Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

Bullying in schools


lightsout

Recommended Posts

Is it THAT big of a deal? I know when I was younger, I was told by my dad "Ignore them as long as possible. Then, have friends or some other people near you that can see you. Then, you give them a chance to stop. After that, if they keep on, you hit em. You get called to the office, you have your witnesses and I won't be mad".

Now, I've seen this on the news all day. Why are the schools at fault? If you're a parent, it is your job to tell your kids how to handle it. Then, it is your job to go to the bully's parents and explain what happened, ask what they plan to do, wait for improvement. If there is none, you go back with a bit more attitude. That doesn't work, you teach your kid how to kick somebody's ass.

Any other takes on this?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think schools do take some of the blame. Simply because child safety is their responsibility. However (and I have been witnessesd to this) a lot of schools have a ridiculous tolerance policy. They tell kids not to do anything or just take it if a bully hits you. Which is bullpoo. No one has a right, a specially a piece of poo kid to touch or you or your son, it's your/their body. fug'em if he hits me I'm pounding his face.

I graduated a few years back

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Absolutely it's the school's responsibility. We've gone through bullying in middle school and it was hell. Talking to the parents most of the time doesn't change a damn thing and forget the school doing anything. It took my son getting suspended for it to stop. He'd finally had enough and went off on the kid bullying him. 3 days at home, even though the other kid started it.

No one fugs with him now in high school. He hit a growth spurt and is taller than most of the other guys at school. He works out at the gym and runs. He's an honorary member of SI and already a prospect, and is the most badass band geek you'll ever meet.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You can talk yourself out of most situations, but there are some idiots who like to shove around the smaller kids. It really just depends on the area. I never saw much bullying myself, but I was picked on a lot in like, 9th grade. After that, I got too big and good at football for them to do anything. Small, rural areas and real big cities typically have the most poo heads. Any place in the middle, for whatever reason, has no real problems. At least from people I've talked to about their high school/middle school experience.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Absolutely it's the school's responsibility. We've gone through bullying in middle school and it was hell. Talking to the parents most of the time doesn't change a damn thing and forget the school doing anything. It took my son getting suspended for it to stop. He'd finally had enough and went off on the kid bullying him. 3 days at home, even though the other kid started it.

No one fugs with him now in high school. He hit a growth spurt and is taller than most of the other guys at school. He works out at the gym and runs. He's an honorary member of SI and already a prospect, and is the most badass band geek you'll ever meet.

The school has to say something at the beginning of every year. Most schools I have been to have that little convocation on day 1 of the year and lay down the law a little. After that, yeah, if they hear of a problem child, they need to bring that kid in and let him know whats up. But at the end of the day, kids are gonna do what they want, no matter what some principle says. I just think parents should let their kids know how to handle these situations. A lot of parents want to say "just walk away if they put their hands on you" and when their kid is hit, they tell the school its their fault. True, if the person who threw the punch isn't suspended or punished in some way, then the school fugged up. But I will tell my kids one day "dont start anything. talk your way out of it. But if they put their hands on you, you finish it."

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The school has to say something at the beginning of every year. Most schools I have been to have that little convocation on day 1 of the year and lay down the law a little. After that, yeah, if they hear of a problem child, they need to bring that kid in and let him know whats up. But at the end of the day, kids are gonna do what they want, no matter what some principle says. I just think parents should let their kids know how to handle these situations. A lot of parents want to say "just walk away if they put their hands on you" and when their kid is hit, they tell the school its their fault. True, if the person who threw the punch isn't suspended or punished in some way, then the school fugged up. But I will tell my kids one day "dont start anything. talk your way out of it. But if they put their hands on you, you finish it."

We preached the walking away thing for months. Finally, we told my son to stand up for himself. He wouldn't at first, but finally snapped one day in gym. We had gone to the school numerous times, talked to the parent numerous times, all to no avail. It took Tyler (Taco on here) sailing on the other kid like a spider monkey for it to stop. Never had a problem since.

The kid doing the bullying was like 3 times Ty's size at the time. The kid never made it out of 7th grade before dropping out.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

We preached the walking away thing for months. Finally, we told my son to stand up for himself. He wouldn't at first, but finally snapped one day in gym. We had gone to the school numerous times, talked to the parent numerous times, all to no avail. It took Tyler (Taco on here) sailing on the other kid like a spider monkey for it to stop. Never had a problem since.

The kid doing the bullying was like 3 times Ty's size at the time. The kid never made it out of 7th grade before dropping out.

That's usually how it goes. Big bad-asses who think they're poo don't stink usually give up because they have nothing and they are nothing.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My daughter is in classes with the punk's little brother. I hate it for the little brother if he starts in on my daughter. She jacked a little falcon fan up against the fence in elementary school for telling her her black and hot pink 89 jersey was ugly. My husband was so proud. LOL

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I was bullied once as a teen, I had enough and went bat poo crazy on the other person. My retaliation was enough to get me kicked out for the rest of the school year and they pressed charges. I ended up having to go through about 2 years of punishment for it. House arrest, community service, probation, etc... I was never bullied again, not ever, by anyone and neither were my friends just as long as they were hanging out with me.

There is a difference in bullying and just teasing someone.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • What you are saying isn't always true and I'll give you several examples to demonstrate this. 1) The best player on the board at the end of in round 1 by all consensus is RB (top 15 player in draft who slips b/c of the devaluation of the RB position). Your team is in desperate need of a LT because the current one is getting your QB killed. You already have a serviceable RB in place. The LT has a 2nd round grade and you have the first pick on day 2 of the draft Who do you choose? 2) Your run defense was abysmal the previous season. A DT in round 2 does not provide much in terms of pass rush, but most reports have him rated as the best pure run stuffing DT in the draft. The two highest rated players on your board at the time are a TE and tweener at OLB/DE who slipped into round 2 after a run on WR's. Who do you choose? 3) Your pass rush rush is solid across the board. You even have guy coming off of the bench to provide production. Your secondary in below average. No Safety on the roster is a difference maker and as a unit the squad doesn't have an INT. The highest rated player on the board is a DE. The 5th highest rated player on the board is a an intelligent ball hawking Safety. Which player would make the team immediately better?  1) I think the BPA logic applies when your team is solid across the board and you can afford to draft for depth 2) I think it also applies when your team stinks and any solid player will be an immediate upgrade over what you already have. I agree that you should NEVER reach for a player when you are need at a position like we did for Bryce Young. But I also think if there's is a player on the board that will fill a glaring weakness you need to take him even if a player with a higher over all ranking is available at another position (which isn't a need)  
    • Bryce Young excels at dividing Panthers fans. That seems to be what he's best at.
    • 184 yards game, 61% completion 11 tds 5ints    thats ranks :check notes:  25th in the nfl
×
×
  • Create New...