German student takes a punishment - bostero

German student takes a punishment - bostero




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German student takes a punishment - bostero

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When it comes to disciplining students in school, how far is too far? It seems there are many cases where students of all ages are handed punishments that are totally disproportionate — and inappropriate — to their infractions. Below are some of the most shocking and appalling examples of punishments taken too far in school.
In 2008, high school sophomore Jake Shelly wore a T-shirt printed with a tie-dyed American flag and the phrase “United States of America, Washington, D.C.” He wore it on “Hippie Day,” part of Dos Palos High School’s homecoming week.
The school’s assistant principal deemed the shirt a violation of the dress code, which prohibits clothing that “promote specific races, cultures, or ethnicities.” The student was forced to take off the shirt and spend the day instead in a bright-yellow shirt that read “DCV: Dress Code Violator.”
The shirt was worn in support of the United States, not a specific race or culture. Aside from not actually haven broken any rules, the student was outraged and humiliated at being forced to wear the punishment shirt. There was an outcry from the student population on the student’s behalf, and the school ended up reversing the decision and apologizing to the student.
Charlie Patton, 15, wanted a fun, eye-catching yearbook picture, so she mussed her hair and pulled a wide-eyed, wide-grinned funny face for the school photographer. The school’s officials, however, interpreted the pose as a possible gang reference.
At the time the picture was taken, nobody said it was a problem, and Patton used the photo on her ID card for the first couple months of the 2009 school year. But then, school officials told her the photo would not be in the yearbook. They released this statement: “Since the yearbook represents the school and the students, the goal is to have every student presented in the best light. Students who make inappropriate faces or gestures or who do not follow the school dress code in their yearbook photos are asked to retake their photo free of charge.”
How the punishment went overboard :
There are no hand gestures in the photo, precluding the possibility of a gang reference. Furthermore, Patton says that she was never asked to retake the photo. “I’m not making fun of anyone, I think it just looks happy,” said Patton. “It’s almost like they’re deleting me from Madison High School.”
In March of 2010, six-year-old Mason Jammer was playing with his friends at recess when he curled his hand into a gun shape and pointed it at a student.
The punishment:
Jammer was given a two-day suspension from school. School officials have justified the punishment by pointing to the school’s zero-tolerance policy on guns and violence. They also said that the boy was making other students uncomfortable with his pretend gun, and that he had been warned against aiming his hand several times before.
Mason Jammer has never exhibited any violent tendencies, nor has he ever come to school with any real or toy guns. “He’s only six, and he doesn’t understand any of this,” said his mother Erin Jammer. “Maybe what you could do is take his recess away.”
At age 13, eighth grader Savana Redding was suspected of carrying prescription-strength ibuprofen pills in her underwear. She had no such pills on her, but the school’s vice principal was responding to a claim by another student who had been caught with pills and said that she’d received them from Redding.
The school’s assistant principal pulled Redding out of class to search her backpack and outer clothes. When no pills were found, he empowered the school nurse to strip-search Redding in order to find the pills. She was asked to strip down to her underwear, then to pull out each side of her bra and then her underwear.
Redding was so humiliated by this treatment that she left the school and refused to come back. Her mother, infuriated at what she saw as a grievous overreaction and infraction of her daughter’s civil rights, filed suit against both the assistant principal and the school district. The case went on for six years, eventually reaching the U.S. Supreme Court. In June of 2009 the court finally ruled in favor of Redding, saying that the strip search violated Redding’s Constitutional rights against unreasonable search and seizure.
In 2007, three-year-old Jayce Brown had been attending Southern Maryland Christian Academy for one month when his parents received a letter saying the child’s hair would need to be cut if he was to continue at the school. His hair was in dreadlocks, the same hairstyle as his parents. His parents refused to cut their son’s hair.
The Browns were told that beginning September 24th, Jayce faced expulsion if his hair wasn’t cut. The school cited their handbook policy prohibiting “extremely faddish styles including the use of rubber bands or the ‘twisting’ of hair.” The Browns said cutting their son’s hair was too extreme, offering to pull the locks into a ponytail instead. The school insisted on a haircut, however, and when the Browns again refused, Jayce was suspended indefinitely.
Jayce’s mother, Danielle Brown, maintains that she never signed any form agreeing that her son would adhere to the dress code. Both parents argue that the dreadlocks are neither “faddish” nor a fashion statement, but are instead part of a family and cultural heritage. Concerned that their son’s expulsion was being threatened on racial grounds, they hired a civil rights lawyer.
Ben Sharpe, 13, was a straight-A student at Capital Christian Center School in Sacramento. As graduation approached, Sharpe was presented with the Superintendent’s Award for being an exceptional student and was asked to speak at graduation. A few days before the ceremony, Sharpe got a cropped haircut. The next day he was told the cut was too short, violating the school’s policies.
Sharp was banned from speaking or participating in the graduation ceremonies. His parents tried to reason with school officials, but they insisted that Sharp had broken the rules and couldn’t be a part of graduation. In fact, Sharp wasn’t even mentioned during the graduation ceremony.  “I’ve seen many kids throughout the school year with short haircuts like mine. It isn’t shaved; the barber used clippers,” said Sharp.
His parents believe that the overly-harsh punishment was a racist, spiteful decision. His mother pointed out that the school rules state that first-time infractions merit a warning; Ben was punished outright. And, says his father, “It’s more than a haircut. He’s bright and he’s black and he’s leaving their school for a different high school. The haircut is just an excuse.” Ben Sharpe is now a doctoral candidate, and the Church that runs that school has since apologized.
On December 10 of 2006, high school senior Justin Layshock created a MySpace profile page for the principal of his high school, Eric Trosch. The page included a picture of the principal from the school’s website and listed a series of joke answers (mostly “fat jokes”) to the profile questions.
Layshock tried to remove the page after three days, but it had already been taken down. Then, on December 21st, both Layshock and his mother were called in to a meeting with the school superintendant, district solicitor and the co-principal of the high school to discuss the MySpace page. After the meeting, Layshock apologized to Principal Trosch in person and also sent him a former letter of apology. He thought the matter ended there.
But then, on January 3rd, Layshock was contacted by the local police department and informed that Trosch had asked that harassment charges be filed against Layshock. On January 6th, Layshock faced a hearing at the school on charges of “disrespect; harassment; gross misbehavior; obscene, vulgar and profane language; and for violating the school’s computer policy for using a picture without permission.” He was suspended from school for 10 days and then ordered to finish high school in the Alternative Education Program. He was banned from going to any of his regular classes, as well as any school-related activities such as his French tutoring program and his own graduation.
Layshock maintains that he created the page on a home computer, and never accessed it from school; the page also contained no threats or obscenities, as cited in the charge. Layshock contested the decision and, when his and his parents’ requests to reconsider the harsh measures were denied, filed suit against the school district. The suit cited First Amendment rights and asked that the incident be removed from Layshock’s record and that he be returned to his regular classes. In 2010, the court ruled in his favor and Layshock was awarded 10,000 in damages from the school.
Fulton, Mississippi teen Constance McMillen petitioned school officials to allow her to attend the prom with her girlfriend. The school’s policy prohibited same-sex couples from attending school functions together, and she asked that they revoke both that rule and the rule that would keep her from wearing a tuxedo to the event. She informed the ACLU of the school’s
Sein Schwanz ist hart genug für die Fotzen der beiden Blondinen
Wer Popo ficken will muss blasen
Vollbusige Blondine wird in alle Löcher gefickt

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