Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ms. Loft is a good principal but should be irrelevant to what's happening at Westover. This isn't about the school not taking action, it's about the police not arresting these kids instead of just having a friendly conversation with them. It's about holding the parents accountable.
Assaulting senior citizens off school property not during school hours isn't an APS issue. It's an ACPD issue.
What constitutes as criminal behavior has evolved over the past few years. Throwing eggs at shoppers or cafe patrons, even with video evidence is simply bad behavior, and nothing more. Sadly this behavior is celebrated on youth-oriented social media platforms. Hopefully the parents discipline. There’s nothing the school can do. And the police will likely stay out of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take one wild guess why there haven't been consequences. One guess.
Please answer this q as I honestly don’t know.
Looks like one black and two Hispanic kids. The Arlington NAACP, who ofte talk about APS's school-to-prison pipeline, would be all over this if any disciplinary actions were taken
Loft is afraid to take any targeted disciplinary action for exactly this reason. There were kids openly selling pot last year in the 8th grade, and all the teachers and admins looked the other way. It is also why the prior principal let the Taser kid situation escalate, even though he was bragging about bringing a weapon to school before he finally did it. Loft's new SEL program is pointless-- these lessons aren't changing any bad behaviors and they are just wasting the time of the kids who are trying to be good students and follow the rules.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take one wild guess why there haven't been consequences. One guess.
Please answer this q as I honestly don’t know.
Looks like one black and two Hispanic kids. The Arlington NAACP, who ofte talk about APS's school-to-prison pipeline, would be all over this if any disciplinary actions were taken
Loft is afraid to take any targeted disciplinary action for exactly this reason. There were kids openly selling pot last year in the 8th grade, and all the teachers and admins looked the other way. It is also why the prior principal let the Taser kid situation escalate, even though he was bragging about bringing a weapon to school before he finally did it. Loft's new SEL program is pointless-- these lessons aren't changing any bad behaviors and they are just wasting the time of the kids who are trying to be good students and follow the rules.
Sounds like putting the SROs back in school would be a good idea. Swanson used to have a fantastic one.
First of all, in this particular situation, the school has no disciplinary authority. Actions took place outside of school, off campus. it is not up to the school to implement any discipline or consequences.
Second of all, the SEL lessons are not "Loft's." They are APS-wide and mandated. All the schools are giving these "lessons." And yes, they are ineffective - particularly at the secondary level.
I agree that NAACP and its supporters are a problem that significantly impedes discipline in general.
The SRO used to go to Westover after school back when they had one. He may have had no authority, but his presence was felt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ms. Loft is a good principal but should be irrelevant to what's happening at Westover. This isn't about the school not taking action, it's about the police not arresting these kids instead of just having a friendly conversation with them. It's about holding the parents accountable.
Assaulting senior citizens off school property not during school hours isn't an APS issue. It's an ACPD issue.
What constitutes as criminal behavior has evolved over the past few years. Throwing eggs at shoppers or cafe patrons, even with video evidence is simply bad behavior, and nothing more. Sadly this behavior is celebrated on youth-oriented social media platforms. Hopefully the parents discipline. There’s nothing the school can do. And the police will likely stay out of it.
Anonymous wrote:Ms. Loft is a good principal but should be irrelevant to what's happening at Westover. This isn't about the school not taking action, it's about the police not arresting these kids instead of just having a friendly conversation with them. It's about holding the parents accountable.
Assaulting senior citizens off school property not during school hours isn't an APS issue. It's an ACPD issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take one wild guess why there haven't been consequences. One guess.
Please answer this q as I honestly don’t know.
Looks like one black and two Hispanic kids. The Arlington NAACP, who ofte talk about APS's school-to-prison pipeline, would be all over this if any disciplinary actions were taken
Loft is afraid to take any targeted disciplinary action for exactly this reason. There were kids openly selling pot last year in the 8th grade, and all the teachers and admins looked the other way. It is also why the prior principal let the Taser kid situation escalate, even though he was bragging about bringing a weapon to school before he finally did it. Loft's new SEL program is pointless-- these lessons aren't changing any bad behaviors and they are just wasting the time of the kids who are trying to be good students and follow the rules.
Sounds like putting the SROs back in school would be a good idea. Swanson used to have a fantastic one.
First of all, in this particular situation, the school has no disciplinary authority. Actions took place outside of school, off campus. it is not up to the school to implement any discipline or consequences.
Second of all, the SEL lessons are not "Loft's." They are APS-wide and mandated. All the schools are giving these "lessons." And yes, they are ineffective - particularly at the secondary level.
I agree that NAACP and its supporters are a problem that significantly impedes discipline in general.
The SRO used to go to Westover after school back when they had one. He may have had no authority, but his presence was felt.
Did APS get rid of SROs? I can't keep track who did (ACPS) and who didn't (FCPS) anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take one wild guess why there haven't been consequences. One guess.
Please answer this q as I honestly don’t know.
Looks like one black and two Hispanic kids. The Arlington NAACP, who ofte talk about APS's school-to-prison pipeline, would be all over this if any disciplinary actions were taken
Loft is afraid to take any targeted disciplinary action for exactly this reason. There were kids openly selling pot last year in the 8th grade, and all the teachers and admins looked the other way. It is also why the prior principal let the Taser kid situation escalate, even though he was bragging about bringing a weapon to school before he finally did it. Loft's new SEL program is pointless-- these lessons aren't changing any bad behaviors and they are just wasting the time of the kids who are trying to be good students and follow the rules.
