Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the thing that made PPs suggest filing a police report is that it went beyond words and child was assaulted.
Schools (participate FCPS) do too little to response to address/correct physical violence in the classroom. And having a police report on file will not only encourage the school admins to act, but it may also trigger an investigation of CPS if they feel that it is warranted.
It’s not okay for a child to be permitted to hit, kick, or choke another child, whether inside or outside of school. And that behavior comes from somewhere. Police report will allow someone to follow up on what the underlying home issue is.
+1
FCPS is not looking out for the victim, they are looking out for themselves. Do what you have to do, as a parent, to protect your child. If that means lawyering up, depending on the situation, so be it.
This is inaccurate. The school district is looking out for all kids, which includes the victim and includes other kids. People may not approve of what they are doing now but saying they they aren't looking out for your DC is wrong.
Uh no FCPS is not looking out for our kids. We had a serial offender last year in 4th grade who spat on other kids, hit them with her metal water bottle, shoved them etc etc. after each incident (most of which the teacher did not inform parents about) the student was sent to sit with principal. She thought this was a treat. She was a menace the whole year and our school did nothing. Your school and FCPS want to minimize fallout from issues. They’ve stopped telling parents when their kid gets assaulted cause it happens so much now. They know they can’t do anything to these kids that rage and disrupt or anything for the kids that have their learning interrupting and are getting hurt. All they can do is put their head in the sand and pretend nothing is wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the thing that made PPs suggest filing a police report is that it went beyond words and child was assaulted.
Schools (participate FCPS) do too little to response to address/correct physical violence in the classroom. And having a police report on file will not only encourage the school admins to act, but it may also trigger an investigation of CPS if they feel that it is warranted.
It’s not okay for a child to be permitted to hit, kick, or choke another child, whether inside or outside of school. And that behavior comes from somewhere. Police report will allow someone to follow up on what the underlying home issue is.
+1
FCPS is not looking out for the victim, they are looking out for themselves. Do what you have to do, as a parent, to protect your child. If that means lawyering up, depending on the situation, so be it.
This is inaccurate. The school district is looking out for all kids, which includes the victim and includes other kids. People may not approve of what they are doing now but saying they they aren't looking out for your DC is wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the thing that made PPs suggest filing a police report is that it went beyond words and child was assaulted.
Schools (participate FCPS) do too little to response to address/correct physical violence in the classroom. And having a police report on file will not only encourage the school admins to act, but it may also trigger an investigation of CPS if they feel that it is warranted.
It’s not okay for a child to be permitted to hit, kick, or choke another child, whether inside or outside of school. And that behavior comes from somewhere. Police report will allow someone to follow up on what the underlying home issue is.
+1
FCPS is not looking out for the victim, they are looking out for themselves. Do what you have to do, as a parent, to protect your child. If that means lawyering up, depending on the situation, so be it.
This is inaccurate. The school district is looking out for all kids, which includes the victim and includes other kids. People may not approve of what they are doing now but saying they they aren't looking out for your DC is wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the thing that made PPs suggest filing a police report is that it went beyond words and child was assaulted.
Schools (participate FCPS) do too little to response to address/correct physical violence in the classroom. And having a police report on file will not only encourage the school admins to act, but it may also trigger an investigation of CPS if they feel that it is warranted.
It’s not okay for a child to be permitted to hit, kick, or choke another child, whether inside or outside of school. And that behavior comes from somewhere. Police report will allow someone to follow up on what the underlying home issue is.
+1
FCPS is not looking out for the victim, they are looking out for themselves. Do what you have to do, as a parent, to protect your child. If that means lawyering up, depending on the situation, so be it.
Anonymous wrote:I think the thing that made PPs suggest filing a police report is that it went beyond words and child was assaulted.
Schools (participate FCPS) do too little to response to address/correct physical violence in the classroom. And having a police report on file will not only encourage the school admins to act, but it may also trigger an investigation of CPS if they feel that it is warranted.
It’s not okay for a child to be permitted to hit, kick, or choke another child, whether inside or outside of school. And that behavior comes from somewhere. Police report will allow someone to follow up on what the underlying home issue is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that people suggest filing a police report because the schools are no longer moving quickly to address issues with kids with behavioral problems. Physical assault should be a threshold that leads to immediate consequences but it now seems that is not happening. And while most early ES kids are not likely to try and really harm a classmate, we know that some do and the very rare few are quite clinical in their decision to shoot or assault a classmate.
