The principal’s action was the result of a new state law that had gone into effect just months earlier, heightening penalties for students who make threats at school. Passed after a former student shot and killed six people at The Covenant School in Nashville, the law requires students to be expelled for at least a year if they threaten mass violence on school property, making it a zero-tolerance offense.

Tennessee lawmakers claimed that ramping up punishments for threats would help prevent serious acts of violence. “What we’re really doing is sending a message that says ‘Hey, this is not a joke, this is not a joking matter, so don’t do this,’” state Sen. Jon Lundberg, a co-sponsor of the legislation, told a Chattanooga news station a week and a half after the law went into effect.

Tennessee school officials have used the law to expel students for mildly disruptive behavior, according to advocates and lawyers across the state who spoke with ProPublica. (In Tennessee and a number of other states, expulsions aren’t necessarily permanent.) Some students have been expelled even when officials themselves determined that the threat was not credible. Lawmakers did put a new fix in place in May that limits expulsions to students who make “valid” threats of mass violence. But that still leaves it up to administrators to determine which threats are valid.

In some cases last school year, administrators handed off the responsibility of dealing with minor incidents to law enforcement. As a result, the type of misbehavior that would normally result in a scolding or brief suspension has led to children being not just expelled but also arrested, charged and placed in juvenile detention, according to juvenile defense lawyers and a recent lawsuit.

  • calabast@lemm.ee
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    3 months ago

    The only thing that will stop kids making finger guns is more good kids with finger guns.

  • some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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    3 months ago

    Ok, so now we’re just destroying the education of little kids who have imagination. That’s awesome.

    • grue@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      🧑‍🚀👈🧑‍🚀 Always have been

      (Which is not to say this isn’t making it even worse, 'cause it is.)

      • shalafi@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        I’d get in some minor, and I do mean minor, trouble in elementary school and say, “Buh, buh, but I thought…”

        “You’re not here to think!”

        Got that a few times.

    • Q*Bert Reynolds@sh.itjust.works
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      3 months ago

      My little brother was expelled from school in 1st grade for drawing a gun (which looked far more like a banana) and pointing it at another kid. That was in rural Alabama in 2000. Nothing new here.

  • BertramDitore@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Do these freaks really not remember what it was like to be a kid? Kids do crazy shit, it’s how we all learn about ourselves, our boundaries, our values. Punishing a kid for playing around like this will not help anyone, it will simply make it more likely that this kid acts out later because their sense of what’s socially acceptable and what’s not will be completely skewed by these absurd rules.

    I played finger guns in school all the time (before active-shooter drills were a thing, to be fair), and it’s part of how I figured out that I hate guns and violence. Punishment first has never been effective, we need to trust ourselves and our kids a little more.

  • thefartographer@lemm.ee
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    3 months ago

    “What we’re really doing is sending a message that says ‘Hey, this is not a joke, this is not a joking matter, so don’t do this,’” state Sen. Jon Lundberg, a co-sponsor of the legislation, told a Chattanooga news station

    Yeah guys! We’re gonna start taking mass shootings super-seriously now! If you shoot adults and children and then commit suicide at a school in Tennessee, you better expect some serious consequences now, guys!

  • Annoyed_🦀 @monyet.cc
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    3 months ago

    Wow, ok, gee, american will literally do anything and everything other than control and limit their gun sales.

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    Adults have the right to bear arms, but kids don’t have the right to bear hands? Yup, we live in a dystopia…

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    3 months ago

    School Administrators: “If only we could kick out the students we don’t like, but the law states that every kid gets an education”

    School shooting -> New law

    “Hey, I know just how to selectively abuse this!”

  • TooManyFoods@lemmy.world
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    The kid was angry, but you are only making it worse with this punishment. The appropriate thing to do would be to send him to a competent guidance counselor and work through his feelings then send him on a path forward. Not really even a "punishment " but a correction. Before reading what happened I would have said that even that would be too much, but having read it, I don’t think it would hurt to counsel him though his feelings. I doubt Tennessee has many competent guidance counselors though.

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    3 months ago

    When I was kid, we regularly played partisans vs nazis and cowboys vs indians, “shooting” each other with home made “guns”. Nobody said anything ever… Happier times…

  • Modern_medicine_isnt@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Cause 10 year Olds are known to be up on current laws and to think about the consequences of thier actions when they are mad, or really anytime.

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    Let the kids learn to use weapons before their old enough to walk, but don’t you fucking DARE use a finger gun 👉

    Go play insert any game with guns.

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    Wow, sounds like the idea of “At Will” for the workplace has spread elsewhere. Making a vague generic rule that can be used to get rid of anyone you feel is a problem. I wonder how many “messages” will have to be sent to keep these kids in line from doing anything kid-related.

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    As much as I hate to admit it, I understand zero tolerance policies. But a fucking year? There’s got to be some kind of sliding scale based on the offense. Draw a picture of a gun, 3 days. Finger guns, ok, a week. Toy gun, month. Real gun, jail.

    • andrewta@lemmy.world
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      Draw a picture of a gun = 3 weeks of suspension?

      What the actual fuck?

      A picture? Really?

      I mean if the picture was off a kid holding a gun shooting a teacher, maybe get the kid some help.

      But a picture of a gun? Again…

      What the actual fuck?

    • nickwitha_k (he/him)@lemmy.sdf.org
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      As much as I hate to admit it, I understand zero tolerance policies.

      What is it that you understand about them? Is it that all extant data suggest that they are not effective in increasing the safety of childhood learning environments? Or that they have a statistically-significant impact on juvenile and adult rates of incarceration and criminality, increasing both (ex. children who are students at schools with SROs are five times more likely to get arrested for disorderly conduct)? Or is it that zero-tolerance policies, while resulting in overall increases in student suspension rates, additionally result in an additional two-fold increase for black children?

      https://ies.ed.gov/ncee/rel/Products/Region/midwest/Ask-A-REL/10185

      Basically, my point is that zero tolerance policies enable racial discrimination against children of color and has measurable long-term educational and legal implications on children well into adulthood. It is, simply put, state-sanctioned children abuse.

  • venusaur@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Not the most effective law but it’s interesting to see a state like Tennessee implementing any laws against gun violence in schools.

    • Lets_Eat_Grandma@lemm.ee
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      3 months ago

      Yeah that’s gonna stop the next school shooter from mowing down whatever class they’re going for. They are afraid of school expulsion for sure.