Saturday, December 03, 2005

Is This A Solution To Potty-Mouthed Students?

At our junior high school here in California's "Imperial" Valley, so many students are now using foul language that our administration has stopped treating it as a violation of our discipline policy. The kids haven't missed this retreat on the part of our administrators and now it's not at all uncommon to overhear kids dropping the "F Bomb" as they walk about campus.

In two Connecticut schools, officials may have found a partial answer to the problem.
Make the potty-mouthed kids pay each obscenity:
Bad words are costing Hartford Public and Bulkeley high schoolers $103 each.

Police officers assigned to the schools have fined about two dozen students for cursing in a new program to curtail unruly behavior. The joint effort by school and police officials targets students who swear while defying teachers and administrators.

"We're sending a message to the parents and to the teachers," said Sandy Cruz-Serrano, senior adviser to Superintendent of Schools Robert Henry. "We are trying to bring back order to the schools."

Parents are required to pay the fines if the students cannot.

"Our heads are spinning with that," said Sam Saylor, president of the district Parent Teacher Organization. "The kids are really indecent with their swearing and they're swearing at teachers. This is their way of curtailing it making the parents pay."

Keila Ayala, 17, a Hartford Public sophomore, said she was ticketed for shouting an expletive in an officer's face while handcuffed for taking a swing at him.

"It'll stop me from swearing," she said. "Well, it won't stop me from swearing, but I won't cuss at the teachers."

George Sugai, who teaches school discipline at UConn's Neag School of Education, is skeptical of the effort. "Research says that punishing kids doesn't teach them the right way to act," he said.

But Hartford Police Officer Roger Pearl said the program is working.

"Before, the kids were swearing all the time. It went from many incidents to almost nothing," he said. "It's quiet in the halls."
The article doesn't say what, if anything, potty-mouthed school employees would pay if caught using the same four-letter words.
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