Sounds like putting the SROs back in school would be a good idea. Swanson used to have a fantastic one.
First of all, in this particular situation, the school has no disciplinary authority. Actions took place outside of school, off campus. it is not up to the school to implement any discipline or consequences.
Second of all, the SEL lessons are not "Loft's." They are APS-wide and mandated. All the schools are giving these "lessons." And yes, they are ineffective - particularly at the secondary level.
I agree that NAACP and its supporters are a problem that significantly impedes discipline in general.
The SRO used to go to Westover after school back when they had one. He may have had no authority, but his presence was felt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take one wild guess why there haven't been consequences. One guess.
Please answer this q as I honestly don’t know.
Looks like one black and two Hispanic kids. The Arlington NAACP, who ofte talk about APS's school-to-prison pipeline, would be all over this if any disciplinary actions were taken
Loft is afraid to take any targeted disciplinary action for exactly this reason. There were kids openly selling pot last year in the 8th grade, and all the teachers and admins looked the other way. It is also why the prior principal let the Taser kid situation escalate, even though he was bragging about bringing a weapon to school before he finally did it. Loft's new SEL program is pointless-- these lessons aren't changing any bad behaviors and they are just wasting the time of the kids who are trying to be good students and follow the rules.
Sounds like putting the SROs back in school would be a good idea. Swanson used to have a fantastic one.
First of all, in this particular situation, the school has no disciplinary authority. Actions took place outside of school, off campus. it is not up to the school to implement any discipline or consequences.
Second of all, the SEL lessons are not "Loft's." They are APS-wide and mandated. All the schools are giving these "lessons." And yes, they are ineffective - particularly at the secondary level.
I agree that NAACP and its supporters are a problem that significantly impedes discipline in general.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ms. Loft is a good principal but should be irrelevant to what's happening at Westover. This isn't about the school not taking action, it's about the police not arresting these kids instead of just having a friendly conversation with them. It's about holding the parents accountable.
Assaulting senior citizens off school property not during school hours isn't an APS issue. It's an ACPD issue.
What constitutes as criminal behavior has evolved over the past few years. Throwing eggs at shoppers or cafe patrons, even with video evidence is simply bad behavior, and nothing more. Sadly this behavior is celebrated on youth-oriented social media platforms. Hopefully the parents discipline. There’s nothing the school can do. And the police will likely stay out of it.
The problem is that the parents aren't disciplining, and the police are staying out of it which means that there are zero consequences for these kids. Throwing eggs at an 85yr old woman isn't just bad behavior. Sorry not sorry, it's not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ms. Loft is a good principal but should be irrelevant to what's happening at Westover. This isn't about the school not taking action, it's about the police not arresting these kids instead of just having a friendly conversation with them. It's about holding the parents accountable.
Assaulting senior citizens off school property not during school hours isn't an APS issue. It's an ACPD issue.
What constitutes as criminal behavior has evolved over the past few years. Throwing eggs at shoppers or cafe patrons, even with video evidence is simply bad behavior, and nothing more. Sadly this behavior is celebrated on youth-oriented social media platforms. Hopefully the parents discipline. There’s nothing the school can do. And the police will likely stay out of it.
Anonymous wrote:Ms. Loft is a good principal but should be irrelevant to what's happening at Westover. This isn't about the school not taking action, it's about the police not arresting these kids instead of just having a friendly conversation with them. It's about holding the parents accountable.
Assaulting senior citizens off school property not during school hours isn't an APS issue. It's an ACPD issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take one wild guess why there haven't been consequences. One guess.
Please answer this q as I honestly don’t know.
Looks like one black and two Hispanic kids. The Arlington NAACP, who ofte talk about APS's school-to-prison pipeline, would be all over this if any disciplinary actions were taken
Loft is afraid to take any targeted disciplinary action for exactly this reason. There were kids openly selling pot last year in the 8th grade, and all the teachers and admins looked the other way. It is also why the prior principal let the Taser kid situation escalate, even though he was bragging about bringing a weapon to school before he finally did it. Loft's new SEL program is pointless-- these lessons aren't changing any bad behaviors and they are just wasting the time of the kids who are trying to be good students and follow the rules.
Sounds like putting the SROs back in school would be a good idea. Swanson used to have a fantastic one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take one wild guess why there haven't been consequences. One guess.
Please answer this q as I honestly don’t know.
Looks like one black and two Hispanic kids. The Arlington NAACP, who ofte talk about APS's school-to-prison pipeline, would be all over this if any disciplinary actions were taken
Loft is afraid to take any targeted disciplinary action for exactly this reason. There were kids openly selling pot last year in the 8th grade, and all the teachers and admins looked the other way. It is also why the prior principal let the Taser kid situation escalate, even though he was bragging about bringing a weapon to school before he finally did it. Loft's new SEL program is pointless-- these lessons aren't changing any bad behaviors and they are just wasting the time of the kids who are trying to be good students and follow the rules.