Quote:
Originally Posted by PiKA2001
Poor little divas. I take it none of these kids have an after school job at a restaurant or plan on joining the military after graduation?
I see nothing wrong with this. I like the idea of having kids do chores around the school, it's a lot more productive than having them sit in a room for an hour (detention).
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Quote:
Originally Posted by knight_shadow
I agree that students should be doing something productive while in detention.
I disagree that cleaning toilets (which exposes the students to waste, diseases, etc) is the way to do it.
Not sure how the job and military references fit in, since cleaning toilets is NOT the job of students.
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This.
Quote:
Originally Posted by PiKA2001
When I worked at a fast food restaurant in high school I had to clean the restrooms there. When I was in basic training, we all had to clean the latrines. Yes, it was far from pleasent but I've yet to hear of any mcdonalds employee catching Ebola and dying from mopping a bathroom floor. If these students find this form of punishment so repulsive, maybe it will encourage them to change the behaviour that landed them in detention in the first place.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Drolefille
So you were employed? Being paid? That's exactly the point that we're making.
These students are not. There are certainly ways for them to do chores/cleaning around school that does not expose them to biohazards as a punishment.
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And this.
A student cleaning toilets for their job and them doing it at school are totally different situations to most people.