Zigner
Senior Member, Non-Attorney
Ok, let's liken this to a note that's been passed around.The OP began the discussion. It was his discussion to begin with. He was "owner" of the smoking note.
OP didn't bring the note to school.
Ok, let's liken this to a note that's been passed around.The OP began the discussion. It was his discussion to begin with. He was "owner" of the smoking note.
Yep, I'm sure I'm rolling my eyes harder at you.And, now we're back to the "stated reason" as opposed to the "real reason"
Yes he did. Virtually. It came to school. Welcome to the 21st century!Ok, let's liken this to a note that's been passed around.
OP didn't bring the note to school.
No, he didn't. Because it's not the NOTE that caused the disruption (that you are claiming occurred). It was the discussion of the note. The other students brought the discussion. Welcome to the world.Yes he did. Virtually. It came to school. Welcome to the 21st century!
Ahhh, I'm sorry that I didn't decide to declare victory and go home first.and with that, since I know I'm right and Zig is arguing semantics not grounded in fact, I'll wait for the OP to return.
Thanks
ARE YOU JOKING?I'm sure he'll come back after school and tell us what his post actually said.
That was an interesting article.Interestingly, yesterday at:
http://reason.com/blog/2012/04/11/stop-cyberbullying-your-masters
is an article on high school kids getting suspended for posting parodies and irreverent memes about teachers and administrators on Tumbler.
I don't quite understand how the use of profanity would be so much more disruptive to the educational process than those Tumblr posts.That was an interesting article.
Where that differs from the OP's article is that the CA students didn't use profanity, just "mocking."
OP, I'm SURE you have a copy of what was said in your post on FB. Could you copy and paste that here, so we can see if there were any threats or slander?
Saying STUPID stuff is different than saying SLANDEROUS or THREATENING stuff.I don't quite understand how the use of profanity would be so much more disruptive to the educational process than those Tumblr posts.
Boy, the link I posted regarding the civil rights problems from school over-suspensions really is illustrated from the person who seems to want to differentiate between what the law and the constitution says and what schools think they can do.If you can post the thread, MINUS NAMES, then *I* can tell you if you were appropriately suspended for disruptive behavior or whatever.
The rest of the posters here are not in "school mode." They are in "free speech mode."
Most suspensions are for minor or vague infractions, such as disrespect, defiance and dress code violations, and this is clearly an unsound educational policy,” says coauthor Daniel Losen. “The numbers in our report indicate an absolute crisis in many California districts since suspending students out of school--with no guarantee of adult supervision - greatly increases the risk for dropping out and involvement in the juvenile justice system.”
The report discusses more effective responses to misbehavior than out-of-school suspensions. Studies of Texas and Indiana comparing demographically similar districts showed that those with lower suspension rates tended to have achievement and graduation numbers that were equal to or better than those with higher suspension rates.
As Losen points out, “This robust research busts the myth that you have to kick out the ‘bad kids’ so the ‘good kids’ can learn.”
Ohhh, the Civil Rights Project and their "words" are so tempting.Boy, the link I posted regarding the civil rights problems from school over-suspensions really is illustrated from the person who seems to want to differentiate between what the law and the constitution says and what schools think they can do.
From the Civil Rights Project at UCLA: