Picture
Three young students were suspended in the aftermath of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting for playfully making a gun with their forefingers and thumbs, as children are wont to do.
Such is the overreaction among many school administrators attempting to remove any simblance of a firearm on campus.
A first-grade teacher in Georgia apparently didn't get the memo, though, and caused students to have nightmares after a ridiculously ham-fisted lesson in which he pretended to shoot and kill his own students.
His attempt to teach them about gun violence during a game of hide-and-seek could not have been more shortsighted as he chased the youngsters around making the hand sign of a gun and shouting.
"You're dead," he yelled after "shooting" them with his finger.
Thankfully, this teacher was disciplined, though not before traumatizing many of the students under his supervision. The school admitted several of the students complained of nightmares following the terrifying classroom game.
This teacher's ignorance in addressing such a sensitive matter with young children should have cost him his job, in my opinion.
A director of the school district explained this instance "shows, if nothing else, that you just can't do security off the cuff."
While that might be true enough, I think the more important lesson to be learned is never pretend to murder young kids.
The spokesperson, whose child was in the class during the incident, continued by conceding the teacher "made a bad decision" but was "the first person to volunteer for things" and "would be the first person to protect kids in a crisis."
Unfortunately, not only did he not protect his students from this trauma, he was its sole cause.
Click here to get B. Christopher Agee’s latest book for less than $5! Like his Facebook page for engaging, relevant conservative content daily.

 


Comments

Carolyn @cmdorsey
02/17/2013 1:21am

Great read!! THANKS FOR SHOWING ME YOUR SITE!!

Reply
David
02/17/2013 7:22pm

Did this teacher use extremely bad judgement? Of course. Did he traumatize the children? Well, when I was a child, that would not even have been a question. We all ran around "shooting" each other with anything we could get our hands on, or even our bare and empty hands. "Trauma" was not a question. I do understand that in the aftermath of Sandy Hook, this could be traumatizing, but only if the parents/teachers/counselors, etc. told these kids that fingers can kill, too. Should the teacher be disciplined? Yes. He should get a reprimand for not preparing the children for the game and/or excusing those who thought they may be frightened. But the parents and other authorities should also be educated on teaching the children the difference between a real threat and a game. If he was in fact teaching them what to do if a threat arises, perhaps his methods are questionable, but the sought after result is admirable. We need more people willing to teach our kids what parents apparently refuse to.

Reply



Leave a Reply