Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:our kids attend Wakefield- they thought the decision to remove SROs was bad and they said they made a difference
on the news regarding the Yorktown fight they interviewed 2 parents -1 Hispanic parent who said the police should have been called and 1 white parent who said police weren’t needed
Are your kids white?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s going to be interesting the first time a student or staff member is seriously hurt in a school this year because there is no SRO.
It will 100% happen.
Sending in a social worker won’t work in a brawl.
Students and teachers get hurt in schools with SROs too.
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says somebody who isn't a teacher. I was there and this was a lot. even the custodians got involved in stopping kids. an SRO would have made me feel a lot better
Menu didn’t someone call the police then? I’m sure 10 APD could have been there within minutes.
A lot can happen in “minutes”. Just hope it’s not your kid getting beat up while they’re waiting.
But I mean the majority of us go through every single day without having police at our heels watching us. Is school inherently more dangerous than bars, or grocery stores, or the park?
NP. It absolutely is. If you don't understand that then you have no business at all responding here. Listen to the teachers and the parents who are telling you that the middle schools and high schools need permanent SROs assigned to their facilities. Their presence makes a huge difference and is absolutely necessary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s going to be interesting the first time a student or staff member is seriously hurt in a school this year because there is no SRO.
It will 100% happen.
Sending in a social worker won’t work in a brawl.
Students and teachers get hurt in schools with SROs too.
![]()
says somebody who isn't a teacher. I was there and this was a lot. even the custodians got involved in stopping kids. an SRO would have made me feel a lot better
Menu didn’t someone call the police then? I’m sure 10 APD could have been there within minutes.
A lot can happen in “minutes”. Just hope it’s not your kid getting beat up while they’re waiting.
+1 Because I, for one, am not going to help break up the fight or to go out into the crowd watching the fight. I will call the office and I will call 911. I will do both from the safety of my classroom with the door shut and locked.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s going to be interesting the first time a student or staff member is seriously hurt in a school this year because there is no SRO.
It will 100% happen.
Sending in a social worker won’t work in a brawl.
Students and teachers get hurt in schools with SROs too.
![]()
says somebody who isn't a teacher. I was there and this was a lot. even the custodians got involved in stopping kids. an SRO would have made me feel a lot better
Menu didn’t someone call the police then? I’m sure 10 APD could have been there within minutes.
A lot can happen in “minutes”. Just hope it’s not your kid getting beat up while they’re waiting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s going to be interesting the first time a student or staff member is seriously hurt in a school this year because there is no SRO.
It will 100% happen.
Sending in a social worker won’t work in a brawl.
Students and teachers get hurt in schools with SROs too.
![]()
says somebody who isn't a teacher. I was there and this was a lot. even the custodians got involved in stopping kids. an SRO would have made me feel a lot better
Menu didn’t someone call the police then? I’m sure 10 APD could have been there within minutes.
A lot can happen in “minutes”. Just hope it’s not your kid getting beat up while they’re waiting.
But I mean the majority of us go through every single day without having police at our heels watching us. Is school inherently more dangerous than bars, or grocery stores, or the park?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s going to be interesting the first time a student or staff member is seriously hurt in a school this year because there is no SRO.
It will 100% happen.
Sending in a social worker won’t work in a brawl.
Students and teachers get hurt in schools with SROs too.
![]()
says somebody who isn't a teacher. I was there and this was a lot. even the custodians got involved in stopping kids. an SRO would have made me feel a lot better
Menu didn’t someone call the police then? I’m sure 10 APD could have been there within minutes.
A lot can happen in “minutes”. Just hope it’s not your kid getting beat up while they’re waiting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s going to be interesting the first time a student or staff member is seriously hurt in a school this year because there is no SRO.
It will 100% happen.
Sending in a social worker won’t work in a brawl.
Students and teachers get hurt in schools with SROs too.
![]()
says somebody who isn't a teacher. I was there and this was a lot. even the custodians got involved in stopping kids. an SRO would have made me feel a lot better
Menu didn’t someone call the police then? I’m sure 10 APD could have been there within minutes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a high school teacher, and I’m absolutely pissed they took the SROs out. I have seen it on more than one occasion where a child was being predated upon by an adult in the community, abs the SRO took care of business.
