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  #1  
Old 10-13-2009, 11:24 PM
Preston327 Preston327 is offline
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Zero Tolerance is a f***ing joke. The only school I went to with a serious crime problem spent more time figuring out who wrote "penis" on the bathroom wall than actually enforcing this stuff. I went to elementary school before this crap became the feel-good solution du jour, but I've got a few hilariously stupid stories of my own from high-school:

1. Getting bitched out by the SRO for having in my possession a drawing of a Barret M82 sniper rifle (for those of you who don't know your guns, this bad-boy costs $15k assuming you can even find one, not something a kid could afford) given to me by one of the cadets in my JROTC company. Nothing happened, I still have said drawing hanging prominently in my dorm.

2. Called down to SRO's office for "looking up weapons" on GlobalSecurity.org (yeah I was a military nerd in HS). What I had actually looked up was the specs on a tank. He gives me some BS, I question how the hell a high school student is supposed to buy or build a tank, he's humiliated and forced to let me back to class.

Zero-Tolerance needs to go 10 years ago. What ever happened to common sense and discretion?

ETA:
Quote:
“There are still serious threats every day in schools,” Dr. Ewing said, adding that giving school officials discretion holds the potential for discrimination and requires the kind of threat assessments that only law enforcement is equipped to make.
So I'm not longer "equipped" to determine if a kid with a book of rifle drawings is a threat to myself, himself or others? God this article makes me weep for humanity.

Last edited by Preston327; 10-13-2009 at 11:28 PM.
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  #2  
Old 10-13-2009, 11:33 PM
Kevin Kevin is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Preston327 View Post
ETA: So I'm not longer "equipped" to determine if a kid with a book of rifle drawings is a threat to myself, himself or others? God this article makes me weep for humanity.
Only law enforcement is equipped to make these decisions? Reary?

Requirement to be a school administrator: bachelor's in education plus a master's in administration.

vs.

Requirement to be a police officer: (maybe) high school diploma? Some sort of state certification?

If administrators aren't equipped to make these 'tough' decisions, they should not be trusted to run schools, supervise teachers, ensure kids are safe, etc.
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  #3  
Old 10-14-2009, 12:05 AM
chickenoodle chickenoodle is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kevin View Post
Only law enforcement is equipped to make these decisions? Reary?

Requirement to be a school administrator: bachelor's in education plus a master's in administration.

vs.

Requirement to be a police officer: (maybe) high school diploma? Some sort of state certification?

If administrators aren't equipped to make these 'tough' decisions, they should not be trusted to run schools, supervise teachers, ensure kids are safe, etc.
Yep.

Speaking of simple situations blown completely out of proportion by ridiculous school policies... When my sister was in high school, she and a friend went to the bathroom during lunch. Turns out, that's is a big no-no at this particular school. She and her friend were suspended for 3 days.

So when are students supposed to go, you ask? During the 3 minutes they have in between classes.
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  #4  
Old 10-14-2009, 11:12 AM
deepimpact2 deepimpact2 is offline
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I have mixed feelings about this kind of thing. Often times it is the kid who really has honest intentions who gets shafted by these "strict liability" type of rules. But still, what he brought to school was a knife. And I fail to see how his 14th Amendment due process rights were violated. It was a school policy. He violated it. So what if he is six? They knew that 6 yr olds would be included in the group affected by the policy.

A student at the high school where I taught was suspended for 365 days. He had gone hunting over the weekend. That Sunday he was going to the school for a Relay for Life event. He forgot to take his hunting rifle out of the back of his truck. He realized it not long after he got there when one of his friends told him. Before he could get back to the truck to go home, he was in handcuffs. His family appealed but to no avail. He was an honor student and one of the nicest students in the school. Granted the situation is slightly different, but it goes to show that these schools really are drawing a hard line about this kind of thing.
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  #5  
Old 10-14-2009, 11:33 AM
MysticCat MysticCat is offline
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Originally Posted by deepimpact2 View Post
And I fail to see how his 14th Amendment due process rights were violated. It was a school policy. He violated it. So what if he is six? They knew that 6 yr olds would be included in the group affected by the policy.
That's the extent of your due process analysis?
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  #6  
Old 10-14-2009, 01:57 PM
ForeverRoses ForeverRoses is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gamma View Post
Where is your brilliant analysis?

Do you think it is ok for students to bring knives to school?
Well you didn't ask me, but as the mother of 3, here is my opinion.

I think context is everything. Do I think weapons should be allowed at school? No. However I also don't think there should be an across the board inflexible policy regarding it. A policy that states: no weapons and here are the possible punishments... yes.

I see it as a difference between a child bringing a knife and eating with it versus a child bringing a knife and holding to another child's neck. The first child should be spoken to about why we don't bring knives to school. The second should possibly be expelled/sent to reform school.

About the student that had a hunting weapon in his car? If he told someone himself and said it was an honest mistake, then he should have been sent to class to learn about gun safty/never leaving it in the car. Not expelled. Maybe even had an agreement to have his car/locker searched on a regular basis for some amount of time to show that he wasn't making the mistake again.

