Anonymous wrote:Once more:
If schools aren't going to ensure 100% accountability and responsibility, give me the $ Richmond sends per pupil, and I'll go private.
One time incidents, like this, are one too many!
Anonymous wrote:Once more:
Do you keep your doors at home bolted so that your child cannot get out. Do you never go water the plants and leave your child inside? Do you never take a shower and leave your kid watching television? Do you expect your child to walk away while you are doing those things?
This child did not wander off the playground. At least, that is not what the father said. He said the child came out of the bathroom and he didn't know where the class was. That is BS.
And, if they were on the playground, you cannot possibly keep each child in full view all the time. Kids come up and ask questions, etc. A teacher might be handling an altercation. Handing out jump ropes, etc.
I've stated this before: I taught for years and I never had a child run away--and I taught lots of kids with "issues". Even a Kindergarten child knows better than to leave--that is, unless he is some type of special needs child. No one has said this kid had special needs.
This is a case of something that should never have happened----but preventable? If a kid has decided to pull something like this, there are lots of opportunities.
Anonymous wrote:Once more:
If schools aren't going to ensure 100% accountability and responsibility, give me the $ Richmond sends per pupil, and I'll go private.
One time incidents, like this, are one too many!
Anonymous wrote:About a mile!
Teachers should have stations outside; places where they must monitor. No iPhones, no chatting. Supervise, you're not on break!
The teacher should be fired!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I saw the NBC 4 article but I think the kid lied to the dad. In kindergarten the bathrooms are in the classroom, and I doubt the whole class would just leave while he was in the bathroom. Even if they did, the child would know the schedule and where the playground/etc. were by then.
To further clarify for the PP who asked what was said on television--the excuse was that the kid came back from the bathroom and his classroom was empty. He thought school was over or something. Somehow, I think this smells--and FWIW, I taught school. Unless this kid is extremely disabled, he would know where the class was. Pretty sure the kid knew what he was doing. This was not the beginning of the year.
London Towne parent here. My child is at this school and the kids don't use the hallway bathrooms in K. If they do (at specials or whatever) they go in pairs. The back door also opens up near the playground, where the kids have recess.
I'm not blaming the kid, he is 6, but what is being said does not make sense.
My K student is in this boy's class. Recess is at 11 am and lunch is immediately afterwards. There is no way this boy would have thought school is over. What is strange is that the classroom is right next to the principals office and if he was lost I am not sure why he would not have gone to the office to let an adult know. He is not disabled and is in the classroom with my child all day. Hopefully proper protocols will be in place to ensure that all kids are accounted for
I don't think it's wise to put on the net such specific details of a classroom's schedule.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I saw the NBC 4 article but I think the kid lied to the dad. In kindergarten the bathrooms are in the classroom, and I doubt the whole class would just leave while he was in the bathroom. Even if they did, the child would know the schedule and where the playground/etc. were by then.
To further clarify for the PP who asked what was said on television--the excuse was that the kid came back from the bathroom and his classroom was empty. He thought school was over or something. Somehow, I think this smells--and FWIW, I taught school. Unless this kid is extremely disabled, he would know where the class was. Pretty sure the kid knew what he was doing. This was not the beginning of the year.
London Towne parent here. My child is at this school and the kids don't use the hallway bathrooms in K. If they do (at specials or whatever) they go in pairs. The back door also opens up near the playground, where the kids have recess.
I'm not blaming the kid, he is 6, but what is being said does not make sense.
My K student is in this boy's class. Recess is at 11 am and lunch is immediately afterwards. There is no way this boy would have thought school is over. What is strange is that the classroom is right next to the principals office and if he was lost I am not sure why he would not have gone to the office to let an adult know. He is not disabled and is in the classroom with my child all day. Hopefully proper protocols will be in place to ensure that all kids are accounted for
Anonymous wrote:
Most kids that age aren't going to wander unless they are "wanderers." Meaning, a kid who has never walked away from school or home or the store before, and who has always followed the rules, isn't likely to suddenly decide to walk home one day. Hopefully, this will be a lesson to teachers to pay extra attention to kids who wander, and to parents to make sure to tell the teachers if that is how their child is.
This is June. School started in September. If this child was a "wanderer" the teacher would know.
This child knew what he was doing. Period. He knew better
Most kids that age aren't going to wander unless they are "wanderers." Meaning, a kid who has never walked away from school or home or the store before, and who has always followed the rules, isn't likely to suddenly decide to walk home one day. Hopefully, this will be a lesson to teachers to pay extra attention to kids who wander, and to parents to make sure to tell the teachers if that is how their child is.