Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s funny to see white people claim that their story is disproportionately covered in the news.
Why? When was the last time WP covered a white person being shot by the cops or a white person being called a honkey?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes, and with kids at MCPS. Now, where's the incident data?
Found the incident data:
https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/regulatoryaccountability/SafetyGlance/currentyear/SafetyGlance2018.pdf
page 434 (PDF page 450) shows out of school suspension rates by gender and race. Again, we need more diversity in who gets suspended.
Then it's per high school on preceding pages.
Whitman in on page 405 (PDF page 422) and had 1 serious incident where police were called -- a physical or verbal threat.
Wheaton is on the page before that, with 9 serious incident calls: 4 drugs, 2 threats, 3 weapons.
Our kids are not high school age yet, but I think we'll stay in the Whitman cluster. I think my DD is going to be a lot safer there compared to Wheaton.
Your daughter is more likely too be raped by a white guy.
Neither Wheaton nor Whitman had any reported rapes in the most recent report.
You think they report every rape on the weekends... or any.
She probably won’t even tell you.
Bret’s and Squis are everywhere in W schools.
Have you seen 13 reasons... if not you should educate yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes when a kid at Whitman uses the N word people react like when a public official says it, when a kid at Kennedy uses it people just roll their eyes and say that is what Kennedy kids do. We govern our schools with the same expectations we govern the classes
Always amazed that there are so many people who think it's so unfair that white kids don't get to say that word.
Always amazed that black people think that you can punish one side but not the other. Test scores not good enough-let em in. Not enough money-let them live there anyway. Data makes us look bad, that’s racist. Too many criminals, system is racist too.![]()
If you want a social construct where one side can use it and the other can’t what ever, still means the same thing. But legal is black and white, schools either allow it or don’t. And who wants to bet the poor kids at Kennedy are going around using the N word left and right? I’ll take that bet
Doo you believe that crack addicts are treated the same as cocaine addicts?
Crimes involving crack tend to be more violent, including crimes committed by the addicts, compared to cocaine. As with all crimes, violence is an aggravating factor leading to more severe punishment.
Anonymous wrote:It’s funny to see white people claim that their story is disproportionately covered in the news.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes when a kid at Whitman uses the N word people react like when a public official says it, when a kid at Kennedy uses it people just roll their eyes and say that is what Kennedy kids do. We govern our schools with the same expectations we govern the classes
Always amazed that there are so many people who think it's so unfair that white kids don't get to say that word.
Always amazed that black people think that you can punish one side but not the other. Test scores not good enough-let em in. Not enough money-let them live there anyway. Data makes us look bad, that’s racist. Too many criminals, system is racist too.![]()
If you want a social construct where one side can use it and the other can’t what ever, still means the same thing. But legal is black and white, schools either allow it or don’t. And who wants to bet the poor kids at Kennedy are going around using the N word left and right? I’ll take that bet
Doo you believe that crack addicts are treated the same as cocaine addicts?
Crimes involving crack tend to be more violent, including crimes committed by the addicts, compared to cocaine. As with all crimes, violence is an aggravating factor leading to more severe punishment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes, and with kids at MCPS. Now, where's the incident data?
Found the incident data:
https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/regulatoryaccountability/SafetyGlance/currentyear/SafetyGlance2018.pdf
page 434 (PDF page 450) shows out of school suspension rates by gender and race. Again, we need more diversity in who gets suspended.
Then it's per high school on preceding pages.
Whitman in on page 405 (PDF page 422) and had 1 serious incident where police were called -- a physical or verbal threat.
Wheaton is on the page before that, with 9 serious incident calls: 4 drugs, 2 threats, 3 weapons.
Our kids are not high school age yet, but I think we'll stay in the Whitman cluster. I think my DD is going to be a lot safer there compared to Wheaton.
Your daughter is more likely too be raped by a white guy.
Neither Wheaton nor Whitman had any reported rapes in the most recent report.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes when a kid at Whitman uses the N word people react like when a public official says it, when a kid at Kennedy uses it people just roll their eyes and say that is what Kennedy kids do. We govern our schools with the same expectations we govern the classes
Always amazed that there are so many people who think it's so unfair that white kids don't get to say that word.
Always amazed that black people think that you can punish one side but not the other. Test scores not good enough-let em in. Not enough money-let them live there anyway. Data makes us look bad, that’s racist. Too many criminals, system is racist too.![]()
If you want a social construct where one side can use it and the other can’t what ever, still means the same thing. But legal is black and white, schools either allow it or don’t. And who wants to bet the poor kids at Kennedy are going around using the N word left and right? I’ll take that bet
Doo you believe that crack addicts are treated the same as cocaine addicts?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes, and with kids at MCPS. Now, where's the incident data?
Found the incident data:
https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/regulatoryaccountability/SafetyGlance/currentyear/SafetyGlance2018.pdf
page 434 (PDF page 450) shows out of school suspension rates by gender and race. Again, we need more diversity in who gets suspended.
Then it's per high school on preceding pages.
Whitman in on page 405 (PDF page 422) and had 1 serious incident where police were called -- a physical or verbal threat.
Wheaton is on the page before that, with 9 serious incident calls: 4 drugs, 2 threats, 3 weapons.
