Another one that is too good to pass up.
The Knuckleheads of the Day award
Posted by Bill Jempty
Published: September 12, 2008 - 3:15 PM
Today's winners are Hilton Head Island International Baccalaureate Principal Jill McAden, Asst. Principal Kim Bratt, and Superintendent of Beaufort County Schools, Valerie Truesdale. They get the award for the following.
A 10-year-old Hilton Head Island boy has been suspended from school for having something most students carry in their supply boxes: a pencil sharpener.
The problem was his sharpener had broken, but he decided to use it anyway.
A teacher at Hilton Head Island International Baccalaureate Elementary School noticed the boy had what appeared to be a small razor blade during class on Tuesday, according to a Beaufort County sheriff's report.
It was obvious that the blade was the metal insert commonly found in a child's small, plastic pencil sharpener, the deputy noted.
The boy -- a fourth-grader described as a well-behaved and good student -- cried during the meeting with his mom, the deputy and the school's assistant principal.
He had no criminal intent in having the blade at school, the sheriff's report stated, but was suspended for at least two days and could face further disciplinary action.
District spokesman Randy Wall said school administrators are stuck in the precarious position between the district's zero tolerance policy against having weapons at school and common sense.
Zero tolerance in this case and others, is the mantra or justification for me who refuse to think. Part of a pencil sharpener is a weapon? Maybe, but so are pens, pencils, protractors and a long list of other items found in schools. How about paint and glue? A child may harm a classmate if they inject it into another's mouth. Any student bringing these should be suspended too. I mean school officials must have zero tolerance for any potential weapon.
A Beaufort County school spokesman said-
"We're always going to do something to make sure the child understands the seriousness of having something that could potentially harm another student, but we're going to be reasonable,"
Suspending a student over a broken pencil sharpener isn't a reasonable action except in the mind of idiots. Why are people like this educating students in South Carolina? Their brain matter is obviously more consistent with a person who digs ditches.
Steve Verdon at OTB wrote-
This policy is stupid in that a sliver of metal is probably far less lethal a weapon and a pencil or pen. The idea of preventing weapons on a school campus with young children is a laudable goal, but when you end up punishing a student for a silly mistake it is counter productive. The school district looks like a bunch of blithering morons and could undermine their authority (I'm sure the child has heard an earful from mom and dad about what a bunch of blithering morons the school officials are right on down to the teacher), undermine their credibility with the public, make them look incompetent and waste time on what amounts to literally a non-issue for the school, the parents and law enforcement.
*****
The reasonable thing is to say, "Have your mom buy another pencil sharpener, and throw that one out." Maybe having a meeting with the parents and the child and pointing out the concern. But for crying out loud a sliver of sharpened metal is nowhere near as deadly as a pencil, pen, a shod foot, a hard bound book, a chair, or a belt with a metal buckle. Hell, I bet a paper cut would be worse.
Being this stupid needs to hurt.
Its cases like this that show why schools in this country fail to educate. The principals and administrators are clueless idiots. One blogger called these school officials, 'retarded primates'. I think that's insulting to the real primates populating this planet.
The School Principal Jill McAden defended her, Kim Bratt(The person who called police to report the 'crime') and the school district's actions-
We regret that inaccuracies in a local news story created an impression that we do not use common sense in working with our children.
"The student was not suspended for having a pencil sharpener," McAden wrote. "He had an exposed blade which created a dangerous setting for the student and other children. The student was suspended for one day for inappropriate behavior in the classroom. The suspension was warranted."
The information in the story published in The Island Packet on Thursday was taken primarily from a Beaufort County sheriff's report. According to that report, the sheriff's office responded to the school after a teacher noticed the boy had what appeared to be a small razor blade.
"It was obvious the blade was the metal insert commonly found in a child's small plastic pencil sharpener," the deputy noted in his report.
The 10-year-old boy -- described in the report as"a very good student who has not been in any previous trouble" -- cried during the meeting with his mom, the deputy and the school's assistant principal, according to the report.
He had no criminal intent in having the blade at school, the sheriff's report stated, but was suspended.
Here's a link to the police report in question. Draw your own conclusions. McAden's defense looks to me like the desperate actions of a person who has been discovered to be an out of control idiot. Being labeled as an national embarassment to the education system in this country has to hurt.
Valerie Truesdale is the superintendent of schools in the county, and her failure to reign in McAden and Bratt makes her equally assinine looking. Valerie I see you have a doctorate, may I ask if it is in total stupidity?
Hilton Head Island International Baccalaureate Principal Jill McAden, Asst. Principal Kim Bratt, and Superintendant of Beaufort County Schools, Valerie Truesdale are today's Knuckleheads of the Day. Show this off to Beaufort County schoolchildren, Ladies.
Saturday, October 11, 2008
Candidates defend right to be stupid
Once a right reserved to the public only, now, new! And improved!
It has nothing to do with education or Morrisville. The headline was too good to pass up.
Enjoy your weekend.
It has nothing to do with education or Morrisville. The headline was too good to pass up.
Enjoy your weekend.
Schools News Around the Blogosphere
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Education is a messy business. I am not talking about the educational "mess" rhetoric that is much in the news. I am talking about the messy quality of even good education. Education is not a sleek, mechanistic enterprise of "I teach and you learn. Instead, education is an emotional set of experiences. That's what makes it so messy
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By ROBERT GEBELOFF
Grades for New York City schools are determined, in part, by a series of subjective decisions about which factors to use and how to weigh them.
A diploma for every student
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by Dorothy Rich
Education is a messy business. I am not talking about the educational "mess" rhetoric that is much in the news. I am talking about the messy quality of even good education. Education is not a sleek, mechanistic enterprise of "I teach and you learn. Instead, education is an emotional set of experiences. That's what makes it so messy
An F School? Depends on How It's Judged
New York Times
By ROBERT GEBELOFF
Grades for New York City schools are determined, in part, by a series of subjective decisions about which factors to use and how to weigh them.
A diploma for every student
Boston Globe
THERE ARE conflicting reports about the state of the public education system in Massachusetts. National data indicate that students are achieving at the highest levels in the country, yet the state Department of Education says that one out of every two public schools in the Commonwealth "needs improvement," and 75 percent of the middle schools and 277 public schools need yet-undefined "restructuring" to meet state MCAS standards.
It's a rough road to a diploma that means something
Providence Journal
Julia Steiny
The best thing about Rhode Island's rigorous new diploma system is its child-friendly spirit. Not that everyone feels that spirit. A newly organized group of parents sees the system becoming outright oppressive to kids, but more on those parents in a moment
Audit gives Detroit PS failing grade
Detroit News
An audit of Detroit Public Schools found serious systemic problems across many facets of the district, including lack of a strategy for raising academic performance, financial systems teetering on the edge of a breakdown and a nonexistent facilities management plan.
Primary school axes spelling tests because they are too 'distressing' for pupils
Daily Mail
Pupils in a Gloucestershire school will no longer be tested because staff believe it leaves them feeling like failures nationwide.
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