READERS RESPOND -- How far should zero tolerance go?
Thank you, Gay Geiser-Sandoval. Your education columns make a great
deal of sense to us. We are former teachers and grandparents of two
teenagers and two young adults. Your column (“Policy would not solve
school bully problem,” March 6) about the recent school shooting tragedy
hit the nail on the head regarding bullying by children. All the other
articles that day never mentioned that as a possible cause.
Consider the comments quoted from children that day:
* “One of the boys beats Williams.”
* “We were just making fun of him. We were just mocking him.”
* “Andrew Williams was considered a scrawny punk, a pint-sized
15-year-old ridiculed for his passivity, small size and pale skin.”
* “Kids stole shoes off his feet or stuff from his backpack and he
never fought back. Twice his skateboard was snatched away.”
* “You could take money out of his wallet, you could take the shirt
off his back and throw it in the gutter, and he would just walk away.”
* “He pounded him badly and punched him in the face four times.”
* And then there was the comment by a 12-year-old when Williams
threatened that he was going to shoot kids at school: “You don’t have the
guts to do it.”
We agree with you, Geiser-Sandoval. Bullying is a big part of the
problem, and so are those who stand by and watch it.
VIRGINIA AND ALLEN DAVIS
Newport Beach
Hurrah for parents who insisted on zero tolerance for bullying and
harassment at Corona del Mar High School. Their stance is one of
tenacity, dignity and integrity.
I’m sure the parents of students who were either killed or were the
killers in other districts wished they had insisted on such policies.
Those parents and administrators in Colorado, in San Diego, will likely
deal with the guilt from their passive responses to the clues and
indications of impending doom for the rest of their lives.Good for the
parents who bang the gong for the safety of their children and insist
that there be absolutely no tolerance for anyone who even threatens
physical violence. It is rare to see such courage and action in this age
of apathy and denial.
For a principal at a local high school to finally acknowledge
“probably” that harassment has a new significance is ludicrous. Of course
it has new meaning after watching the shock and horror at other affluent,
suburban districts in the recent past.
Why did parents have to demand such a policy? Why wasn’t it put into
place by an administration aware of the availability of guns in
combination with horror stories of student violence on the Corona del Mar
campus? I question the voracity and strength of character of this man.
Bravo to the parents who fought for a zero-tolerance policy, who
listen to their children, who take action on their child’s behalf, to get
through to obviously ostrich-like administrators. They are the true
heroes.
Today, Corona del Mar is not the agonized school dealing with
unchangeable, unspeakable tragedy because of the courage of these
parents. Thank you for the example you have set for the many other local
school districts in Orange County. I hope when my 2-year-old daughter
goes to school, I will have the same determination and tenacious
follow-through on her behalf as these parents in Corona del Mar did when
they took up activism for the zero-tolerance policy.
CAROLINE McNABBCosta Mesa
How far should the district’s zero-tolerance policy go?
The policy needs to go far enough to ensure all students have a safe,
nonthreatening environment.
Though she is now in college, we had a horrid experience when our
daughter was in sixth grade. The taunting from one boy spread to several
kids she thought had been friends, then to most of her class. Kids were
pressured to harass, taunt and tease her. The result was a girl who
wanted to change schools. The harasser promised to engage the help of his
friends at the other schools to ensure her life remained miserable.
After several conversations at the school, where we were told there
was not much that could be done, I started calling parents. While some
were receptive and took corrective action, I discovered the true source
of the problem when the parent of the instigator/worst offender
(obviously oblivious to her kid’s obnoxiousness) called to tell me that
she and her husband had discussed the problem and thought perhaps my
daughter needed counseling. Was she joking?
They did nothing to stop their son because, after all, they can only
control what he does in their presence. And he is, after all, just a kid
and boys will be boys.
It is a testimony to the true character of our daughter that she
survived the experience to become a truly beautiful (inside and out),
confident and compassionate young woman.
How many kids would have taken action into their own hands? Is this
not the type of stress that has led to violence in schools?
This problem extends beyond the school’s reach and is often a
parenting issue. The parents need to be held accountable (or at the very
least be inconvenienced). Perhaps a three-strikes policy, with the first
course of action being a conference with the parent and student, would
work?
Provide parents a chance to hear the problem and take their own
corrective action before escalating punishment. The school should then
have the option of determining the most appropriate punishment options.
The third and final action should be suspension or expulsion.
We live in a world where there must be laws to provide consequences
for harassment in the workplace. When adults must obey laws to prevent
them from abusing and harassing each other, it makes sense that the
offspring of the people who inspired the laws would also need special
“incentives” to behave themselves.
Is this still a civilized society?
MEG TWEEDY
Costa Mesa
I graduated from Newport Harbor High School 20 years ago and have
noticed huge changes everywhere.
When I was in school, you didn’t do anything because you knew that
when a teacher called your parents, the punishment would be much worse
than any five-day suspension from school.
We didn’t have the violent video games of today, but we had our share
of movies that would rival anything currently out there. Students live
for today and don’t worry about tomorrow.
Living in Seattle for the last 10 years, I’ve seen that kids only need
an excuse like a public gathering to express their bad behavior. In this
case in Corona del Mar, was it the right thing to suspend the child for
five days? No. Should the child have to go to counseling? Yes, but the
parents of the child would have to attend as well.
PETE CALLAWAY
Seattle, Wash.
Regarding Gay Geiser-Sandoval’s column (“Campus officers not the
answer,” March 13) and Ila Johnson’s community commentary
(“Zero-tolerance policy doesn’t attack cause,” March 13): I’m in favor of
combining Gay’s idea of training teachers and students with Ila’s concern
for the new children’s zero-tolerance recommendation by the school board.
A psychologist needs to educate the teachers, parents and children
what is acceptable venting of anger and when someone has gone too far,
such as acting in a more dangerous manner. This could include both people
who threaten suicide and violence. Both usually give warnings to others.
Those others simply need to understand the difference between a threat
and venting.
JANE ALTMAN-DWAN
Newport Beach
How far should the schools go? Well, I think if the students are
pulling pranks and are not obeying the rules like they have been in the
past, I believe a firm zero tolerance is needed to help correct
situations like that.
LARRY SEAL
Laguna Niguel
I thank you so much, Gary Norton, principal of Corona del Mar High
School. Please be tough; somebody has to. There is no excuse for children
drawing pictures that scare other kids nor is there an excuse for
harassing kids. Somebody needs to be strong. I’m glad that somebody’s
taken the stand. Tough love.
PENNY FLEMING
Newport Beach
What a surprise, another schoolyard shooting.
Between the killing-suggestive lyrics of today’s favorite rap stars,
the murder-oriented video games, the teaching philosophy that we are
nothing but evolved animals anyway, and society saying it’s OK to kill an
unborn child if you don’t want it: Should we expect anything less than
more violence from a confused child?
School leaders say what we need are more gun-control laws and metal
detectors in the schools with more psychologists to counsel on anger
management.
The same people say we don’t need groups that want to teach values and
morals and publicly post outdated documents that have sayings like, “Thou
shall not kill.”
Funny, I sound a little confused myself.
GARY BAUME
Costa Mesa
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