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A 10-Year-Old Pointed a Finger Gun. The Principal Kicked Him Out of His Tennessee School for a Year.

The principal’s action was the result of a new state law that had gone into effect just months earlier, heightening penalties for students who make threats at school. Passed after a former student shot and killed six people at The Covenant School in Nashville, the law requires students to be expelled for at least a year if they threaten mass violence on school property, making it a zero-tolerance offense.

Tennessee lawmakers claimed that ramping up punishments for threats would help prevent serious acts of violence. “What we’re really doing is sending a message that says ‘Hey, this is not a joke, this is not a joking matter, so don’t do this,’” state Sen. Jon Lundberg, a co-sponsor of the legislation, told a Chattanooga news station a week and a half after the law went into effect.

Tennessee school officials have used the law to expel students for mildly disruptive behavior, according to advocates and lawyers across the state who spoke with ProPublica. (In Tennessee and a number of other states, expulsions aren’t necessarily permanent.) Some students have been expelled even when officials themselves determined that the threat was not credible. Lawmakers did put a new fix in place in May that limits expulsions to students who make “valid” threats of mass violence. But that still leaves it up to administrators to determine which threats are valid.

In some cases last school year, administrators handed off the responsibility of dealing with minor incidents to law enforcement. As a result, the type of misbehavior that would normally result in a scolding or brief suspension has led to children being not just expelled but also arrested, charged and placed in juvenile detention, according to juvenile defense lawyers and a recent lawsuit.

some_guy ,

Ok, so now we’re just destroying the education of little kids who have imagination. That’s awesome.

grue ,

🧑‍🚀👈🧑‍🚀 Always have been

(Which is not to say this isn’t making it even worse, 'cause it is.)

tyler ,

You’re expelled

shalafi ,

I’d get in some minor, and I do mean minor, trouble in elementary school and say, “Buh, buh, but I thought…”

“You’re not here to think!”

Got that a few times.

Samvega ,

To kids who hate school, being able to not go for a year might be a reward.

girlfreddy OP ,
@girlfreddy@lemmy.ca avatar

It sets them back a year so I doubt they’d be happy about redoing a grade.

curbstickle ,

Oh no, I think you’re missing the real goal here.

Clearly, these children yearn for the mines.

girlfreddy OP ,
@girlfreddy@lemmy.ca avatar

Who peed in your cornflakes this morning?

curbstickle ,

That I think choosing to make such egregious punishment is intended to increase the rate of dropouts, and more relaxed child labor laws?

I mean, this isn’t new. Its a republican goal, just look at Arkansas and Iowa.

Samvega ,

School refusal is real.

Modern_medicine_isnt ,

At 10, they probably won’t even think of that until the next year. And that’s assuming that they actually make them do the grade instead of skip. A lot of schools think it is more important to stay with your age group. And they are probably not wrong.

BertramDitore ,
@BertramDitore@lemmy.world avatar

Do these freaks really not remember what it was like to be a kid? Kids do crazy shit, it’s how we all learn about ourselves, our boundaries, our values. Punishing a kid for playing around like this will not help anyone, it will simply make it more likely that this kid acts out later because their sense of what’s socially acceptable and what’s not will be completely skewed by these absurd rules.

I played finger guns in school all the time (before active-shooter drills were a thing, to be fair), and it’s part of how I figured out that I hate guns and violence. Punishment first has never been effective, we need to trust ourselves and our kids a little more.

MediaBiasFactChecker Bot ,

Propublica - News Source Context (Click to view Full Report)Information for Propublica:
> MBFC: Left-Center - Credibility: High - Factual Reporting: High - United States of America
> Wikipedia about this source

Search topics on Ground.Newshttps://www.propublica.org/article/tennessee-school-threats-expulsions

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