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-   -   Disciplinary Actions in High School? (https://greekchat.com/gcforums/showthread.php?t=127495)

sarajean94 06-21-2012 11:16 AM

Disciplinary Actions in High School?
 
Ahh nevermind.

33girl 06-21-2012 11:21 AM

LOL. Any sorority that would cut you for having detention would be super turbo lame. Is detention really considered a "disciplinary action"?

(Yet another :eek: between my generation and today. Shoot, if you got out of my high school WITHOUT ever having detention, people thought there was something seriously wrong with you. I was actually relieved when I got it my senior year.)

Kevin 06-21-2012 11:30 AM

Is it on your "permanent record"? I hear those are permanent.

Titchou 06-21-2012 11:55 AM

If you had been sent to alternative school or something of that nature, it might show on your transcript and "people" might know. If it was a one day detention for texting I doubt seriously anyone cares. Then again, if the police escorted you to detention, that would be known!

MysticCat 06-21-2012 11:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 33girl (Post 2154022)
(Yet another :eek: between my generation and today. Shoot, if you got out of my high school WITHOUT ever having detention, people thought there was something seriously wrong with you. I was actually relieved when I got it my senior year.)

I got what we called in-school detention -- spending a few school days in a special classroom in the office area, where you still had to do your work and where contact with students not in detention was not allowed. Well, it wasn't allowed except for when I had to briefly leave the detention classroom and go preside over the induction of new members of the National Honor Society, of which I was president. Most of the teachers thoroughly enjoyed the humor of that.

Somehow, I still got a bid.

33girl 06-21-2012 11:58 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Titchou (Post 2154029)
Then again, if the police escorted you to detention, that would be awesome!

FYP, LOL.

AGDee 06-21-2012 10:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MysticCat (Post 2154030)
I got what we called in-school detention -- spending a few school days in a special classroom in the office area, where you still had to do your work and where contact with students not in detention was not allowed. Well, it wasn't allowed except for when I had to briefly leave the detention classroom and go preside over the induction of new members of the National Honor Society, of which I was president. Most of the teachers thoroughly enjoyed the humor of that.

Somehow, I still got a bid.

You can't tell this story without telling us what you did to get in detention!

MysticCat 06-21-2012 10:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AGDee (Post 2154155)
You can't tell this story without telling us what you did to get in detention!

It sounds better if I say I was skipping school. I, along with quite a few others, participated in an extracurricular activity during the morning. Then I went home for lunch. (Seniors could leave school for lunch.) I had been pretty much going non-stop for weeks if not months, so my dad told me I could stay home that afternoon and get some rest if I wanted to.

That afternoon, my mother (the principal of an elementary school) got home and had a fit, since the rule was in order to participate in any extracurricular activity part of the day, you had to be in class the rest of the day. (My dad got the blame from her, not me.) About 8 of us (some of whom really were skipping) got in-school detention for 2 days.

See, just plain "skipping" sounds better. :D

sigmagirl2000 06-21-2012 10:37 PM

My students today wouldn't be willing to get up early for any extracurricular. MysticCat was clearly a super motivated teen. :)

MysticCat 06-21-2012 10:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sigmagirl2000 (Post 2154166)
My students today wouldn't be willing to get up early for any extracurricular. MysticCat was clearly a super motivated teen. :)

LOL. Not that motivated, though. It was during school hours in the morning -- a performance of the spring musical for the junior high school. (I was Prof. Henry Higgins.)

AlwaysSAI 06-21-2012 11:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Titchou (Post 2154029)
Then again, if the police escorted you to detention, that would be known!

I've had more than one student leave my classroom this way. And, where I live, we don't call them police. They're called the SRO (a la School Resource Officer)--they are members of the police force assigned to serve the school.

lovespink88 06-21-2012 11:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kevin (Post 2154024)
Is it on your "permanent record"? I hear those are permanent.

Laughed harder at this than I should have. I should go to bed.

Titchou 06-22-2012 06:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AlwaysSAI (Post 2154178)
I've had more than one student leave my classroom this way. And, where I live, we don't call them police. They're called the SRO (a la School Resource Officer)--they are members of the police force assigned to serve the school.

One that I know about was actually the sheriff's deputies...and they really hauled her out in handcuffs....real, honest arrest - not SRO....

AGDee 06-22-2012 09:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MysticCat (Post 2154164)
It sounds better if I say I was skipping school. I, along with quite a few others, participated in an extracurricular activity during the morning. Then I went home for lunch. (Seniors could leave school for lunch.) I had been pretty much going non-stop for weeks if not months, so my dad told me I could stay home that afternoon and get some rest if I wanted to.

That afternoon, my mother (the principal of an elementary school) got home and had a fit, since the rule was in order to participate in any extracurricular activity part of the day, you had to be in class the rest of the day. (My dad got the blame from her, not me.) About 8 of us (some of whom really were skipping) got in-school detention for 2 days.

See, just plain "skipping" sounds better. :D

Somehow, I knew it wouldn't be something egregious!