I know many school districts have very ridgid policies because they fear lawsuits if they have any bit of discretion. A parent might cry discrimination or its not fair. But I still think that context should matter.
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  #7  
Old 10-14-2009, 02:03 PM
DaemonSeid DaemonSeid is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ForeverRoses View Post
Well you didn't ask me, but as the mother of 3, here is my opinion.

I think context is everything. Do I think weapons should be allowed at school? No. However I also don't think there should be an across the board inflexible policy regarding it. A policy that states: no weapons and here are the possible punishments... yes.

I see it as a difference between a child bringing a knife and eating with it versus a child bringing a knife and holding to another child's neck. The first child should be spoken to about why we don't bring knives to school. The second should possibly be expelled/sent to reform school.

About the student that had a hunting weapon in his car? If he told someone himself and said it was an honest mistake, then he should have been sent to class to learn about gun safty/never leaving it in the car. Not expelled. Maybe even had an agreement to have his car/locker searched on a regular basis for some amount of time to show that he wasn't making the mistake again.

I know many school districts have very ridgid policies because they fear lawsuits if they have any bit of discretion. A parent might cry discrimination or its not fair. But I still think that context should matter.
And those rigid policies comes from too many kids killing other kids in school near school around the shcool and after school and it has resulted in panic button politics.

The moment we see kids with something that could be misconstrued as a weapon (per the cartoon a few poasts back) they are automatically deemed as 'troublemakers'.

let's thank the perps that has made it bad for those who are innocent.
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  #8  
Old 10-14-2009, 03:23 PM
deepimpact2 deepimpact2 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ForeverRoses View Post
Well you didn't ask me, but as the mother of 3, here is my opinion.

I think context is everything. Do I think weapons should be allowed at school? No. However I also don't think there should be an across the board inflexible policy regarding it. A policy that states: no weapons and here are the possible punishments... yes.

I see it as a difference between a child bringing a knife and eating with it versus a child bringing a knife and holding to another child's neck. The first child should be spoken to about why we don't bring knives to school. The second should possibly be expelled/sent to reform school.

About the student that had a hunting weapon in his car? If he told someone himself and said it was an honest mistake, then he should have been sent to class to learn about gun safty/never leaving it in the car. Not expelled. Maybe even had an agreement to have his car/locker searched on a regular basis for some amount of time to show that he wasn't making the mistake again.

I know many school districts have very ridgid policies because they fear lawsuits if they have any bit of discretion. A parent might cry discrimination or its not fair. But I still think that context should matter.
But how do the officials know that all he intended to do was eat with it? How do officials know that someone else might not have grabbed the knife and used it in a harmful way. The bottom line is that kids should not be allowed to bring weapons to school despite their actual intentions for doing so. I prefer for schools to be strict about this than to let it ride and find that chaos results. And if the decision is made on a case-by-case basis, then you run the risk of discriminatory practices settling into place.

There was nothing confusing about the policy. And no one can argue ignorance as an excuse because parents and children are expected to know these policies. If they are applying it to everyone across the board, then again, there is no problem.
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  #9  
Old 10-14-2009, 02:28 PM
MysticCat MysticCat is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gamma View Post
Where is your brilliant analysis?

Do you think it is ok for students to bring knives to school?


Let me try to make this easy for you. Whether I think it is okay for kids to bring knives to school (even if they are Cub Scout camping knives that are duller than what would be in the cafeteria) and whether I think there are due process issues involved are completely unrelated questions.

I have not offered a due process analysis, largely because one or two news stories don't provide enough information to make any reasonable analysis. But were I too undertake a due process analysis, it would not begin with whether the policy is a good or bad policy. It would probably begin with the question of whether automatic suspension, possibly without any hearing or appeal rights, implicates the due process rights of the student. A due process analysis would typicall have to do with how the consequences of violating the rule were imposed, not with whether the policy was valid or was violated to begin with.

deepimpact basically said it was school policy, intended to include students like him and he violated it. As a second- or third-year law student, she should know (1) that whether a law or policy applies to someone who violated it is usually irrelevant to a due process question, and (2) people's convictions for crimes are overturned everyday not because they didn't violate the law but because they were denied due process.
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  #10  
Old 10-14-2009, 03:20 PM
deepimpact2 deepimpact2 is offline
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Originally Posted by MysticCat View Post


Let me try to make this easy for you. Whether I think it is okay for kids to bring knives to school (even if they are Cub Scout camping knives that are duller than what would be in the cafeteria) and whether I think there are due process issues involved are completely unrelated questions.

I have not offered a due process analysis, largely because one or two news stories don't provide enough information to make any reasonable analysis. But were I too undertake a due process analysis, it would not begin with whether the policy is a good or bad policy. It would probably begin with the question of whether automatic suspension, possibly without any hearing or appeal rights, implicates the due process rights of the student. A due process analysis would typicall have to do with how the consequences of violating the rule were imposed, not with whether the policy was valid or was violated to begin with.

deepimpact basically said it was school policy, intended to include students like him and he violated it. As a second- or third-year law student, she should know (1) that whether a law or policy applies to someone who violated it is usually irrelevant to a due process question, and (2) people's convictions for crimes are overturned everyday not because they didn't violate the law but because they were denied due process.
As someone who has practiced law for several years, you should recognize that there is a difference between the majority of cases where the courts decided that due process rights had been violated and this case.
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