Anonymous wrote:When a student is physically attacked at school, what options do the student/parents have to proceed? File a police report? Bully report? Email principal? What about when the student who assaulted your child is in some of the same classes? What can we do to help prevent this from happening again?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of those avenues are open to you. I’d file an incident report with the school for sure. Whether the incident results in a bullying report depends on the presented facts. If its a serious attack, you could file a police report, and, depending on the age of the student and the substance of the claim, additional steps could be taken.
Please tread cautiously here. The consequences for the alleged assailant can be truly devastating.
Do you really want to ruin some poor child’s life over what will ultimately be a small bump in the road?
If someone attacks my kid at school, I am calling the police. If the alleged assailant was unprepared for consequences, they should not have attacked. This is nursery school content.
Define "attack"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of those avenues are open to you. I’d file an incident report with the school for sure. Whether the incident results in a bullying report depends on the presented facts. If its a serious attack, you could file a police report, and, depending on the age of the student and the substance of the claim, additional steps could be taken.
Please tread cautiously here. The consequences for the alleged assailant can be truly devastating.
Do you really want to ruin some poor child’s life over what will ultimately be a small bump in the road?
If someone attacks my kid at school, I am calling the police. If the alleged assailant was unprepared for consequences, they should not have attacked. This is nursery school content.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of those avenues are open to you. I’d file an incident report with the school for sure. Whether the incident results in a bullying report depends on the presented facts. If its a serious attack, you could file a police report, and, depending on the age of the student and the substance of the claim, additional steps could be taken.
Please tread cautiously here. The consequences for the alleged assailant can be truly devastating.
Do you really want to ruin some poor child’s life over what will ultimately be a small bump in the road?
Anonymous wrote:RJ is a joke. DD was assaulted on the school bus and the bully told her that if she tells anyone about it "you don't know what I'll do to you" We complained to the school. And the school made my daughter and the bully sit opposite each other, and my daughter had to tell the bully how she felt. Complete insanity. Luckily the bully moved to a different address and hence different school bus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it's bullying, ask if the school practices "restorative justice". If it does, the school may expose your child to the bully so make it clear you're seeking protection and will not authorize your child exposed to the bully. If it is a serious matter and your child has an injury as evidence, file a police report. I say this because victim-blaming is not uncommon, especially if you feel the school is trying to bury the matter. If the situation is getting out of hand, NEVER file a CFP (which MCPS will encourage you to do). Go straight to a lawyer for advice. Don't be afraid to consider court or file with the Maryland Inspector General.
Don’t listen to this stupid MAGA parent. She has no clue about the benefits of restorative justice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree with above post that nominal "restorative justice" is nothing like restorative justice as it's supposed to be practiced within communities.
These nominal practices can cause harm.
PhD psychologist here who worked in community setting with days-long restorative justice practices. Community leaders there were mentored, over time, by First Nations groups
I absolutely agree that RJ, as it is practiced in our schools, absolutely causes more harm than good. It’s so poorly implemented.
I’ve gotten to the point that I feel anger toward the RJ advocates, especially ones who don’t actually work in our schools. They haven’t seen the negative ways students respond to it, and how it can actually reinforce the behaviors it is supposed to mitigate.
Testify at a BOE meeting. Tell them how RJ, as it's currently implemented, is failing everyone. We need teachers to speak out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree with above post that nominal "restorative justice" is nothing like restorative justice as it's supposed to be practiced within communities.
These nominal practices can cause harm.
PhD psychologist here who worked in community setting with days-long restorative justice practices. Community leaders there were mentored, over time, by First Nations groups
I absolutely agree that RJ, as it is practiced in our schools, absolutely causes more harm than good. It’s so poorly implemented.
I’ve gotten to the point that I feel anger toward the RJ advocates, especially ones who don’t actually work in our schools. They haven’t seen the negative ways students respond to it, and how it can actually reinforce the behaviors it is supposed to mitigate.
Anonymous wrote:Agree with above post that nominal "restorative justice" is nothing like restorative justice as it's supposed to be practiced within communities.
These nominal practices can cause harm.
PhD psychologist here who worked in community setting with days-long restorative justice practices. Community leaders there were mentored, over time, by First Nations groups