Sunday, May 25, 2014

COLORADO TEACHER SAW THREAT WHEN 8-YEAR-OLD BOY IMAGINED SEEING GUN IN A CLOUD

The second grade teacher took the little boy to the principal’s office after the class was asked to look at the clouds and draw a picture of what they saw, and he drew a picture of a gun

It looks as though the Sandy Hook Elementary School shootings have left teachers and school administrators in a panic mode concerning anything related to a gun, even if it exists in the imagination of a second grader.

Last year a 6-year-old boy at Roscoe R. Nix Elementary School in Silver Spring, Maryland was suspended for making a hand gesture in the form of a gun toward one of his classmates and saying ‘pow’. All I can say is that school administrators have taken leave of their senses since the Sandy Hook shootings. It’s a wonder they didn’t chop off that 6-year old’s hand to take his gun away.

When I was a young schoolboy, I drew pictures of guns all the time and so did my classmates. And during breaks, we played 'cowboys and Indians' or 'cops and robbers' on the school grounds, using hand gestures in the form of a gun and shouting 'bang bang.' If they found us doing that today, we’d all be in a pile of deep shit. As far as I know, none of my classmates ever shot anyone other than a Jap or Nazi soldier. (My apologies to any Japanese folks who may be offended by the word ‘Jap’.)

SECOND GRADER WRITTEN UP FOR ‘SEEING’ GUN IN THE CLOUDS
By Sandy Fitzgerald

Newsmax
May 24, 2014

An 8-year-old second grader at Talbott Elementary School in Colorado Springs, Colo., is in big trouble for using his imagination after he said a cloud looked like a gun.

His teacher filed a behavioral report against the boy after he drew a picture of a gun, after the teacher told him to look up at the clouds and draw what he saw, reports CBS affiliate KKTV.

“Draw a picture of what you see in the clouds from your imagination,” 8-year-old Kody Smith told the television station about what the teacher has said. "That picture is a gun," he continued, pointing to the gun he drew.

But his teacher, who has not been identified, was not happy with Kody's drawing, and took him to the office before and complained that he was exhibiting behavior disruptive to the school's entire learning community.

While his parents are concerned that the incident will remain on the little boy's permanent record, Widefield School District officials said it will not be.

"Our primary responsibility as a school district is to ensure safety of all staff, students and community," the district said in a press release. "We exercised an age-appropriate reaction to an incident. The student's education was never disrupted nor is this incident on the student's permanent record. Our response was in line with routine procedures focused on school safety.”

But Kody's parents said they are not happy with the action.

"It hurts that he was so scared for being penalized for his imagination," his father, Jeff Smith, told KKTV. His mother, Angel Rivers, told the station she does not believe her son did anything wrong.

“He’s 8 years old," Rivers said. "He was doing exactly what he was told to do for the assignment."

The incident is just one of many occurring nationwide as schools exhibit sensitivity on anything concerning guns, including last year when a 5-year-old Maryland kindergartner was suspended for 10 days for bringing a cowboy-style, orange-tipped cap gun onto his Calvert County, Md., school bus.

In addition to the 10-day suspension, school officials interrogated the boy for approximately two hours, during which time he urinated in his pants, before they called his mother and making her aware of the situation.

1 comment:

bob walsh said...

This would be funny if it wasn't instead sad, stupid and tragic. These are the people making decisions about how to educate our nation's children. That should either scare, irritate or depress you. If it doesn't, you are not paying attention.