Anonymous wrote:I think kids use the word kill freely without really knowing the seriousness of it. Get Ring doorbell and see if he comes back.
+1Anonymous wrote:A note threatening to kill my son? I would call the police. I do not care if kids did it. Let the police talk to them so they understand the seriousness of what they did.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:First of all op, there should have been a trigger warning for this thread.
But to answer your question, I'd lol, show the note to dh and then I'd put it in the box of things I'm saving for my son for when he's an adult. I'm sure he'd get a kick out of it when he's a grown up. I might include a note with my reaction to discovering the note if I had anything to say about it.
Why should there be a trigger warning? Just curious. I'm all for them but I don't see the context here.
People can have very traumatizing memories of bullshit notes second grade boys sent them with dog faces and such
In other words...PP was being sarcastic, feeding into OP's drama.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A note threatening to kill my son? I would call the police. I do not care if kids did it. Let the police talk to them so they understand the seriousness of what they did.
You are a nut.
OP, I'm an administrator at a school and I think you should let the principal know. This may be a harmless prank (and most likely is) but the school will be able to handle it and should know if there is animosity among some students. Also, this may not be the first time this child has done something like this, so it's important to loop in the school.
Please don't listen to the others who are saying ignore it- it could be part of a more serious pattern.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm an administrator at a school and I think you should let the principal know. This may be a harmless prank (and most likely is) but the school will be able to handle it and should know if there is animosity among some students. Also, this may not be the first time this child has done something like this, so it's important to loop in the school.
Please don't listen to the others who are saying ignore it- it could be part of a more serious pattern.
OP's first grader THINKS he knows who did it. For crying out loud, now you want to go on a witch hunt! Yeah. When the principal calls your house, I'm sure you'll be delighted the opinion of a first grader was taken that it was part of a more serious pattern.
There's no witch hunt, you cretin, in simply informing the school and letting them know what you know.
What is wrong with you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm an administrator at a school and I think you should let the principal know. This may be a harmless prank (and most likely is) but the school will be able to handle it and should know if there is animosity among some students. Also, this may not be the first time this child has done something like this, so it's important to loop in the school.
Please don't listen to the others who are saying ignore it- it could be part of a more serious pattern.
OP's first grader THINKS he knows who did it. For crying out loud, now you want to go on a witch hunt! Yeah. When the principal calls your house, I'm sure you'll be delighted the opinion of a first grader was taken that it was part of a more serious pattern.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A note threatening to kill my son? I would call the police. I do not care if kids did it. Let the police talk to them so they understand the seriousness of what they did.
You are a nut.
Nut 2 here: call the police or go pay a visit next door with a baseball bat... I think the former is within the law and won't get you in trouble.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm an administrator at a school and I think you should let the principal know. This may be a harmless prank (and most likely is) but the school will be able to handle it and should know if there is animosity among some students. Also, this may not be the first time this child has done something like this, so it's important to loop in the school.
Please don't listen to the others who are saying ignore it- it could be part of a more serious pattern.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you contacting the school? It happened outside of school at your personal residence. I'd ask the girls' parents if they know about it and may ask the police how to proceed, but schools aren't responsible for everything relating to our children.
Harassment/threats that happen outside of school can still be handled inside of school if it has and impact on the student's performance/behavior.
We had middle school students suspended a couple years ago for twitter threats/bullying.
Anonymous wrote:Why are you contacting the school? It happened outside of school at your personal residence. I'd ask the girls' parents if they know about it and may ask the police how to proceed, but schools aren't responsible for everything relating to our children.