Now that my kids have established themselves as hardworking students with good grades, I have relaxed that rule out of concern for their level of exhaustion too. I'd side with Dad on that one.

AlphaFrog 06-22-2012 09:32 AM

I received two detentions, but only had to serve one. One was after school and the Dean told us to go outside and play in the snow (you weren't allowed to stay in the building after a certain hour) - so we did - and another teacher came and gave us detentions for snowball fighting.

The one I did serve was for a dresscode violation. We had to wear khakis that were NOT jeans style. I had this pair that I wore all the time that had embroidered flowers all up the back, but I didn't get called on it until second semester senior year, and then it wasn't the flowers but because the pants had rivets which made them jeans. I was irked that I got away with it until the 11th hour, and then it was the RIVETS not the GIANT FLOWERS I was called on.

aephi alum 06-22-2012 10:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AlphaFrog (Post 2154270)
The one I did serve was for a dresscode violation. We had to wear khakis that were NOT jeans style. I had this pair that I wore all the time that had embroidered flowers all up the back, but I didn't get called on it until second semester senior year, and then it wasn't the flowers but because the pants had rivets which made them jeans. I was irked that I got away with it until the 11th hour, and then it was the RIVETS not the GIANT FLOWERS I was called on.

At my high school, the head of the athletics department was one of those people where you give them a little power and they go power-crazy. I'll call him Napoleon. For gym classes, we were required to wear clothing that was different from our street clothes, and the two main rules were that we had to wear sneakers (duh) and we were not allowed to wear jeans. So one of my classmates showed up for gym wearing dark blue sweatpants that, at a distance, could be mistaken for jeans. Napoleon said loudly, "Are you wearing DUNGAREES??? Go change or you're getting detention." Who says "dungarees" ??? :rolleyes:

I did narrowly dodge a detention thanks to this same guy. My HS had just implemented a new computer system for attendance. One day, Nappy was out, and the substitute accidentally marked me absent. Since I was in school and went to all my other classes, I was flagged as having cut gym, and a letter was automatically generated and sent to my parents informing them that I would be receiving detention. (This happened a lot. Normally, a student would take the letter to the regular teacher when s/he returned, and s/he would sign off that the student did attend class and the sub messed up, and the attendance records would be corrected.) So I took the letter to Nappy and asked him to sign off, and he refused on the grounds that he himself hadn't been there and therefore was unable to verify that I had been there. So I spoke to the head of the women's athletic department (who knew me because I was on the track team) and she went over Nappy's head and signed off. No detention for me. And some serious egg on Nappy's face. :D

ANYWAY... if you've just had a detention or three over the course of your HS career, most likely that won't even be considered during rush. Now, if you were arrested and hauled off in handcuffs for bringing a knife to school (yes, this happened to one of my classmates), that could be a problem.

sarajean94 06-22-2012 12:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aephi alum (Post 2154290)
At my high school, the head of the athletics department was one of those people where you give them a little power and they go power-crazy. I'll call him Napoleon. For gym classes, we were required to wear clothing that was different from our street clothes, and the two main rules were that we had to wear sneakers (duh) and we were not allowed to wear jeans. So one of my classmates showed up for gym wearing dark blue sweatpants that, at a distance, could be mistaken for jeans. Napoleon said loudly, "Are you wearing DUNGAREES??? Go change or you're getting detention." Who says "dungarees" ??? :rolleyes:

I did narrowly dodge a detention thanks to this same guy. My HS had just implemented a new computer system for attendance. One day, Nappy was out, and the substitute accidentally marked me absent. Since I was in school and went to all my other classes, I was flagged as having cut gym, and a letter was automatically generated and sent to my parents informing them that I would be receiving detention. (This happened a lot. Normally, a student would take the letter to the regular teacher when s/he returned, and s/he would sign off that the student did attend class and the sub messed up, and the attendance records would be corrected.) So I took the letter to Nappy and asked him to sign off, and he refused on the grounds that he himself hadn't been there and therefore was unable to verify that I had been there. So I spoke to the head of the women's athletic department (who knew me because I was on the track team) and she went over Nappy's head and signed off. No detention for me. And some serious egg on Nappy's face. :D

ANYWAY... if you've just had a detention or three over the course of your HS career, most likely that won't even be considered during rush. Now, if you were arrested and hauled off in handcuffs for bringing a knife to school (yes, this happened to one of my classmates), that could be a problem
.


I guess my question is, though - would they even know about it? If it was minor, of course.

carnation 06-22-2012 12:44 PM

Probably only if it's on your permanent record and prominently displayed.

Yoquierotacobel 06-23-2012 06:24 AM

I asked my counselor about that and she said that on the college application, when they ask "Have you ever been found...of a disciplinary violation?"--if you checked yes, they will know because that disciplinary violation would have been on your record and you would have needed an explanation for the college.

If you checked no, it doesn't matter because it was not on your record.


Detentions aren't held against you because they aren't on your record. If you get in school suspension, suspended or expelled that's totally different.

So, they won't know because it's not on your record.


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