Friday, August 29, 2008

Stirring the pot

Sometimes people don't have enough conflict in their lives so they go out of their way to create more. As the new school year begins, that's something I'm going to be trying to avoid.

Because it's short, I've pasted an article I found here. Dress codes are one of those things that will always create conflict. You have to have some limits, but this is just picking a fight:

A Crime of Fashion
There are no bars on the windows, but Texas’ Gonzales High School could start to resemble a prison. A new policy at the school, located 70 miles east of San Antonio, states students who violate the dress code will be required to wear an inmate-style navy blue jumpsuit to class if they refuse to attend in-school suspension or don’t change their clothes, The Houston Chronicle reported.

“We’re a conservative community, and we’re just trying to make our students more reflective of that,” Gonzales Independent School District deputy superintendent Larry Wehde said. Dress code violations include spaghetti-strap tank tops, baggy clothes, miniskirts, clothes that reveal underwear, and earrings on male students. T-shirts have recently been added to the list, with students now expected to wear collared shirts.

Although school officials hope the policy will lessen clothing distractions in class, senior class president Jordan Meredith says some students plan to fight the policy by turning the jumpsuits into a fashion statement, even going as far as to say they will purposefully violate the dress code or purchase their own coveralls. “They’ll see it as an opportunity to be like, rebels,” he said. “I don’t think there’s going to be enough jumpsuits for everyone.”

In Ephesians right after the famous passage telling children to obey their parents is one warning parents not to "provoke" their children. Sounds like Gonzales Independent School District doesn't get that, though I bet some of them have used the "obey" part with their own kids before.

It's always better to find ways to defuse rather than escalate. That goes for foreign policy as well as the classroom.

(Addendum: I found this about Texas teachers who are now allowed to carry concealed firearms in the classroom as of this year as well. There are no words...)
(PPS - Here's an excerpt from the article as I was informed that the link only works if you have access to the journal)

The superintendent said some of the school's 50 employees are carrying weapons, but he wouldn't say how many. When pressed further, he first said that revealing that number might jeopardize school security. He then added that he considered it to be personnel information and not a matter of public record.

Each employee who wants to carry a weapon first must be approved by the board based on his or her personality and reaction to a crisis, Thweatt said. In addition to training required for a state concealed weapons license, they also must be trained to handle crisis intervention and hostage situations.

State education officials said they did not know of any other Texas schools allowing teachers to carry guns. National security experts and the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence said they did not know of other U.S. schools with such a policy.

School districts in some states, including Florida and Arizona, have closed loopholes that allowed guns on K-12 campuses. Utah allows concealed weapons at public universities but not at primary or secondary schools.

Thweatt said the board took extra precautions, such as requiring employees to use bullets that will minimize the risk of ricochet, similar to those used by air marshals on planes.
"I can lead them from a fire, tornado and toxic spill; we have plans in place for that. I cannot lead them from an active shooter," Thweatt said. "There are people who are going to think this is extreme, but it's easy to defend."

Judy Priz, who has a third-grade daughter, said that "everyone I've talked to thinks it's great." She said she trusts the teachers with her child's life.

"Look how long it takes the police or anybody else to get here," she told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram for a story in its Monday online edition. "If someone wants to come here and harm someone, at least we would have sort of defense."

1 comment:

Jenny G said...

I was ok with the dress code till I got to the no earrings on males and no T-shirts. WTF?! I didn't know Ephesians told parents not to provoke their children...that's interesting.

I'm wondering how long it'll be until a Texas teacher shoots a student or a student grabs a teacher's gun and uses it.