Our kids are not high school age yet, but I think we'll stay in the Whitman cluster. I think my DD is going to be a lot safer there compared to Wheaton.
Your daughter is more likely too be raped by a white guy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes, and with kids at MCPS. Now, where's the incident data?
Found the incident data:
https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/regulatoryaccountability/SafetyGlance/currentyear/SafetyGlance2018.pdf
page 434 (PDF page 450) shows out of school suspension rates by gender and race. Again, we need more diversity in who gets suspended.
Then it's per high school on preceding pages.
Whitman in on page 405 (PDF page 422) and had 1 serious incident where police were called -- a physical or verbal threat.
Wheaton is on the page before that, with 9 serious incident calls: 4 drugs, 2 threats, 3 weapons.
Our kids are not high school age yet, but I think we'll stay in the Whitman cluster. I think my DD is going to be a lot safer there compared to Wheaton.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Show me school incident data -- would love to see that if MCPS reports it.
I'd wager that there are more incidents of a serious nature in schools that are in areas with a higher crime rate, compared to schools in an area with a lower crime rate. Is there reason to believe otherwise? I guess if we have MCPS incident data we could check to be certain.
Do you even live in Montgomery County?
Yes, and with kids at MCPS. Now, where's the incident data?
Found the incident data:
https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/regulatoryaccountability/SafetyGlance/currentyear/SafetyGlance2018.pdf
page 434 (PDF page 450) shows out of school suspension rates by gender and race. Again, we need more diversity in who gets suspended.
Then it's per high school on preceding pages.
Whitman in on page 405 (PDF page 422) and had 1 serious incident where police were called -- a physical or verbal threat.
Wheaton is on the page before that, with 9 serious incident calls: 4 drugs, 2 threats, 3 weapons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes when a kid at Whitman uses the N word people react like when a public official says it, when a kid at Kennedy uses it people just roll their eyes and say that is what Kennedy kids do. We govern our schools with the same expectations we govern the classes
Always amazed that there are so many people who think it's so unfair that white kids don't get to say that word.
Always amazed that black people think that you can punish one side but not the other. Test scores not good enough-let em in. Not enough money-let them live there anyway. Data makes us look bad, that’s racist. Too many criminals, system is racist too.![]()
If you want a social construct where one side can use it and the other can’t what ever, still means the same thing. But legal is black and white, schools either allow it or don’t. And who wants to bet the poor kids at Kennedy are going around using the N word left and right? I’ll take that bet
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes when a kid at Whitman uses the N word people react like when a public official says it, when a kid at Kennedy uses it people just roll their eyes and say that is what Kennedy kids do. We govern our schools with the same expectations we govern the classes
Always amazed that there are so many people who think it's so unfair that white kids don't get to say that word.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes, and with kids at MCPS. Now, where's the incident data?
Found the incident data:
https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/regulatoryaccountability/SafetyGlance/currentyear/SafetyGlance2018.pdf
page 434 (PDF page 450) shows out of school suspension rates by gender and race. Again, we need more diversity in who gets suspended.
Then it's per high school on preceding pages.
Whitman in on page 405 (PDF page 422) and had 1 serious incident where police were called -- a physical or verbal threat.
Wheaton is on the page before that, with 9 serious incident calls: 4 drugs, 2 threats, 3 weapons.
Our kids are not high school age yet, but I think we'll stay in the Whitman cluster. I think my DD is going to be a lot safer there compared to Wheaton.
NP, and you have to consider what the other "threats" are that don't get reported: how much anxiety, depression, suicide, substance use? How stressed are the kids? Every school has its trade-offs; think about which of the negatives are most likely to affect your particular kids.
I wouldn't touch Whitman with a ten-foot pole.
Those are individual issues so if our DD is facing them, we can get her help. In other words, we can control it.
What we can't control is weapons, drugs, and assaults in the school, since our DD is more likely to be a victim then a perpetuator of them. So I'd take the option where those are less likely, based on statistics.
It's the same reason we prefer to live in a lower-crime neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes, and with kids at MCPS. Now, where's the incident data?
Found the incident data:
https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/regulatoryaccountability/SafetyGlance/currentyear/SafetyGlance2018.pdf
page 434 (PDF page 450) shows out of school suspension rates by gender and race. Again, we need more diversity in who gets suspended.
Then it's per high school on preceding pages.
Whitman in on page 405 (PDF page 422) and had 1 serious incident where police were called -- a physical or verbal threat.
Wheaton is on the page before that, with 9 serious incident calls: 4 drugs, 2 threats, 3 weapons.
Our kids are not high school age yet, but I think we'll stay in the Whitman cluster. I think my DD is going to be a lot safer there compared to Wheaton.
NP, and you have to consider what the other "threats" are that don't get reported: how much anxiety, depression, suicide, substance use? How stressed are the kids? Every school has its trade-offs; think about which of the negatives are most likely to affect your particular kids.
I wouldn't touch Whitman with a ten-foot pole.
Those are individual issues so if our DD is facing them, we can get her help. In other words, we can control it.
What we can't control is weapons, drugs, and assaults in the school, since our DD is more likely to be a victim then a perpetuator of them. So I'd take the option where those are less likely, based on statistics.
It's the same reason we prefer to live in a lower-crime neighborhood.