Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your daughter laughed it off. Your daughter shared with you her feelings, "weird," and she said it's over with yet you want to make it a big deal. Let it go
+1. Your dd isn't going to tell you anything again if you go to the school when she doesn't want you to.
Maybe the guy meant like a high five. If this were happening multiple times, then it's a problem.
Anonymous wrote:Your daughter laughed it off. Your daughter shared with you her feelings, "weird," and she said it's over with yet you want to make it a big deal. Let it go
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD is an minority honor student and a junior at a HoCo public school.
She's a sweet girl - a little on the shy side, and makes friends easily.
Today, when she entered her Spanish class, the teacher and the school's resource officer were standing in the doorway talking.
DD has seen the officer around school, but has never had any interactions with him.
DD walked around them and proceeded to her desk. Before she reached her desk, she heard the officer ask the teacher who DD was.
The teacher told him her name and about a minute later, the officer addresses DD from across the room with, "Jessica, manos arriba!" (Spanish for "Hands up!").
DD smiled nervously - surprised that he called her name and also was not familiar with the term. Her and a classmate sitting next to her quickly figured it out and smiled it off.
DD shared this story with the family at the dinner table this evening and I am freakin livid. I told her I was going to talk with the administrators tomorrow, but she protested and said it was fine, just "weird".
Please advise on what steps, if any, I should take next. TIA.
What, if anything, did the teacher say?
It's weird for sure.
Is this an actual police officer? or is it a security guard who is tasked as a "resource officer"? If the later, I wouldn't be surprised bc they get very little training.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who cares that your daughter is a minority.
It sounds like the officer was trying to joke around with the students. I can see that someone might see it as slightly distasteful. It's all about intent.
If this officer has a history of issues, then I would pursue it. Have you ever told a joke that didn't go over well?
OP does, I do, and other posters on this thread do.
Stop trying to turn everything into a racial issue. How do you even know that race was a factor?
Anonymous wrote:DD is an minority honor student and a junior at a HoCo public school.
She's a sweet girl - a little on the shy side, and makes friends easily.
Today, when she entered her Spanish class, the teacher and the school's resource officer were standing in the doorway talking.
DD has seen the officer around school, but has never had any interactions with him.
DD walked around them and proceeded to her desk. Before she reached her desk, she heard the officer ask the teacher who DD was.
The teacher told him her name and about a minute later, the officer addresses DD from across the room with, "Jessica, manos arriba!" (Spanish for "Hands up!").
DD smiled nervously - surprised that he called her name and also was not familiar with the term. Her and a classmate sitting next to her quickly figured it out and smiled it off.
DD shared this story with the family at the dinner table this evening and I am freakin livid. I told her I was going to talk with the administrators tomorrow, but she protested and said it was fine, just "weird".
Please advise on what steps, if any, I should take next. TIA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who cares that your daughter is a minority.
It sounds like the officer was trying to joke around with the students. I can see that someone might see it as slightly distasteful. It's all about intent.
If this officer has a history of issues, then I would pursue it. Have you ever told a joke that didn't go over well?
OP does, I do, and other posters on this thread do.