longbow51
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 17, 2023
- Messages
- 1,054
That's certainly worthy of respect. Some of the most difficult kids, though, according to my sharpshooter friend, have parents who fully embrace their bad behavior; it's always someone else's fault. And they have lawyers.My dad was a teacher, at some point during his career I think he noticed that some kids really struggled at lunch time as it was kinda unregulated and a prime opportunity for bullying. He started kinda lunch club in his classroom and let gets go there instead and get help on homework or play on the computers... etc.
In retrospect I'm sure it was kinda a pain for him because he gave up his one opportunity to go run an errand and get lesson planning done.
Probably didn't stop a school shooting, but I bet that giving kids a bully free lunch space helped some kids.
Definitely not as news worthy as handing out glocks, certainly isn't going to galvanize a polarized electorate.
You father's experiences were a generation ago.