This doesn't seem like an appropriate code for a public school where the child doesn't have a choice about where they go. The only appropriate thing here involves criminal behavior. If you are prosecuted criminally then the school has proof and it's a level playing field....
Then the school should inform the parents just like they inform them when they cut school or are failing a class. The school could also notify law enforcement if they are worried about liability.Underage drinking and smoking cigarettes (in most states) is against the law. If a school official had proof of this activity and did nothing, the parent could sue because of the school's LACK of action, especially if someone was injured in some way.
We did! The "BlackTop" it was a grassy hill that was at the end of the basketball courts and on the edge of the school property. Then there was the the teachers loungeDid anyone else have a smoking section at school?
I think I have heard in the past that many schools have instituted a "student code of conduct" where students of that school have to follow guidlines that even covers things OFF school property.
But if you are a football player on a team in the state finals, nothing happens to you at all.
Happened around here last fall. The entire football team and cheerleaders were found by a farmer in his barn, all drunk as skunks, after a game. He called the cops, etc. This was in clear violation of school policy, which mandated that they were all to be kicked off the team. They went on to play in the state finals. No consequences whatsoever.
1. ALL students ARE MADE to sign a code of conduct claiming they will have NOTHING to do with drugs or drinking. period.
NOTE::::::: THIS POST IS MY OPINION. PLEASE DO NOT FLAME ME.
ok, i graduated from that high school in 2004... i know how that school feels about drinking and drug use. They have ZERO tollerance.
1. ALL students ARE MADE to sign a code of conduct claiming they will have NOTHING to do with drugs or drinking. period.
2. If you are going to a party that serves alcohol, and you chose to drink and if a picture of you holding/drinking the alcohol is taken, and winds up on facebook/myspace/whatever.... DELETE IT!!!! i mean... duh! first of all, you're stupid for drinking underage. second, ANY PERSON HAS A RIGHT TO DELETE SUCH PICTURES OF THEMSELVES ON SUCH WEBSITES!!!
3. any parents taking legal action.... pa-leeze. go after the cooks that supplied your precious minors with alcohol.... and then go after your CHILD that drank it. In my house I WOULD BE THE ONE gettin' it if i drank... not the school.
4. I realize that a lot of the pictures are of students holding red cups. Stereotypically, red cups are 'party' cups and used to hold beer or other alcoholic substances. The school can not legally do anything abotu a student holding a red cup.... that is the one and ONLY reason i back up the students in this situation... but... stereotypically it looks like they would have been drinking if you can see other bottles in the room.
5. Most of the students were saying that they drank before they ever signed anything. ok cool- whatever... but YOU STILL DRANK UNDERAGE... true, the school cannot go after them since it was off school property and they had not signed anything... BUT... this is when the parents should get a LOUD BUZZING ANNOYING WAKE UP CALL... and figure out what is going on with their children.
A reason for my lovely rant here, is because WAY TOO MANY kids have been dying of alcohol related incidents and note::: MANY OF THEM ARE AT LEGAL AGE!!!... i would HATE to see a highschool kid (or anyone younger for that matter) die of alcohol related incidents, too.
Parents, PLEASE don't let your kids drink underage. TALK TO THEM ABOUT THE OUTCOMES and SEVERITY OF THEIR CHOICES. even if you have already done so... DO IT AGAIN. even if your kids are LEGAL AGE... DO IT AGAIN. Let your kids know you love them and care about them and want them to make RESPONSIBLE decisions.
A select few kids from my old high school did not do that and are now paying the consequences.
Rant over. Thanks for listening.
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Did you go to a public school?
When you say "made" what was the punishment for students who simply refused to sign anything agreement about their lives outside of school?
I agree with other posters that I don't understand why (public) schools seem to think they should be able to dictate what children do in their non-school hours. When my brother was in high school he got pulled into the principal's office at school over a website he designed/maintained which often said bad (but true) things about the school; the principal ordered him to get rid of the website and my brother refused. Since that tactic didn't work, the principal then went for another. My brother also had some kind of poll about what girl in school is most "doable" or something like that(he did have the girls' permission to use their names) and the principal decided to call each of the girls into his office and talk to them about how wrong it is to portray themselves as promiscuous on the internet
. Except the girls weren't buying the principal's crap either so he then began calling the girl's parents to alert them that their daughter's names were online in this format and most of the girls were over 18 (most of the parents didn't care). My parents freaked out over all of this and made my brother take down the site until he turned 18 (a few months) because they were scared of repurcussions at school. I kept insisting that there was no way the school punishing my brother for something he put on the internet on his own free time would hold up in court. They were too scared to look into it though.
I have a feeling that once I have a child in school I may need to keep the ACLU's phone number close by.
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Did you go to a public school?
When you say "made" what was the punishment for students who simply refused to sign anything agreement about their lives outside of school?
I agree with other posters that I don't understand why (public) schools seem to think they should be able to dictate what children do in their non-school hours. When my brother was in high school he got pulled into the principal's office at school over a website he designed/maintained which often said bad (but true) things about the school; the principal ordered him to get rid of the website and my brother refused. Since that tactic didn't work, the principal then went for another. My brother also had some kind of poll about what girl in school is most "doable" or something like that(he did have the girls' permission to use their names) and the principal decided to call each of the girls into his office and talk to them about how wrong it is to portray themselves as promiscuous on the internet
. Except the girls weren't buying the principal's crap either so he then began calling the girl's parents to alert them that their daughter's names were online in this format and most of the girls were over 18 (most of the parents didn't care). My parents freaked out over all of this and made my brother take down the site until he turned 18 (a few months) because they were scared of repurcussions at school. I kept insisting that there was no way the school punishing my brother for something he put on the internet on his own free time would hold up in court. They were too scared to look into it though.
I have a feeling that once I have a child in school I may need to keep the ACLU's phone number close by.
i here what your saying and i respect it fully however parents really don't have a whole lot of say in the matter, sure they can punish them or whatever but parents authority drops off a lot after high school and when your 18, 19 or 20 years old i just don't think a parent telling you no is going to do anything, underage kids are at college with no parents. I would say its more on the responsibility of the people drinking then the parents. If they raised you well enough you will either not drink or be responsible about it if you do...i know plenty of underage drinkers who are way more responsible then their 21 year old counterparts. Do i think drinking in high school is bad yes of course but after high school while still underage its really a personal decision. i mean its not like underage kids don't know what could be the consequences of their actions.
I don't see a problem with this. it's preparing kids for life in the real world. lots of companies will punish you for doing things outside of work. ex--go to amsterdam get high LEGALLY, retur to work, get random drug tested. you fail and could get fired. but you did it outside of work.
these kids are in high school. if they're dumb enough to post drunken photos on PUBLIC websites they get what they deserve.