Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here are just some of the resources available for anyone who needs it. There are several programs listed that work on a sliding fee or insurance and many more programs out there.
https://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/HHS-Program/Resources/Files/A%26D%20Docs/DND/DNDMentalHealth.pdf
School counselor. Make a resource packet for families to have available when you meet with families printed including mental health, housing (HOC website), food resources and more. Several good guidebooks like this available. Then, you just need to highlight the ones the family needs.
I work in a different district and all the free services have miles long waitlists. I think you’re very naive.
No, I'm not. Done it many times. For specific needs, you can get families bumped to the head or places like the crisis center can. Or, if this child is that out of control, you take him to Children's as he's a threat to others and they can get supports in place and what ever he needs. Children's has a children's psych ward.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bye bye SROs.
Easy answer.., no police SROs in school... replace them with trained psychologists!
They also need behavioral specialists who are trained to support children with emotional/behavioral difficulties, autism spectrum disorders, etc. Even though they're very young, some children can display very challenging behaviors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Among other things, this situation clearly illustrates the need for additional police training, particularly on how to respond to trauma/crisis situations involving children. I agree with PP that “defund the police” is not the correct terminology, the idea of allocating more resources towards mental and emotional health is vital.
They need a mobile child unit to help with these things. This child had a school counselor and others at the school whose job it was to help with the mental and emotional part. There were several school staff and not one took the time to get down on that child's level, help him calm down with breathing exercises or just calm talking and talk him through what was happening. School staff was mad, angry and frustrated and gave up. Mom and the police officers were inappropriate. None were really abusive in that sense but all crossed the line. No wonder the kid acts this way. This is the example he's shown. Mom was completely flipping off. Police officers were showing off. The child didn't resist returning to school when someone took his hand. He was scared. What's going on at that school where he keeps eloping and is scared and acting that way? Is he hungry (mom says he doesn't eat), is he tired, is he struggling with academics because he has a learning disorder, mental health issues....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here are just some of the resources available for anyone who needs it. There are several programs listed that work on a sliding fee or insurance and many more programs out there.
https://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/HHS-Program/Resources/Files/A%26D%20Docs/DND/DNDMentalHealth.pdf
School counselor. Make a resource packet for families to have available when you meet with families printed including mental health, housing (HOC website), food resources and more. Several good guidebooks like this available. Then, you just need to highlight the ones the family needs.
I work in a different district and all the free services have miles long waitlists. I think you’re very naive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree, once the child was returned to school, it was no longer a police matter. This was a five year old boy.
Watching the video made me sick. How could police behave in that manner to a child? The police officers should be fired and training on basic human decency skills for how to work with members of the community.
Then there were the MCPS employees. Why they didn’t step in and help the child? Why didn’t they ask the police to leave? Disgusting.
Finally, as a mom, I have sympathy for the child’s mom given the situation. She was called to the school because her child ran away from the school staff who was supposed to be watching him only to become the one interrogated by the police. She clearly seemed overwhelmed. The school system should be working with her, the boy, and the school staff to come up with strategies to deescalate when he looses control. Bring in a specialist in behavioral intervention strategies.
I hope the boy gets the help that he needs. For police to threaten and yell at him like that probably was very traumatizing.
Unfortunately, once police get involved, it's hard to get them to let go. And given how these police acted, I'm not sure I'd want to get on their wrong side either. We have a policing issue in this country. "Defund the police" is the wrong slogan, but something fundamental needs to change.
This is why I don't fault the school staff in the moment. Challenging a riled up cop does not usually end well. Maybe a supervisor could have helped. How may people here would have the presence of mind to call 911 on the cops in the moment? I would like to know whether the staff reported the abusive conduct after the fact.
The MCPD has a lot of problems. One of them is contempt for the public. Another is an inability to dismiss officers whose behavior makes clear that they have suitability issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree, once the child was returned to school, it was no longer a police matter. This was a five year old boy.
Watching the video made me sick. How could police behave in that manner to a child? The police officers should be fired and training on basic human decency skills for how to work with members of the community.
Then there were the MCPS employees. Why they didn’t step in and help the child? Why didn’t they ask the police to leave? Disgusting.
Finally, as a mom, I have sympathy for the child’s mom given the situation. She was called to the school because her child ran away from the school staff who was supposed to be watching him only to become the one interrogated by the police. She clearly seemed overwhelmed. The school system should be working with her, the boy, and the school staff to come up with strategies to deescalate when he looses control. Bring in a specialist in behavioral intervention strategies.
