Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I worked as a para educator for ten years in two different high schools. Believe me when I say that there are fights everyday. The vast majority are black on black.
But that belies DCUM logic that all fights in MCPS are between MS-13 and rival gangs.
If there is any MS-13 related violence it is usually committed by Hispanics on Hispanics. Please, even MS-13 is not foolish enough to walk up to a random kid and beat him up. These are intimidation tactics that work only on those people who know who the intimidators are. Random kids are not being beaten.
I do agree that these students need to be removed from regular school and thoroughly investigated. Better still, their parents/guardians should be made to shadow them in school and sit with them as they go from classroom to classroom for a period of time, enough so that the parents/guardians are heavily inconvenienced and will understand what the consequences of their child's bad behavior is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I worked as a para educator for ten years in two different high schools. Believe me when I say that there are fights everyday. The vast majority are black on black.
But that belies DCUM logic that all fights in MCPS are between MS-13 and rival gangs.
Anonymous wrote:I worked as a para educator for ten years in two different high schools. Believe me when I say that there are fights everyday. The vast majority are black on black.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Redistricting is hopefully what will come soon for CHS. We do not want Neelsville and some students from Montgomery Village that go to CHS. Serious safety and behavior concerns have been brought up about these students. Not all, but enough to be a trend. Parents have voiced their concerns in parent meetings and board meetings. CHS will reflect the community of Clarksburg once this is done.
Rezoning will certainly come soon for Clarksburg HS - in fact, the boundary study should be starting any time now, because the new Seneca Valley HS will open in the fall of 2020. And comments like yours are unlikely to go over well during that process.
NP. Why? Is it politically incorrect to be concerned about the safety of children? Let's not pretend like there aren't significant problems at Neelsville. Its a high Farms MS with very little parental involvement and the environment at that school reflects that.
Generally people don't perceive arguments that boil down to "We don't want you in our school" as concern about the safety of children. But you're welcome to try it out and see for yourself what kind of reception you get.
Yes, it boils down to safety. I don't want my kid going to a school that has fights on a regular basis. It is a safety issue. Full stop.
Anonymous wrote:I worked as a para educator for ten years in two different high schools. Believe me when I say that there are fights everyday. The vast majority are black on black.
Anonymous wrote:Really, whites leave because they are racist and Asians only leave due to school performance and safety.
You are a racist. Blacks, whites, asians and hispanics all want whats best for thier kids. They will all flee from low performing and dangerous schools if they have the means to do so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Redistricting is hopefully what will come soon for CHS. We do not want Neelsville and some students from Montgomery Village that go to CHS. Serious safety and behavior concerns have been brought up about these students. Not all, but enough to be a trend. Parents have voiced their concerns in parent meetings and board meetings. CHS will reflect the community of Clarksburg once this is done.
Rezoning will certainly come soon for Clarksburg HS - in fact, the boundary study should be starting any time now, because the new Seneca Valley HS will open in the fall of 2020. And comments like yours are unlikely to go over well during that process.
NP. Why? Is it politically incorrect to be concerned about the safety of children? Let's not pretend like there aren't significant problems at Neelsville. Its a high Farms MS with very little parental involvement and the environment at that school reflects that.
Generally people don't perceive arguments that boil down to "We don't want you in our school" as concern about the safety of children. But you're welcome to try it out and see for yourself what kind of reception you get.
Yes, it boils down to safety. I don't want my kid going to a school that has fights on a regular basis. It is a safety issue. Full stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Redistricting is hopefully what will come soon for CHS. We do not want Neelsville and some students from Montgomery Village that go to CHS. Serious safety and behavior concerns have been brought up about these students. Not all, but enough to be a trend. Parents have voiced their concerns in parent meetings and board meetings. CHS will reflect the community of Clarksburg once this is done.
Rezoning will certainly come soon for Clarksburg HS - in fact, the boundary study should be starting any time now, because the new Seneca Valley HS will open in the fall of 2020. And comments like yours are unlikely to go over well during that process.
NP. Why? Is it politically incorrect to be concerned about the safety of children? Let's not pretend like there aren't significant problems at Neelsville. Its a high Farms MS with very little parental involvement and the environment at that school reflects that.
Generally people don't perceive arguments that boil down to "We don't want you in our school" as concern about the safety of children. But you're welcome to try it out and see for yourself what kind of reception you get.
