I don't want to go into the whole situation, but I am wondering how other people feel about this. Here is what happened:
10 yo (R) re-told a racist joke he heard during lunch. 1 girl got upset, told a teacher. The following day the 10yo is brought to the school counselor - he admits to telling the joke and says that he was told the joke by another student (N). The N denies telling the joke - but eventually school counselor asks more children involved and it comes out that N told the joke and R did re-tell it to more student. Both students get an in school suspension.
Here is my question: Do you have further consequences for your child?
Re: Not specifically BF - but question on discipline
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Can I ask you opinion if you thought the joke was hurtful and obvious enough to warrant a suspension? Did N know that the joke was inappropriate? And let me give the disclaimer that I am fairly politically correct and try to teach my kids not to say things based on appearances that could hurt feelings. My kids are no-racial and my step-FIL is a third race. We are a diverse group but I am sure that my kids while much younger are naive enough to not see something as mean. And as the parent I would not want to see other kids suspended for telling a joke if it was innocent as long as they get a lecture about WHY it was wrong.
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This is how racism perpetuates, but is a very teachable moment for a child. Not everyone in nazi Germany was racist but they didn't speak against it. I would punish my kids if I even heard they laughed at a racist joke much less told one
He did write a letter to the girl while at BMs house. We bought a book (age appropriate and reading level appropriate) about Jackie Robinson and he has to write a 2 page report on how racism affected Jackie. He also lost outdoor priveleges during our custody time this week (2 days).
BM thinks he should be commended for telling the truth when confronted and that us having a consequence is cruel and unusual.
I like the idea of writing an appology letter. It makes them think about what they said and that it was wrong, and to appologize for this along with admitting you were wrong goes a long way.
My dd is 11 (will turn 12 in 1 month), she had a fight with one of her friends, and I found out that she purposely hurt her friends feelings by making fun of her parents for something that they collect (the girls Mom told me about it). I had a talk with my DD and made her write an appology to her friends Mom.
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We tried to not make SS punishment harsh, but in my opinion he needed a litle more reinforcement than the suspension.
Also, BM wrote the apology letter and then had SS re write it in his own writing. She holds him accountable for nothing.
I was beginning to think I was crazy for having consequences for him outside of school.
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I think it is great that he had to write an apology letter and a book report on Jackie Robinson. Those are good ways to get him to think about his actions. When he isn't in trouble anymore, I would watch the movie 42 with him. We watched it with my SS who is also 10 and it was a great movie. We thought it was very educational, but age appropriate as well. It really illustrated Jackie's personal struggle and how one person can affect change.
I also would emphasize @Nineoceans point that it is not okay to just stand by when others are getting picked on or persecuted.
He was told that we were proud he didn't try to lie and since he didn't try to lie we aren't taking away his phone. So not a reward, but reduced punishment.
His BM does not think he lies. She has used the words corageous, commendable, and applaud when speaking about him telling the truth. The principal told my SS that he threw a friend under the bus. I think he was between a rock and a hard place. He knew he was caught. But I am proud he didn't try to lie.
I am side-eyeing the principal who is telling your SS that he threw a friend under the bus. What is that about? Your SS should get in trouble, but other people who told the joke should get away with it if they weren't caught?
I think the punishment needs to tie with how your kids are in general. My kids are pretty sensitive to diversity issues (MIL was disabled). My kids would have had to apologize the girl and get a lecture on diversity/sensitivity and hurting feelings. I would be harder on them if I thought they were turning into jr. KKK members.
If you have a kid who lies, you need to reward them (even if it is only with praise) for telling the truth. If they get nothing out of telling the truth, you are not going to change their behavior.