They’re not all Derek Chauvin. This is so ridiculous.
They aren’t gone.you can still call police. What you can’t do is interrogate a AA 3rd grader for stealing something off of your desk with out parental consent etc...
Btw the theft was white. This country has to much racial reckoning to deal with before we need cops near my kid. ( we are in a sought after north Arlington school btw)
extra points for “sought after.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a high school teacher, and I’m absolutely pissed they took the SROs out. I have seen it on more than one occasion where a child was being predated upon by an adult in the community, abs the SRO took care of business.
They’re not all Derek Chauvin. This is so ridiculous.
They aren’t gone.you can still call police. What you can’t do is interrogate a AA 3rd grader for stealing something off of your desk with out parental consent etc...
Btw the theft was white. This country has to much racial reckoning to deal with before we need cops near my kid. ( we are in a sought after north Arlington school btw)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s going to be interesting the first time a student or staff member is seriously hurt in a school this year because there is no SRO.
It will 100% happen.
Sending in a social worker won’t work in a brawl.
Students and teachers get hurt in schools with SROs too.
![]()
says somebody who isn't a teacher. I was there and this was a lot. even the custodians got involved in stopping kids. an SRO would have made me feel a lot better
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s going to be interesting the first time a student or staff member is seriously hurt in a school this year because there is no SRO.
It will 100% happen.
Sending in a social worker won’t work in a brawl.
Students and teachers get hurt in schools with SROs too.
![]()
says somebody who isn't a teacher. I was there and this was a lot. even the custodians got involved in stopping kids. an SRO would have made me feel a lot better
I am PP, a special ed teacher who has been injured at school.
Now that I am in my late 40s, there is no way I’m getting in the middle of one of these fights. Sorry, but I know my limitations. Students are stronger than me and it is not worth risking injury or liability.
+1 I used to jump in all the time. These days going forward? Nope. I am going back into my classroom and from there I will call the office to send help. I can't believe I typed that but it is what it is. My safety is important and we need those police officers in our schools.
DP who also works in Special Ed. I think a lot of people will just dial 911. That's probably going to end worse than having SROs who at least get to know the kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a high school teacher, and I’m absolutely pissed they took the SROs out. I have seen it on more than one occasion where a child was being predated upon by an adult in the community, abs the SRO took care of business.
They’re not all Derek Chauvin. This is so ridiculous.
Oh stop it - they didn’t send the SROs to the Bermuda Triangle, they are all just as close to being dispatched to a school as they are to your home or car. Somehow adults can manage to face their day without a cop waiting in their break room at the office, in case. If some student is being “predated upon” (I think the word you are looking for is “groomed”), then a youth-trained law enforcement officer is still able to intervene on the students behalf.
Either you have not bothered to understand what the changes are, or you are on the payroll of the new republican initiative to discredit local D prosecutors as being soft on crime by manufacturing outrage around recent progressive initiatives. We know your tactics.
Not the case. I’m THERE. I actually work in a high school. They provided an important and valuable function, and now they’re gone. I vote your way, too- but not on this. This is a knee jerk reaction to an incident that had nothing to do with them. It’s foolish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a high school teacher, and I’m absolutely pissed they took the SROs out. I have seen it on more than one occasion where a child was being predated upon by an adult in the community, abs the SRO took care of business.
They’re not all Derek Chauvin. This is so ridiculous.
Oh stop it - they didn’t send the SROs to the Bermuda Triangle, they are all just as close to being dispatched to a school as they are to your home or car. Somehow adults can manage to face their day without a cop waiting in their break room at the office, in case. If some student is being “predated upon” (I think the word you are looking for is “groomed”), then a youth-trained law enforcement officer is still able to intervene on the students behalf.
Either you have not bothered to understand what the changes are, or you are on the payroll of the new republican initiative to discredit local D prosecutors as being soft on crime by manufacturing outrage around recent progressive initiatives. We know your tactics.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a high school teacher, and I’m absolutely pissed they took the SROs out. I have seen it on more than one occasion where a child was being predated upon by an adult in the community, abs the SRO took care of business.
They’re not all Derek Chauvin. This is so ridiculous.