Monday, May 14, 2007

Could they be the stupidest people on earth?

Under the heading of mind-boggling stupidity we have this tale from Murfreesboro, Tennessee. It is bad enough that teachers would pull such a lame, cruel "prank" on the students who trust them, but for the school system to try to wriggle out of responsibility. That is how I read the statement, “I think they need to take the appropriate action, but I don’t think they need to overreact.” (see below).

Comments on the story, posted in the Tennesseean, speculate that this is the result of a Federal Program designed to spur fear among families. I'm not quite that paranoid (although I am getting there) but I do think it is typical of the education "industry." These people refuse to indulge in serious self-examination and criticism.

School system says students told to expect prank
Murfreesboro board members don’t want overreaction

By JAIME SARRIO
Staff Writer


Elementary students on a school field trip had been told to expect a “campfire prank” by the teachers, but a tale of a gunman on the loose went too far, Murfreesboro’s city school system said in a statement Sunday.

Sixty-nine sixth-grade students from Scales Elementary were told Thursday during a field trip to Fall Creek Falls that someone was shooting in the park and they should lie on the floor or crawl underneath tables and keep quiet.

Parents met at the school over the weekend to discuss the incident, which frightened many of the children and brought some to tears.

According to a statement released late Sunday by the district, the students had been anticipating a prank such as had been done to previous sixth-grade campers. Most of the students, the statement said, stood up after the trick, exchanged high fives and said, “That was a good one. Yeah, you got me.”

But some parents were outraged, especially in light of the April 16 shootings at Virginia Tech.

The district conceded that the prank crossed the line in light of recent incidents but stated that there were many versions of the story and news coverage of the hoax had been sensationalized.

Several Murfreesboro City Schools board members said Sunday that the phony attack was foolish and an error in judgment.

But they said they trust the director of schools, Marilyn Mathis, to decide what action — if any — should be taken against teachers and an assistant principal who staged the prank."

“I’m not sure punishment is even the right word,” said Nancy Phillips, a board member who knows the assistant principal involved.

“I think they need to take the appropriate action, but I don’t think they need to overreact.”

Board member Lon Nuell agrees. He said the incident was very unfortunate and immature, but he will leave it to Mathis to make the call on how those involved should be dealt with.

“It was a very foolish thing for adults to do to children,” he said. “Telling ghost stories is one thing, but carrying it as far as they did was a pretty big error in judgment.”

Scales Elementary Principal Catherine Stephens did not return calls made to her home Sunday.

She held a meeting Saturday afternoon at the school to discuss the matter with a handful of concerned parents. She said that she was saddened by the situation and that the school was handling it, though she declined to elaborate Saturday on whether the teachers involved would face disciplinary action.

Board member Patrick McCarthy said that the incident should be handled with care and sensitivity and that the administration should work hard to get all sides of the story.

“You have to hire the right people and them let them do their job,” he said.

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