The surveillance video was surprisingly clear, and it showed
one student attack another student --and the victim fighting back. The victim was pushed from behind and then
jerked around by his backpack. He turned
around and a fight ensued, with most of the action unfolding outside of the
view of the camera… Nobody wants fights
on campus, and certainly nobody wants students to be injured at school as the
result of a violent fight. That is what
we can all agree upon. But I also know
that we all have the unalienable right of self-defense when we are attacked.
Don’t we?
So it came as somewhat of a surprise to me to hear
administrators and others whose opinions I typically respect tell me as we
watched the video, “See, the student who was pushed turned around and
started swinging, throwing punches.”
“Did he really have to do this, or could he have handled it a different
way by talking his way out of the incident and not swinging at the attacker?” Was the question one administrator asked
me....
My answer:
We are asking the wrong question and focusing on the wrong
student. The only question that matters,
so far as I’m concerned, is why one student physically attacked another. Blaming the victim for defending himself and
fighting off this attacker solves nothing.
In the incident in question, the one depicted on a video I
recently viewed, the attacker was eventually punished appropriately in my
opinion and the victim sustained a minor injury. The parents of the victim chose not to press
charges, and as best I can tell these two students have had no further issues.
At another school in our district, a High School, the story did not play out with such a happy
ending.
In this school, the student who
was bullied and physically slapped and taunted on multiple occasions tried to
play it off. He took it. He walked away, and he turned the other
cheek. Eventually, he became depressed
and confided in his parents about what was happening. His parent contacted the bullied student’s
coach, who assured the parent “he would take care of it.”
That did not happen.
The bullying became worse and soon other students, somehow
hearing that the victim’s parents had tried to intervene to stop the bullying,
joined in the free-for-all of taunting this student.
Many of these students began calling this freshman student their
“Little White Bitch”
Finally, the exasperated parent approached the principal
about the physical and mental abuses, and she was essentially blown-off with a
“boys will be boys” sort of nonchalant response.
“I have never felt so rushed out of a meeting before in my
life, like he did not want to hear anything I
was telling him” the frustrated
parent related to me in a subsequent conversation.
Two days later, this student was gone from our system, after initially being offered a transfer slot at a different Escambia County High
School—these parents declined that offer and enrolled in a public school one
county over.
The parents were devastated. They wanted desperately to have their son attend
this one program in Escambia County, but because of the taunting and abusive
behavior of some students, unchecked by adults who could have and should have done
something to squelch the problem immediately, this student and his engaged and active family are
gone from a school that could have really benefitted from their presence.
This student did nothing wrong; in fact he and his family
did everything right.
The student did not engage nor did he fight back when he was
assaulted, and the staff was made aware of the issue. Multiple times. The parents and the student tried to get the
issue handled --but this school failed to address this problem.
And so I go back to the quote from the administrator who eschewed
the concept of defending oneself against an aggressive attacker. “Did he really have to do this, or could he
have handled it a different way by talking his way out of the incident?”
This High School student did just that, he did not fight
back and look what he got-- for this he endured a month of taunting, physical
blows, bullying, and harassment that went unabated for reasons neither I nor
the parent understand. A part of me
wonders what would have happened to this student if he fought back. Would we have found fault with that and
blamed the victim in this incident as well?
Probably.
But one uncomfortable fact of the matter remains: We failed here, we failed this student and
his family as a school and as a district.
This is how we lose good students and their engaged, active, and
supportive families to our neighboring county!
This is, in large part, why our neighbor county’s school
system is growing geometrically and ours has stagnated badly as we have
actually lost 4,000 students over the last fifteen year time period.
The only way to fix this is to stop making excuses and start
controlling the climate in some of our schools, setting political correctness
at the curb, lest we lose all our
engaged and active families and students—as appears to be happening right now
before our eyes over the last 15 years.
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