Anonymous wrote:I am the parent of 4 teens--1 in college, 2 in HS, 1 in MS--and a psychologist specializing in adolescents who works a lot with "at risk" youth. My husband is a developmental pediatrician. We discussed this story and both of us agreed whole-heartedly that if any of our children, or our patients, pulled this kind of stunt we would be FURIOUS about the expulsion--at the child, for getting themselves expelled. 17 is old enough to know that using a Muslim student's email to send in a bomb thread--a federal offense!--is completely unacceptable on so many levels. It's not like these kids are being executed. Their lives are not over.
Frankly a lot of the reaction here reminds me of cases in which boys assault girls and then people get up in arms about how the boys lives have been ruined. Well, action have consequences, and perhaps you should have thought of that--yes, at 17, yes, even with a not fully developed brain--before you behaved abhorrently towards another human being.
Anonymous wrote:You all are awesome. Basically at a time when tons of DC youth seem to be playing the knock out game on the metro, two kids with good track records who made a bad mistake ( not physical assault, not rape, not plagiarism) a really dumb "joke" have no chance and should have no chance of rebuilding their futures. Hope folks are as merciful with you when you/your kids goof up.
Anonymous wrote:This story from the Philadelphia area might be of interest to the few people still following this thread.
http://6abc.com/education/police-chester-student-in-custody-after-posting-online-threat-/1175433/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To add on, admissions teams spend a lot of time not just choosing kids but building a class. You make it sound like they are frothing at the mouth to reject kids they accepted. If anything, the opposite.
Dream on. Admission letters are pulled all the time for lesser things -- and both the applicant and the school have an obligation to notify the college about disciplinary actions.
This. Unlike most of you, I have worked in admissions and we would absolutely withdraw an acceptance to a student who was expelled for sending a bomb threat to 500+ people. We have many, many qualified students to choose from in building a class. There is no way any admissions professional I know would welcome a student who committed a crime such as this. And make no mistake. This was a criminal act, whether the students were arrested and prosecuted or not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To add on, admissions teams spend a lot of time not just choosing kids but building a class. You make it sound like they are frothing at the mouth to reject kids they accepted. If anything, the opposite.
Dream on. Admission letters are pulled all the time for lesser things -- and both the applicant and the school have an obligation to notify the college about disciplinary actions.
Anonymous wrote:Why don't you not click if you are not interested. Others may have insight. I am still waiting for an appeal to be granted.
Anonymous wrote:Well, b/cause real young lives are involved. A lot of us are waiting for word that these kids will be OK.