Anonymous wrote:I see nothing wrong with the letter. The principal is sending the message that they take this stuff seriously and expect students to speak to each other in respectful and appropriate ways. It's important for those at the top to set the tone. I don't really see what OP is upset about.
And the letter is clearly referring to words like c**t, f*****t, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the kind of thing that gives me pause about sending my kids to a school like Whitman. Yes, the academics are good by public school standards, but then you have a huge lack of diversity to contend with. If the school's make-up was more like BCC the N word wouldn't be getting thrown around like that because there would be a fear of peer-to-peer repercussions. Which is much more impactful than adults slapping them on the wrist.
Have you been at places around BCC at lunchtime? There is plenty of the N word from all races. And I’m sure a other more diverse schools in the area too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So now the “n” word is a serious offense.
I’d think serious was when they find a gun. Or a bomb threat.
So some kids said N&$$@?
How does anyone survive in the day to day world.
Go to school on the East side. This stuff is nothing.
Just stop your little assholes from doing this - how hard is that? How can you survive in this world if you can't do this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the kind of thing that gives me pause about sending my kids to a school like Whitman. Yes, the academics are good by public school standards, but then you have a huge lack of diversity to contend with. If the school's make-up was more like BCC the N word wouldn't be getting thrown around like that because there would be a fear of peer-to-peer repercussions. Which is much more impactful than adults slapping them on the wrist.
Have you been at places around BCC at lunchtime? There is plenty of the N word from all races. And I’m sure a other more diverse schools in the area too.
Black kids using it among each other is a completely different scenario than two white kids ganging up on a black kid and saying it. I'm sure I don't need to break that down for you?
Anonymous wrote:So now the “n” word is a serious offense.
I’d think serious was when they find a gun. Or a bomb threat.
So some kids said N&$$@?
How does anyone survive in the day to day world.
Go to school on the East side. This stuff is nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the kind of thing that gives me pause about sending my kids to a school like Whitman. Yes, the academics are good by public school standards, but then you have a huge lack of diversity to contend with. If the school's make-up was more like BCC the N word wouldn't be getting thrown around like that because there would be a fear of peer-to-peer repercussions. Which is much more impactful than adults slapping them on the wrist.
Have you been at places around BCC at lunchtime? There is plenty of the N word from all races. And I’m sure a other more diverse schools in the area too.
Black kids using it among each other is a completely different scenario than two white kids ganging up on a black kid and saying it. I'm sure I don't need to break that down for you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd like to know the race of the students who used the N word. And, maybe some context.
I obviously don't use the N word, but work in Gaithersburg and hear that word daily.
Also, 'sexual identity references'?? What does that mean? You can't talk about sexual identity?
my locker was in the Cooper section and I heard that word multiple times a day, but not from white kids. oh well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the kind of thing that gives me pause about sending my kids to a school like Whitman. Yes, the academics are good by public school standards, but then you have a huge lack of diversity to contend with. If the school's make-up was more like BCC the N word wouldn't be getting thrown around like that because there would be a fear of peer-to-peer repercussions. Which is much more impactful than adults slapping them on the wrist.
Have you been at places around BCC at lunchtime? There is plenty of the N word from all races. And I’m sure a other more diverse schools in the area too.
Anonymous wrote:This is the kind of thing that gives me pause about sending my kids to a school like Whitman. Yes, the academics are good by public school standards, but then you have a huge lack of diversity to contend with. If the school's make-up was more like BCC the N word wouldn't be getting thrown around like that because there would be a fear of peer-to-peer repercussions. Which is much more impactful than adults slapping them on the wrist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Well is this a county wide policy? Is the N word completely banned now in MCPS? Or is this on a case by case basis?
It's not just AS kids who use the N word. It's also commonly used by Latino kids at our school. Wonder if it was a Latino kid at Whitman who used it. And we're the kids at Whitman using it to refer to their friends or was it actually being used as an insult.
Anyone who works with kids knows that the N word is NOT always used as a derogatory term by teens/young adults.
Anyone who works with kids should teach kids about code-switching. Language you use among your friends is not necessarily appropriate to use at school, and the other way around.
Anonymous wrote:
Well is this a county wide policy? Is the N word completely banned now in MCPS? Or is this on a case by case basis?
It's not just AS kids who use the N word. It's also commonly used by Latino kids at our school. Wonder if it was a Latino kid at Whitman who used it. And we're the kids at Whitman using it to refer to their friends or was it actually being used as an insult.
Anyone who works with kids knows that the N word is NOT always used as a derogatory term by teens/young adults.