REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

A Terrifying Way to Discipline Children

POSTED BY: CANTTAKESKY
UPDATED: Sunday, September 9, 2012 20:32
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Saturday, September 8, 2012 8:47 AM

CANTTAKESKY


https://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/09/opinion/sunday/a-terrifying-way-to-
discipline-children.html?_r=3


Quote:

IN my public school 40 years ago, teachers didn’t lay their hands on students for bad behavior. They sent them to the principal’s office. But in today’s often overcrowded and underfunded schools, where one in eight students receive help for special learning needs, the use of physical restraints and seclusion rooms has become a common way to maintain order.
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Ward Zwart

It’s a dangerous development, as I know from my daughter’s experience. At the age of 5, she was kept in a seclusion room for up to an hour at a time over the course of three months, until we discovered what was happening. The trauma was severe.

According to national Department of Education data, most of the nearly 40,000 students who were restrained or isolated in seclusion rooms during the 2009-10 school year had learning, behavioral, physical or developmental needs, even though students with those issues represented just 12 percent of the student population. African-American and Hispanic students were also disproportionately isolated or restrained.

Joseph Ryan, an expert on the use of restraints who teaches at Clemson University, told me that the practice of isolating and restraining problematic children originated in schools for children with special needs. It migrated to public schools in the 1970s as federal laws mainstreamed special education students, but without the necessary oversight or staff training. “It’s a quick way to respond but it’s not effective in changing behaviors,” he said.

State laws on disciplining students vary widely, and there are no federal laws restricting these practices, although earlier this year Education Secretary Arne Duncan wrote, in a federal guide for schools, that there was “no evidence that using restraint or seclusion is effective.” He recommended evidence-based behavioral interventions and de-escalation techniques instead.

The use of restraints and seclusion has become far more routine than it should be. “They’re the last resort too often being used as the first resort,” said Jessica Butler, a lawyer in Washington who has written about seclusion in public schools.

Among the recent instances that have attracted attention: Children in Middletown, Conn., told their parents that there was a “scream room” in their school where they could hear other children who had been locked away; last December, Sandra Baker of Harrodsburg, Ky., found her fourth-grade son, Christopher, who had misbehaved, stuffed inside a duffel bag, its drawstrings pulled tight, and left outside his classroom. He was “thrown in the hall like trash,” she told me. And in April, Corey Foster, a 16-year-old with learning disabilities, died on a school basketball court in Yonkers, N.Y., as four staff members restrained him following a confrontation during a game. The medical examiner ruled early last month that the death was from cardiac arrest resulting from the student’s having an enlarged heart, and no charges were filed.

I saw firsthand the impact of these practices six years ago when my daughter, Rose, started kindergarten in Lexington, Mass. Rose had speech and language delays. Although she sometimes became overwhelmed more quickly than other children, she was called “a model of age-appropriate behavior” by her preschool. One evaluation said Rose was “happy, loves school, is social.” She could, however, “get fidgety and restless when she is unsure as to what is expected of her. When comfortable, Rose is a very participatory and appropriate class member with a great deal to contribute to her world.”

Once in kindergarten, Rose began throwing violent tantrums at home. She repeatedly watched a scene from the film “Finding Nemo” in which a shark batters its way into a tiny room, attempting to eat the main characters. The school provided no explanation or solution. Finally, on Jan. 6, 2006, a school aide called saying that Rose had taken off her clothes. We needed to come get her.

At school, her mother and I found Rose standing alone on the cement floor of a basement mop closet, illuminated by a single light bulb. There was nothing in the closet for a child — no chair, no books, no crayons, nothing but our daughter standing naked in a pool of urine, looking frightened as she tried to cover herself with her hands. On the floor lay her favorite purple-striped Hanna Andersson outfit and panties.

Rose got dressed and we removed her from the school. We later learned that Rose had been locked in the closet five times that morning. She said that during the last confinement, she needed to use the restroom but didn’t want to wet her outfit. So she disrobed. Rather than help her, the school called us and then covered the narrow door’s small window with a file folder, on which someone had written “Don’t touch!”

We were told that Rose had been in the closet almost daily for three months, for up to an hour at a time. At first, it was for behavior issues, but later for not following directions. Once in the closet, Rose would pound on the door, or scream for help, staff members said, and once her hand was slammed in the doorjamb while being locked inside.

At the time, I notified the Lexington Public Schools, the Massachusetts Department of Children and Families and the Department of Mental Health about Rose and other children in her class whom school staff members indicated had been secluded. If any of these agencies conducted a formal investigation, I was not made aware of it.

Rose still has nightmares and other symptoms of severe stress. We brought an action against the Lexington Public Schools, which we settled when the school system agreed to pay for the treatment Rose needed to recover from this trauma.

The physical and psychological injuries to children as a consequence of this disciplinary system is an issue that has found its way to Congress. Legislation to ban these practices has been introduced in the House and the Senate, but no vote is expected this year.

Meanwhile, Rose is back in public school and has found it within her to forgive those involved in her case. “They weren’t bad people,” she told me. “They just didn’t know about working with children.”

Bill Lichtenstein is an investigative journalist and filmmaker.





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Saturday, September 8, 2012 10:57 AM

FREMDFIRMA


Quote:

Joseph Ryan, an expert on the use of restraints who teaches at Clemson University, told me that the practice of isolating and restraining problematic children originated in schools for children with special needs. It migrated to public schools in the 1970s as federal laws mainstreamed special education students, but without the necessary oversight or staff training. “It’s a quick way to respond but it’s not effective in changing behaviors,” he said.

As in, like I have said before - they tested that crap on those who couldn't fight back, and then escalated it progressively.

