Anonymous wrote:Am I the only one who thinks this kid totally overreacted? He got chased. Period. he didn't get threatened or touched. One kid got chased by other kids. Isn't that just ... part of the life of a child?
Nothing bad happened.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Am I the only one who thinks this kid totally overreacted? He got chased. Period. he didn't get threatened or touched. One kid got chased by other kids. Isn't that just ... part of the life of a child?
Nothing bad happened.
The next time a group of people chase you while yelling threats, you should just carry on as if nothing was wrong. If they don't touch you, there's no problem. While this may be common in most children's lives, doesn't it say something about our society that we accept it as a normal rite of passage?
But OP didn't say there were any threats.
Anonymous wrote:This is absolutely a real threat.
-Former urban HS teacher
Anonymous wrote:Am I the only one who thinks this kid totally overreacted? He got chased. Period. he didn't get threatened or touched. One kid got chased by other kids. Isn't that just ... part of the life of a child?
Nothing bad happened.
Don't downplay the incident. Under the guise of ‘de facto hazing’ as a rite of passage in high school is not an over-reaction. No matter how you choose to view the incident, bullying is victimization abuse; it is a case of the stronger preying on the weak.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Am I the only one who thinks this kid totally overreacted? He got chased. Period. he didn't get threatened or touched. One kid got chased by other kids. Isn't that just ... part of the life of a child?
Nothing bad happened.
The next time a group of people chase you while yelling threats, you should just carry on as if nothing was wrong. If they don't touch you, there's no problem. While this may be common in most children's lives, doesn't it say something about our society that we accept it as a normal rite of passage?
Anonymous wrote:Am I the only one who thinks this kid totally overreacted? He got chased. Period. he didn't get threatened or touched. One kid got chased by other kids. Isn't that just ... part of the life of a child?
Nothing bad happened.
Anonymous wrote:OP get your kid to a psychiatrist and have the dr say he can’t go to school for medical/mental health reasons. Then start the process to get him into the OSSE home and hospital instruction. We did this and it carried us to
within one week of the end of school year and got our kid out of a difficult school
situation where kid was being physically threatened and administration did nothing. https://dcps.dc.gov/service/home-and-hospital-instruction
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are they even learning in these final weeks? Was he accepted to college? Don't think they will care about final grades.
OP here. Yes, DS is going to a 4 year university. I really do not want his grades to suffer at the end of the year as we are worried about potentially losing academic scholarship money.
Anonymous wrote:What are they even learning in these final weeks? Was he accepted to college? Don't think they will care about final grades.
Anonymous wrote:Does your kid know where he's going to college? Do they even collect his June grades?
You could also tell the college ahead of time. Tell them you're trying to work it out with the school but he has been threatened and the Principal said s/he'd do nothing to guarantee his safety.
Anonymous wrote:OP, is there any way you could drive him for the next few weeks?