Anonymous wrote:
I work in an ES that feeds into Neelsville. There are many unsupervised kids. A lot of elementary kids being watched after school by their middle and high school siblings, who expose them to things way beyond their maturity level. Then they try to emulate them by acting tough and "cool". These kids know things that no elementary student should know. There has been a lot of trauma in these students' lives, and I'm talking about the ones who are born here and speak only English because people assume it's the immigrants who are the issue. That's a different issue, but impacts the kids in a more academic way rather than in a behavioral way.
The 5 or so most extreme behavior issues in our building are AA males born in the US. There is usually a single parent and the kids are left to pretty much raise themselves and then they crave and seek attention any way they can get it whether it's positive or negative. Parents are mostly unresponsive--they don't show up to meetings, don't answer the phone when we call, don't return emails, and when they do they are hostile and pretty much tell us it's our problem to deal with during school hours. The parents are typically not willing to entertain referrals to outside resources because they don't typically trust "outsiders" to get involved in their lives.
Schools need more staffing period. But I really don't see extra staffing in Kindergarten to be enough to change this problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Redistricting is hopefully what will come soon for CHS. We do not want Neelsville and some students from Montgomery Village that go to CHS. Serious safety and behavior concerns have been brought up about these students. Not all, but enough to be a trend. Parents have voiced their concerns in parent meetings and board meetings. CHS will reflect the community of Clarksburg once this is done.
You can’t just ‘redistrict’ all the poor kids away . If there are already bunches in the neighboring district how is that going to help rebalance things?
Why are there so many poor, apparently unsupervised kids in our county? Are they citizens? What jobs do they do that they can’t supervise their kids?
Do these schools need to be better staffed starting in Kindergarten ?
I work in an ES that feeds into Neelsville. There are many unsupervised kids. A lot of elementary kids being watched after school by their middle and high school siblings, who expose them to things way beyond their maturity level. Then they try to emulate them by acting tough and "cool". These kids know things that no elementary student should know. There has been a lot of trauma in these students' lives, and I'm talking about the ones who are born here and speak only English because people assume it's the immigrants who are the issue. That's a different issue, but impacts the kids in a more academic way rather than in a behavioral way.
The 5 or so most extreme behavior issues in our building are AA males born in the US. There is usually a single parent and the kids are left to pretty much raise themselves and then they crave and seek attention any way they can get it whether it's positive or negative. Parents are mostly unresponsive--they don't show up to meetings, don't answer the phone when we call, don't return emails, and when they do they are hostile and pretty much tell us it's our problem to deal with during school hours. The parents are typically not willing to entertain referrals to outside resources because they don't typically trust "outsiders" to get involved in their lives.
Schools need more staffing period. But I really don't see extra staffing in Kindergarten to be enough to change this problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Redistricting is hopefully what will come soon for CHS. We do not want Neelsville and some students from Montgomery Village that go to CHS. Serious safety and behavior concerns have been brought up about these students. Not all, but enough to be a trend. Parents have voiced their concerns in parent meetings and board meetings. CHS will reflect the community of Clarksburg once this is done.
You can’t just ‘redistrict’ all the poor kids away . If there are already bunches in the neighboring district how is that going to help rebalance things?
Why are there so many poor, apparently unsupervised kids in our county? Are they citizens? What jobs do they do that they can’t supervise their kids?
Do these schools need to be better staffed starting in Kindergarten ?
Anonymous wrote:Redistricting is hopefully what will come soon for CHS. We do not want Neelsville and some students from Montgomery Village that go to CHS. Serious safety and behavior concerns have been brought up about these students. Not all, but enough to be a trend. Parents have voiced their concerns in parent meetings and board meetings. CHS will reflect the community of Clarksburg once this is done.
Anonymous wrote:Really, whites leave because they are racist and Asians only leave due to school performance and safety.
You are a racist. Blacks, whites, asians and hispanics all want whats best for thier kids. They will all flee from low performing and dangerous schools if they have the means to do so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe that's why this "honor-roll" student brought a gun to CHS
https://www.wusa9.com/article/news/local/maryland/18-year-old-who-brought-gun-to-clarksburg-hs-sentenced-to-4-months/65-545325214
This kid attended a school where I worked at one point in his school career. We observed that he appeared very anxious pretty much all the time. Not like a typical level of anxiety. He was always respectful, was bright and a hard worker, but very anxious. We talked to his parents about it multiple times out of concern for him, but the parents chose to not pursue any kind of treatment for him. Schools cannot force parents to seek treatment for their children and we can’t provide school based without consent. When I saw the news report I honestly wasn’t surprised that he had brought a weapon to school to protect himself. I’m not excusing his actions, but you’d have to know this kid in order to understand what drove him to do that.