Kinda like Zero Tolerance more or less because Airport "Security", it's only when it starts hitting THEM that the adults seem to give a shit about it.

And mind you, this is far more brutal and lethal than the article would have you believe.
http://www.caica.org/RESTRAINTS%20Death%20List.htm
http://www.charlydmiller.com/LIB05/1998hartforddata.html

You let em do this crap to kids, sooner or later, they'll get round to doing it to YOU.

-Frem

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Saturday, September 8, 2012 12:40 PM

NEWOLDBROWNCOAT


Quote:

Originally posted by canttakesky:


Meanwhile, Rose is back in public school and has found it within her to forgive those involved in her case. “They weren’t bad people,” she told me. “They just didn’t know about working with children.”






That's the scariest line in the entire story. The abused child could say that.
About public school teachers, counsellors, analysts, nurses, shrinks, whatever those folks were.
They're all certified, educated professionals, working in the public schools- who else should they know about working with? The Pols and administrators who run their district should all be recalled and replaced, and EVERYONE ELSE involved fired and prosecuted.

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Saturday, September 8, 2012 2:42 PM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


Quote:

Originally posted by FREMDFIRMA:
Quote:

Joseph Ryan, an expert on the use of restraints who teaches at Clemson University, told me that the practice of isolating and restraining problematic children originated in schools for children with special needs. It migrated to public schools in the 1970s as federal laws mainstreamed special education students, but without the necessary oversight or staff training. “It’s a quick way to respond but it’s not effective in changing behaviors,” he said.

As in, like I have said before - they tested that crap on those who couldn't fight back, and then escalated it progressively.

Kinda like Zero Tolerance more or less because Airport "Security", it's only when it starts hitting THEM that the adults seem to give a shit about it.

And mind you, this is far more brutal and lethal than the article would have you believe.
http://www.caica.org/RESTRAINTS%20Death%20List.htm
http://www.charlydmiller.com/LIB05/1998hartforddata.html

You let em do this crap to kids, sooner or later, they'll get round to doing it to YOU.

-Frem




And the funny part is, when they DO get around to doing it to you, your kids - who will be adults by then - won't lift a finger to stop it or to help, because after all, what's the big deal? They grew up being treated this way; to them, even though they know deep down that it's "wrong", it's also been taught to them as being perfectly "normal".

If you let people do this shit to your children - to ANY children - then by gods, you bloody well deserve it when it happens to you!



"I supported Bush in 2000 and 2004 and intellegence [sic] had very little to do with that decision." - Hero

Mitt Romney, introducing his running mate: "Join me in welcoming the next President of the United States, Paul Ryan!"

Rappy's response? "You're lying, gullible ( believing in some BS you heard on msnbc ) or hard of hearing."

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Saturday, September 8, 2012 5:11 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


"... we settled when the school system agreed to pay for the treatment Rose needed to recover from this trauma."

I'm curious what the legal basis for the settlement was. Generally a place will not 'settle' unless there is the overlying threat of more damaging litigation in the offing. What was the lever that was used to pry a settlement out of them?

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Saturday, September 8, 2012 7:10 PM

NEWOLDBROWNCOAT


Quote:

Originally posted by 1kiki:

I'm curious what the legal basis for the settlement was. Generally a place will not 'settle' unless there is the overlying threat of more damaging litigation in the offing. What was the lever that was used to pry a settlement out of them?



The guy was a journalist and filmmaker. Threat of even greater public exposure, and certainty of loss in the court of public opinion, and probability of loss in law courts woulda been enough.

Just the threat of the guy spreading the story among his friends, acquaintances and co-workers, and the probability that it would be picked up by some editor somewhere as newsworthy was enough to scare the bureaucrats. The threat of even a little exposure of some covered-up secret error or wrong-doing on their part would be enough to put them on the run.

When my daughter was in middle school, one of the school nurses asked her a financial question and made a suggestion that invaded our family privacy. I wrote her a letter, asking her to cite her legal authority to ask a minor that question, and cite her mandatory authority to make that suggestion to the child rather than the parent. Never heard another word about it. But later, when she was in High School, I had occasion to review my daughter's District transcript. My letter was the FIRST Page inside the folder, even before the kid's vital statistics and contact info page, with an attached note that " This might not be a good time to pursue the matter in the case of this child."

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Saturday, September 8, 2012 8:05 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


If they assumed that settling would avoid public exposure then they were wrong. If the explicit deal was 'settle and you won't be written about' then someone broke the deal. In either case the school has already lost in the court of public opinion. The NYTimes could not be a more public place to be written about.

Given the tenuous nature of shielding from publicity the settlement seems to have created, I think they settled for some other reason, some more substantial reason why they would have been liable in a court. I'm curious what that was. It could be a lever to stop this kind of thing from happening, especially if more people knew about it.

I think inclusion could work for SOME students, BUT you have to have specially trained additional staff, and it all comes down to lack of money. B/c frankly, in our system almost everything else is more important than people, especially the more helpless (poor, young, disabled) kind.

I'm not going to go into family history with a neurologically damaged child, or the fact that one of my co-workers has a spouse who's worked with autistic children for the last 20 years and who supplies me with first-hand accounts of dealing with the more difficult students, or the entire year+ of controversy here in SoCal about the ways in which children are dealt with. All the ins and outs would take far too long. But this is a topic I have had to think about at length. And while I have a heaping of criticism for the schools, I recognize that they're just a reflection of our messed-up society that has no problem throwing out people who's fault is that they cost too much profit, either directly or through taxes.

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Sunday, September 9, 2012 8:32 PM

RIONAEIRE

Beir bua agus beannacht


Not okay.

"A completely coherant River means writers don't deliver" KatTaya

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