Child Still Expelled for Toy Gun - a Year Later

dejr_8

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Has common sense "left the building"?

http://www.nbcmiami.com/news/local-beat/Child-Gets-Expelled-For-Toy-Gun---a-Year-Later.html
Samuel Burgos has fond memories of his friends at school, but he only gets to see them in pictures now.
The 8-year-old boy hasn't been in school for a year and will likely miss another year if the Broward County School Board has its way.
Burgos was suspended from school in November after a teacher found a toy gun in his backpack. But when the boy went to register to go back to Pembroke Pines Charter School, he was told he will be expelled for this school year, too, as part of the county's zero tolerance weapons policy.
"He made a mistake, but why the severe punishment? I don't understand that," said Magdiel Burgos, Sam's dad

School board officials said the rules are quite clear and that the toy gun constituted a weapon. A school board report on the incident mentions that Samuel showed the toy gun to another student and it was capable of firing projectiles.
That's all it takes for it to be considered a weapon.
"This is in his backpack and it's a toy. It's not a real gun. It's a toy," said Magdiel Burgos, twirling a plastic gun.
The school board said they would admit Samuel into a correctional school for problem children who have been expelled located in Hallandale Beach.
The parents refused and believe their son has already paid for his mistake enough. Samuel has since been home-schooled, but his parents want him back in public school.
"I can't sit here and allow them to send my kid to a school where students have committed actual crimes," Burgos said. "He hasn't committed a crime."
Next week, the family will attend a school board meeting to try and get their son back in class as soon as possible, but that could be after Thanksgiving.
Burgos says his child has been set back emotionally and will probably have to repeat the second grade. He thinks there should be some room to determine that his child didn't bring a real gun to school.
"I understand the board is concerned about schools, and as parents we are concerned, too, but they need to work with us," he said.
The school board says it's common sense to know that this kind of item can't be allowed on school campus and that responsibility also falls on parents to know what their children have in their backpacks.
For more on what your child can and can't bring to school, go to www.browardschools.com.
 
oh man , I would be going so ballistic it wouldnt even be funny! I would NOT want my kid in that school district because of the lack of commen sense and"smarts" the powers that be fail to show.
 
These "zero-tolerance" policies should really be called "zero-intelligence" policies because they don't allow anyone to actually THINK about what's right and wrong.
 

Has common sense "left the building"?

http://www.nbcmiami.com/news/local-beat/Child-Gets-Expelled-For-Toy-Gun---a-Year-Later.html
Samuel Burgos has fond memories of his friends at school, but he only gets to see them in pictures now.
The 8-year-old boy hasn't been in school for a year and will likely miss another year if the Broward County School Board has its way.
Burgos was suspended from school in November after a teacher found a toy gun in his backpack. But when the boy went to register to go back to Pembroke Pines Charter School, he was told he will be expelled for this school year, too, as part of the county's zero tolerance weapons policy.
"He made a mistake, but why the severe punishment? I don't understand that," said Magdiel Burgos, Sam's dad

School board officials said the rules are quite clear and that the toy gun constituted a weapon. A school board report on the incident mentions that Samuel showed the toy gun to another student and it was capable of firing projectiles.
That's all it takes for it to be considered a weapon.
"This is in his backpack and it's a toy. It's not a real gun. It's a toy," said Magdiel Burgos, twirling a plastic gun.
The school board said they would admit Samuel into a correctional school for problem children who have been expelled located in Hallandale Beach.
The parents refused and believe their son has already paid for his mistake enough. Samuel has since been home-schooled, but his parents want him back in public school.
"I can't sit here and allow them to send my kid to a school where students have committed actual crimes," Burgos said. "He hasn't committed a crime."
Next week, the family will attend a school board meeting to try and get their son back in class as soon as possible, but that could be after Thanksgiving.
Burgos says his child has been set back emotionally and will probably have to repeat the second grade. He thinks there should be some room to determine that his child didn't bring a real gun to school.
"I understand the board is concerned about schools, and as parents we are concerned, too, but they need to work with us," he said.
The school board says it's common sense to know that this kind of item can't be allowed on school campus and that responsibility also falls on parents to know what their children have in their backpacks.
For more on what your child can and can't bring to school, go to www.browardschools.com.

WTH, for a toy gun! :mad:
 
I agree the school board is being outrageous, but two other things jumped out at me in this story.

1. Why can't he see his school friends after school? Can't his parents arrange play dates?

2. If he's been "home schooled", why on earth would he have to repeat second grade? Home schooling the first few years is not brain surgery. This child should not have fallen drastically behind, assuming he's got no learning disabilities and his parents are willing to dedicate an hour or two a day to educating him.

I'm going to hope it's all just bad writing on the reporter's part, going for the hyperbole and drama. And I hope the school board comes to its senses!
 
2. If he's been "home schooled", why on earth would he have to repeat second grade? Home schooling the first few years is not brain surgery. This child should not have fallen drastically behind, assuming he's got no learning disabilities and his parents are willing to dedicate an hour or two a day to educating him.

That is exactly what I was thinking. I mean if you can't teach your child second grade enough to keep him average, there is a problem. I would say it is more that the parents just don't want to. Heck I live about a mile from that school. Maybe I should offer to teach him an hour or two a day, but then again, I'm not sure I would want such a "dangerous armed delinquent" in my home.:rotfl2:
 
I had a boy in my class last year that brought a BB gun and a full jar of BBs in his bookbag and he was suspended for 10 days. However, they put it down as 5 day suspension and 5 day home instruction (of which he didn't get) because it looks better for the school when they have to report their suspension numbers to the state :rolleyes:

I was very surprised that they didn't call the police though, because they are supposed to. A few year back I had a kid that brought a switchblade to school and they had the police talking to him in the office.
 
I had a boy in my class last year that brought a BB gun and a full jar of BBs in his bookbag and he was suspended for 10 days. However, they put it down as 5 day suspension and 5 day home instruction (of which he didn't get) because it looks better for the school when they have to report their suspension numbers to the state :rolleyes:

I was very surprised that they didn't call the police though, because they are supposed to. A few year back I had a kid that brought a switchblade to school and they had the police talking to him in the office.

That would seem to be a better way to deal with these situations than suspensions. Scare the bejesus out of the kid by getting the police involved.
 
A few years back, boys could bring their Boy Scout knives to school, as long as they were in uniform that day and it was attached to their uniforms. I don't know how the students survived all those years of "armed Boy Scouts" walking the halls with dangerous weapons on their belts. In all those years there wasn't one "knifing".
 
You know, I would be so embarrassed if I were on that school board. They look so foolish for this decision. When is common sense gonna show up?
 
You know, I would be so embarrassed if I were on that school board. They look so foolish for this decision. When is common sense gonna show up?

When tenure goes away.
 


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