I believe most people are hoping that filing a police report would force the school to take stronger action although I am not certain that will be the case.
It's this. I am very much hoping that parents of my peers file every single physical infraction with tge police so that we can go back to worrying about learning in the classroom and not physical safety. Most of these incidents are committed by repeat offenders who should not be allowed to terrorize the rest of the class.
You do realize the police can’t question 7 year olds right? They can question the teacher who witnessed the fight. Which pulls that teacher out of the classroom. You file 6 reports, that teacher is at the police station six times. Not saying a word, BTW, because their union rep isn’t stupid. That’s six times a sub is babysitting the classroom.
For educated people, DCUMitescan be incredibly dumb.
Anonymous wrote:And what about this one - 7th grade kid choked on a bus, on video, Fairfax county. Would a parent be wrong to file a police report? I would in this case.
https://www.wusa9.com/article/news/local/virginia/video-captures-middle-school-student-being-choked-on-a-school-bus/65-e73a9710-6c11-4194-8db9-b2bb8d5f79e1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think folks are following the original thread that prompted this one when they claim it's over reacting.
The OP of the original thread has a 2nd grader who was choked by a classmate; the same classmate also told the kid he had a knife and would "cut him open."
These are not run of the mill behavior problems in 2nd grade. Considering a 6 year old bought a gun to school and shot their teacher in VA last year, I'd say I'd take that degree of physicality (choking, threatening with a weapon) super seriously and consider a police report.
That's because you are a nutter, equating the one 6 year old in the history of the country who shot a teacher with every other 2nd grader.
Hello, adult bully.
Np. You deserve to be called out for being ridiculous. Grow up.
DP you may think you called someone out but it's useless. Parents are fed up with their kids being the punching bags. You're on the wrong side and aren't going to cow people into sitting back and doing nothing because you don't want there to be any consequences.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think folks are following the original thread that prompted this one when they claim it's over reacting.
The OP of the original thread has a 2nd grader who was choked by a classmate; the same classmate also told the kid he had a knife and would "cut him open."
These are not run of the mill behavior problems in 2nd grade. Considering a 6 year old bought a gun to school and shot their teacher in VA last year, I'd say I'd take that degree of physicality (choking, threatening with a weapon) super seriously and consider a police report.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that people suggest filing a police report because the schools are no longer moving quickly to address issues with kids with behavioral problems. Physical assault should be a threshold that leads to immediate consequences but it now seems that is not happening. And while most early ES kids are not likely to try and really harm a classmate, we know that some do and the very rare few are quite clinical in their decision to shoot or assault a classmate.
I believe most people are hoping that filing a police report would force the school to take stronger action although I am not certain that will be the case.
It's this. I am very much hoping that parents of my peers file every single physical infraction with tge police so that we can go back to worrying about learning in the classroom and not physical safety. Most of these incidents are committed by repeat offenders who should not be allowed to terrorize the rest of the class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The posters who suggest calling the police because of a 2nd grader misbehaving are insane, OP. Not sure why you're paying any attention to them.
Threatening someone with a knife and choking them is "misbehaving"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The posters who suggest calling the police because of a 2nd grader misbehaving are insane, OP. Not sure why you're paying any attention to them.
Aside from getting the schools to take action, the police report also gives you the other family's information so you can sue for any physical or mental harm. Sometimes it's the only way to get a problem resolved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Poluce don’t just write a report because you want them to fyi. Certain criteria has to be met. Reports take a lot of time. Investigations have to done etc…… a lot of times with young children they let schools handle the situation.
Don’t accept that, request a criminal investigation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think folks are following the original thread that prompted this one when they claim it's over reacting.
The OP of the original thread has a 2nd grader who was choked by a classmate; the same classmate also told the kid he had a knife and would "cut him open."
These are not run of the mill behavior problems in 2nd grade. Considering a 6 year old bought a gun to school and shot their teacher in VA last year, I'd say I'd take that degree of physicality (choking, threatening with a weapon) super seriously and consider a police report.
That's because you are a nutter, equating the one 6 year old in the history of the country who shot a teacher with every other 2nd grader.