Anonymous wrote:I haven't heard anyone on this thread defend students who send inappropriate texts. Everyone agrees that kids should not do this.
The problem many posters have with this message is that he focused on himself when there is a much larger cyber bullying problem within MCPS. He doesn't take the time to do anything about this. He doesn't take the time to inform parents about the sex offenders that were caught in MCPS. Its just a continued pattern of constantly being focused on promoting himself and not doing work to actually run MCPS.
Its also bothersome that his PR team spends time posting stuff on this board and giving themselves fake posts in praise. Their time could be much better spent.
Anonymous wrote:I haven't heard anyone on this thread defend students who send inappropriate texts. Everyone agrees that kids should not do this.
The problem many posters have with this message is that he focused on himself when there is a much larger cyber bullying problem within MCPS. He doesn't take the time to do anything about this. He doesn't take the time to inform parents about the sex offenders that were caught in MCPS. Its just a continued pattern of constantly being focused on promoting himself and not doing work to actually run MCPS.
Its also bothersome that his PR team spends time posting stuff on this board and giving themselves fake posts in praise. Their time could be much better spent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not a fan of Starr, but I hope as parents we can all agree that threats etc are totally not ok. I trust his response if it addresses posts he was the target of. He's got a tough job. He makes not perfect decisions, but at the end of the day we're all just people and parents and regular folks who want to feel safe.
Agree. He has three young kids. Completely disrespectful and out of line.
Anonymous wrote:What I find offputting is that cyberbullying among students doesn't seem to have gotten Starr's attention, but when criticism is directed at him he suddenly makes it a priority for all parents and students. It just reinforces my sense that he wants to be treated like Dear Leader and surrounds himself with sycophants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Huge mistake not to anticipate this BEFORE willingly putting himself out there. Now we sound the alarm and start a task force. How about he start with ensuring that digital civility extends beyond protecting the royal office. Many students have been victimized by cyber bullying. The letter focused on him, not about the larger issue at hand, and the cyber bullying that continues on a daily basis.
Stop playing the victim, hon.
The school system does indeed address it in the best way possible - especially at the high school level. But it starts in elementary school.
However, it's YOUR job as a parent to do the bulk of the work. So if your little Suzie Q is on her cell or online for hours and you're not vigilant, is it the system's fault if she's bullied?
I can't believe how so many of you refuse to be parents. Is it just TOO hard for you to handle? so hard, in fact, that you expect US to do it for you?
Signed,
a parent (first) and teacher
Those types of parents will never get it; too busy having a finger-pointing response from "snowflake syndrome."
Here come the MCPS snowflake posters. Anything good the students do is all about hardworking teachers and administrators. Any problem or issue is all about those awful parents that just don't get it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Huge mistake not to anticipate this BEFORE willingly putting himself out there. Now we sound the alarm and start a task force. How about he start with ensuring that digital civility extends beyond protecting the royal office. Many students have been victimized by cyber bullying. The letter focused on him, not about the larger issue at hand, and the cyber bullying that continues on a daily basis.
That is ridiculous. I'm not a big fan of Starr by any means, but you seem to be saying that he put himself out there and so deserved these threats?
No. There is NO EXCUSE for a bunch of high school kids threatening anyone's family. He has three kids. That is out of line.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Huge mistake not to anticipate this BEFORE willingly putting himself out there. Now we sound the alarm and start a task force. How about he start with ensuring that digital civility extends beyond protecting the royal office. Many students have been victimized by cyber bullying. The letter focused on him, not about the larger issue at hand, and the cyber bullying that continues on a daily basis.
Stop playing the victim, hon.
The school system does indeed address it in the best way possible - especially at the high school level. But it starts in elementary school.
However, it's YOUR job as a parent to do the bulk of the work. So if your little Suzie Q is on her cell or online for hours and you're not vigilant, is it the system's fault if she's bullied?
I can't believe how so many of you refuse to be parents. Is it just TOO hard for you to handle? so hard, in fact, that you expect US to do it for you?
Signed,
a parent (first) and teacher
Those types of parents will never get it; too busy having a finger-pointing response from "snowflake syndrome."
Here come the MCPS snowflake posters. Anything good the students do is all about hardworking teachers and administrators. Any problem or issue is all about those awful parents that just don't get it.
Anonymous wrote:What I find offputting is that cyberbullying among students doesn't seem to have gotten Starr's attention, but when criticism is directed at him he suddenly makes it a priority for all parents and students. It just reinforces my sense that he wants to be treated like Dear Leader and surrounds himself with sycophants.