I hope the boy gets the help that he needs. For police to threaten and yell at him like that probably was very traumatizing.
Unfortunately, once police get involved, it's hard to get them to let go. And given how these police acted, I'm not sure I'd want to get on their wrong side either. We have a policing issue in this country. "Defund the police" is the wrong slogan, but something fundamental needs to change.
Anonymous wrote:Here are just some of the resources available for anyone who needs it. There are several programs listed that work on a sliding fee or insurance and many more programs out there.
https://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/HHS-Program/Resources/Files/A%26D%20Docs/DND/DNDMentalHealth.pdf
School counselor. Make a resource packet for families to have available when you meet with families printed including mental health, housing (HOC website), food resources and more. Several good guidebooks like this available. Then, you just need to highlight the ones the family needs.
Anonymous wrote:That poor little boy. Those cops should absolutely be fired and I do fault the school staff as well. I’m an educator and while I admit I get frustrated with certain kids this would not fly in my school. And mom doesn’t seem all that fit either. That little boy needs love and more support.
Anonymous wrote:Among other things, this situation clearly illustrates the need for additional police training, particularly on how to respond to trauma/crisis situations involving children. I agree with PP that “defund the police” is not the correct terminology, the idea of allocating more resources towards mental and emotional health is vital.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The boy needs help, therapy, like what mom said. The cops and mom were all using the same language and come from the same culture.
Mom is scared of spanking b/c CPS. This video is insane.
Totally insane. It was so dehumanizing for that child. But why is the family filing a lawsuit when the mom was just as big of a creep as the cops?
Money. I think mom set it up so she could sue.
Mom is just as complicit. Her only reason for not beating her child is fear of going to jail or losing her child to the system. Otherwise, she’s okay with it?
Did the school previously report her to CPS?
Yes, it sounds like she had reports. Mom needs parenting help.
I hope if anything comes from this video is that MANY kids have needs outside of a parent scope and MANY families have needs that they can not financially receive. Lower class or struggling middle class do not have medical insurance. Do not have the money. Do not have the time. Many are truly single parents (no dropping off with other parent on weekends etc...) and many parents have untreated mental health issues as well.
It is just so sad that the top 1% of our society are so disgusting, controlling, and selfish that wages are so low for others. That our government can not see that basic health care and helping people out of poverty are human rights. We look at other countries with severe poverty and controlling governments and think our country has freedom. It is a joke. We are puppets.
Mom talked about spending money like wild fire with Disney and other trips, tons of toys and more. If they are low income they'd qualify for medicaid or other state run health care programs for kids. And, there are free mental health clinics as well. She doesn't want to get her child help.
You’re clueless. I’m not excusing her behavior but it’s very, very difficult to get ongoing mental health services that take insurance. It’s a crisis, honestly.
This exactly. You would be shocked how much I spend out of pocket for mental health care for my SN kid and I have great insurance. $5k along for parent training and that’s just the tip of the iceberg.
correct. the kind of therapy this kid needs is not covered by insurance or has a very long wait list. but let’s also blame the school - they clearly are not addressing the factors that led to eloping.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I haven't posted in this thread yet, but PP, you're wrong. The crisis center has nothing to do with ongoing mental health services. I'm a school counselor and there are waiting lists of a YEAR for decent therapists who take insurance w. It's hard for kids whose families can pay to get in to see a child therapist these days, there's such a shortage. Schools need more licensed social workers and licensed counselors to plug that gap. I'm a school counselor and am acutely aware of the need to help parents like this one. I'm disgusted that the school didn't protect this little boy.
+1. The crisis center is just that- for one time crises. Of course I have kids who end up using the crisis center far too often bc they can’t get the ongoing support but it’s not made for that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, why are these police officers sitting around school for an hour lecturing this mother on how to raise her kid? Is that a good use of their time, when they have no training in child development or parenting skills? Is that what we are paying them for? It’s like they decided they’d rather sit around and act superior to this mom for an hour than do their job as LEO. They both act like they are going to win the Nobel prize in child rearing.
Agree, once mom arrived, situation resolved, they leave. They don't discuss the child's need. Mom is equally to blame but the cops were terrible.
Anonymous wrote:Among other things, this situation clearly illustrates the need for additional police training, particularly on how to respond to trauma/crisis situations involving children. I agree with PP that “defund the police” is not the correct terminology, the idea of allocating more resources towards mental and emotional health is vital.