my children that they are not to share food or take food from ANYONE, not even their best friends or teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s the new normal OP.
I dunno what happened with Covid, I’m not a psychologist but our kids are a lot more violent and have less social skills than they did pre Covid.
People need to stop blaming Covid. This was happening well before Covid. This has been happening because school districts have made the calculated decision that discipline is not important. There are no consequences for poor or violent behavior. Why would student's behave if they don't have to? Administrators are penalized for suspending students, expelling students or even encouraging detentions. These punishments used to keep schools running much better and allowed students that actually want to learn with that opportunity. Since many parents do not care about the behavior of their children, teachers are put in an impossible situation. It will take a major overhaul in the education system to change the state of the schools today.
Anonymous wrote:There have been incidents of this type since I was in middle school at all schools. Including private. Including all SES. The difference is they didn’t have parents gossiping about it like drama queens all over parent listservs and dcum.
This was a one off incident involving a few immature and impulsive kids who made a poor choice. It’s not indicative of a pervasive drug ring at this particular school. The administrators are super responsive and are on it. They also don’t owe the curious parents whose kids were not involved a full accounting of every discipline issue that crosses their desks. MYOB. Instead of gossiping and wondering if it’s normal, I suggest parents spend more time making sure kids don’t have access to that which y’all voted to legalize and instructing their own children on the fact that these gummies or edibles exist and never to ingest anything other friends offer you of that ilk, especially not at school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rich kids behaving badly...
+100
Anonymous wrote:Love the irony of PP coming to DCUM to complain about parents complaining on DCUM.
Anonymous wrote:Rich kids behaving badly...
Anonymous wrote:Rich kids behaving badly...
Anonymous wrote:It’s the new normal OP.
I dunno what happened with Covid, I’m not a psychologist but our kids are a lot more violent and have less social skills than they did pre Covid.