I haven't read the entire thread only a few posts but allowing me to say this:
Banning bookbags:
I clearly and vividly remember being a teenager. It is physically impossible to carry 5 notebooks, or a huge binder, plus books, pens, pencils and any other crap in your arms all day. Something is bound to get lost, it's not about them not being responsible it's just physically impossible. You can't do it as an adult, never mind as a teenager, not to mention that in the run from classroom to classroom 10 things fall from you. I see disorganized adults all the time and then they insist that their children keep it together. Why the hell are you expecting something that you yourself can't do? We parents expect from our children a perfection and functionality that we ourselves don't have? You want your children to learn about compassion and understanding others? Start by giving it to them first.
Dropping lunch/money:
I don't know about others but I allow myself to be human. Yes I have forgotten my lunch at home more than once, so have my kids. Out of let's say 100 days of school maybe once they have forgotten. It's not a daily occurrence, so I don't see why I shouldn't take the money when they do. However, I can't get out of work to get the money so instead since her school has the lunch money system we open an account and make sure it always has money by having an automatic payment system. The day she forgets her lunch she can easily pay it from there. I refuse to let anyone I know go hungry. As a teenager who went to bed hungry because her family didn't have enough money for food, I can't describe how horrible the feeling is. I just can't stand the thought, not even if it's for a few hours...
Water Bottles:
Alcohol in water bottles? Have the schools documented how many cases of alcohol in water bottles have they had? I'm not talking national statistics I'm talking a real incident in that school. If it has been one person out of 300 students why are we penalizing 299 people for the mistake of one? I'm seriously asking there. Working with schools have made me realize that many times rules have been put in place not by any incident but mostly by fear and mass hysteria of people. My kids had water bottles all of their elementary life and not once we were asked to switch it out to clear bottles. So I don't see what the problem is.
My own annoying rules. Attendance:
I understand the importance of school and I'm not saying that schools shouldn't enforce attendance. I think they should. However, can't we reach a middle ground here? Two years ago we had a death in the family and I pulled the kids out of school so we could attend the funeral. It was out of the country so they missed several days. My oldest was penalized for that and wasn't able to attend the last dance. One of her friends went on a vacation and was also penalized. Look, not all of us can take vacation at the times the school is out. I absolutely can't, would LOVE too, and believe me we have tried. So did the parents of her friends. The week they missed there was no exams or nothing strange and she was able to catch up in no time. Why don't we allow folks a little room to work with? My oldest daughter's high school has now a limit on Medical excuses. The maneuvers I've had to do to schedule doctors appointments is ridiculous. If it wasn't because she loves the school so much I would honestly pulled her from it, and homeschool her.
Attitude:
Please teachers don't take this the wrong way. I have a sister, 3 aunts and several friends who are teachers. I love teachers and I think it's an awesome profession. However, just as in any other profession, sometimes some folks attitude plain out stink. After volunteering extensively in schools for years, this year I'm taking a break. Yikes some teachers attitude is as if students are out to get them. They treat students horribly and then expect respect in return. You can't demand respect, it's earned folks. You can't treat anyone (no matter the age) with contempt and expect respect in return. It's the how the world works.
No touching rule:
In the real world there is no touching rule. I found this rule so ridiculous. If we want kids to learn about personal space and respecting others we need to start up by teaching them proper guidelines to how we touch others. Not make our lives easier by banning touching and be done with the problem, just because it makes us (the adults) our existence easier. I have yet to find one teacher who gives me a good reason for it.