6 Year old suspended for making a "finger gun"

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RKM

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A Montgomery County elementary school student was suspended for a pretend gunshot a week after Adam Lanza killed 20 children and six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn.

The 6-year-old, who attends Roscoe R. Nix Elementary School in Silver Spring, made a gun with his hands, pointed it at another student and said "pow," according to Robin Ficker, the boy's attorney. He was given a one-day suspension, with a conference on the matter planned for Jan. 2, the day students return to school from winter break.

"What they're doing is looking at the worst possible interpretation of a young, naive 6-year-old," Ficker said. "This is a little child who can't form the intent to do anything like that."

According to a letter sent by Assistant Principal Renee Garraway to the child's parents, this was not the first time something like this had happened.

"Your son ... was involved in a serious incident," Garraway wrote. "[He] threatened to shoot a student. He was spoken to earlier today about a similar incident."

Ficker said the boy's family was never told about any previous issues. "They won't say what the similar incident is," Ficker said. "It just shows the overreaction."

The letter says that the child's parents were informed of their son's suspension the day of the incident, though Ficker said the school should have invited his mother in to discuss the situation before a suspension was handed down.

"They could have called the mother in. They didn't do that. They just said, 'You're suspended,' " he said. "Five years from now, when someone in to Montgomery County looks at his permanent record, they're going to see that he threatened to shoot another student."

According to the letter, the ruling can be appealed within 10 days, although the suspension has already been served. Garraway declined to comment.

Montgomery County Public Schools spokesman Dana Tofig said it was policy not to comment on student disciplinary matters. He added, though, that schools make sure parents are aware of behavioral issues.

"Generally, in an incident involving the behavior of our younger students, we will make sure that the student and family are well-informed of any behavior that needs to change and understand the consequences if the behavior does not change," Tofig said. "And that's especially true if the behavior is affecting the learning environment or how safe another student feels."



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oklaccer

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Someone needs to educate the educators. This PC cr@p does not do society any good in the long run. The last statement about how safe another student feels is where this needs to be addressed. Kids will be kids, and that is all there is to it. Educate the kids to the real dangers in the world, not this playground stuff. My 9yo daughter makes those signs with her hand when we are playing around. But I have also taken her to the range and taught her the safety rules for real guns. When the guns come out, she gets real serious real fast. Fire all the PC police.
 

338Shooter

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Had a similar incident when I was in first grade and my brother was in kindergarten in Guymon. We were at recess in the sand box around one of the jungle gyms. We were picking up the tiny rocks (like pin head size) that were in the sand and flicking them at each other. School made a huge deal out of it because throwing rocks was against the rules. My mother was livid.
 

mugsy

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Gah....every day I find a new reason to consider home schooling my kids, "socialization" be damned

Go ahead and do it - we home schooled 4 of our 5 children. Or at least don't skip based on the non-sensical "socialization" argument. The socialization argument is a red herring used by people who don't have a fact based argument. Consider - boy scouts, girl scouts, church groups, civic groups, local team sports (possibly even in conjunction with school sports depending on district). Whoops - sorry for the thread diversion.
 

n8thegr8

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Go ahead and do it - we home schooled 4 of our 5 children. Or at least don't skip based on the non-sensical "socialization" argument. The socialization argument is a red herring used by people who don't have a fact based argument. Consider - boy scouts, girl scouts, church groups, civic groups, local team sports (possibly even in conjunction with school sports idepending on district). Whoops - sorry for the thread diversion.

I was home schooled until the 9th grade and think I'm much better off for it. My wife was public schooled her whole life though, so she is of a different opinion, but even she's been making comments lately that it might not be a bad idea, lol.
 

Waltherfan

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If home schooling isn't a realistic option, then get heavily involved in school matters. Join and take leadership positions in the PTA (or whatever it's called these days). Put pressure of those in charge of making rules. Get rid of zero tolerance. That was simply a cop out so they wouldn't have to make decisions. Take more control over what is taught and how it's taught. Allow kids to fail. Their self esteem will only get stronger if they earn their rewards.
We've allowed people to experiment with our children and now we see the results.
 

WideLoadTimmy

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If home schooling isn't a realistic option, then get heavily involved in school matters. Join and take leadership positions in the PTA (or whatever it's called these days). Put pressure of those in charge of making rules. Get rid of zero tolerance. That was simply a cop out so they wouldn't have to make decisions. Take more control over what is taught and how it's taught. Allow kids to fail. Their self esteem will only get stronger if they earn their rewards.
We've allowed people to experiment with our children and now we see the results.


It's awful, how accurate that statement is.
 

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