Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:12:05, umm parents come whenever they want that is their right.
"umm" no. Parents generally do not have the immediate right to retrieve their children during the lockdown. The primary concern during such an event is the safety of all individuals on campus, and school authorities, law enforcement, and emergency responders will prioritize ensuring the students are safe and secure.
Somehow my kid was able to leave wnd walked home.
Somehow? Regardless, I am glad to hear they are safe and at home.
How do 20 random teens end up in a park nearby? Are they at BCC and just walk out? Skipped? Unrelated to the school? Frightening for all there and locally in the neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:12:05, umm parents come whenever they want that is their right.
"umm" no. Parents generally do not have the immediate right to retrieve their children during the lockdown. The primary concern during such an event is the safety of all individuals on campus, and school authorities, law enforcement, and emergency responders will prioritize ensuring the students are safe and secure.
Somehow my kid was able to leave wnd walked home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The violent children have a similar problem: they have a school that can take them in, but due to space constraints, these children are placed back in mainstream schools after a while. Often not their home school, but another school. Sometimes violent kids attend several schools in MCPS before aging out of the system. They leave a trail of destruction, because their needs are complex and cannot be addressed (severe mental issues combined with disastrous home lives)
MCPS closed the school for students with severe behavioral issues years ago. It was called Mark Twain school, in Rockville. Back when I was in MCPS HS many decades ago, a common threat among the kids is if you did something really bad, you'd end up at Twain.
One of the reasons for closing is that the students there were disproportionately of a certain gender and race, and that was not equitable.
Hmm "not equitable" in this case also means "don't want to spend the money". I hope we can reconsider!
"While blacks make up 23 percent of the district’s student population, they make up 58 percent of the students at Mark Twain, reflective of nationwide trends labeling more black students, especially boys, with emotional and behavioral disorders."
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/1432305/montgomery-to-close-full-day-program-for-emotionally-troubled-middle-high-schoolers/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:12:05, umm parents come whenever they want that is their right.
"umm" no. Parents generally do not have the immediate right to retrieve their children during the lockdown. The primary concern during such an event is the safety of all individuals on campus, and school authorities, law enforcement, and emergency responders will prioritize ensuring the students are safe and secure.
Somehow my kid was able to leave wnd walked home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Drats. I have a kid who has a 504 plan to use the bathroom frequently. I hope they're OK.
Waitz there are open bathrooms for your kid on a "regular" day?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:12:05, umm parents come whenever they want that is their right.
"umm" no. Parents generally do not have the immediate right to retrieve their children during the lockdown. The primary concern during such an event is the safety of all individuals on campus, and school authorities, law enforcement, and emergency responders will prioritize ensuring the students are safe and secure.
Anonymous wrote:12:05, umm parents come whenever they want that is their right.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The violent children have a similar problem: they have a school that can take them in, but due to space constraints, these children are placed back in mainstream schools after a while. Often not their home school, but another school. Sometimes violent kids attend several schools in MCPS before aging out of the system. They leave a trail of destruction, because their needs are complex and cannot be addressed (severe mental issues combined with disastrous home lives)
MCPS closed the school for students with severe behavioral issues years ago. It was called Mark Twain school, in Rockville. Back when I was in MCPS HS many decades ago, a common threat among the kids is if you did something really bad, you'd end up at Twain.
One of the reasons for closing is that the students there were disproportionately of a certain gender and race, and that was not equitable.
Hmm "not equitable" in this case also means "don't want to spend the money". I hope we can reconsider!
"While blacks make up 23 percent of the district’s student population, they make up 58 percent of the students at Mark Twain, reflective of nationwide trends labeling more black students, especially boys, with emotional and behavioral disorders."
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/1432305/montgomery-to-close-full-day-program-for-emotionally-troubled-middle-high-schoolers/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The violent children have a similar problem: they have a school that can take them in, but due to space constraints, these children are placed back in mainstream schools after a while. Often not their home school, but another school. Sometimes violent kids attend several schools in MCPS before aging out of the system. They leave a trail of destruction, because their needs are complex and cannot be addressed (severe mental issues combined with disastrous home lives)
MCPS closed the school for students with severe behavioral issues years ago. It was called Mark Twain school, in Rockville. Back when I was in MCPS HS many decades ago, a common threat among the kids is if you did something really bad, you'd end up at Twain.
One of the reasons for closing is that the students there were disproportionately of a certain gender and race, and that was not equitable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The violent children have a similar problem: they have a school that can take them in, but due to space constraints, these children are placed back in mainstream schools after a while. Often not their home school, but another school. Sometimes violent kids attend several schools in MCPS before aging out of the system. They leave a trail of destruction, because their needs are complex and cannot be addressed (severe mental issues combined with disastrous home lives)
MCPS closed the school for students with severe behavioral issues years ago. It was called Mark Twain school, in Rockville. Back when I was in MCPS HS many decades ago, a common threat among the kids is if you did something really bad, you'd end up at Twain.
One of the reasons for closing is that the students there were disproportionately of a certain gender and race, and that was not equitable.
Hmm "not equitable" in this case also means "don't want to spend the money". I hope we can reconsider!
Anonymous wrote:
My point is that kids who need extra accommodations and services need more budget allocations to implement them, regardless of whether the taxpayer believes they "deserve" them or not.