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The Straight Story

(48,121 posts)
Wed Apr 24, 2013, 04:26 PM Apr 2013

School Suspends Student for Writing YOLO on Test, Tweeting It to School Officials

"I was being a high school kid getting on Twitter," Texas high school student Kyron Birdine said in his defense after being suspended for tweeting out a photo of a state-mandated standardized test with the acronym YOLO (You Only Live Once) and a smiley face emoticon scratched across the essay portion.

Of course, his four-day on-campus suspension might have also had something to do with the fact that Kyron, an Arlington High School junior, made sure to forward the tweet to school district officials and the Texas Education Agency.

But, much as his use of YOLO would indicate, Kyron remains a boy with no regrets.

As the Dallas Observer notes, Kyron and his classmates are being forced to take both the new State of Texas Assessments of Academic Readiness (STAAR) test and the old Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills (TAKS) test, even though only the TAKS will count.

....

Kyron's mother believes her son's punishment was "excessive," telling a reporter suspensions should be reserved "for something really severe."

http://gawker.com/5993322/school-suspends-student-for-writing-yolo-on-test-tweeting-it-to-school-officials

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School Suspends Student for Writing YOLO on Test, Tweeting It to School Officials (Original Post) The Straight Story Apr 2013 OP
"you only live once"? Turbineguy Apr 2013 #1
Right? Control-Z Apr 2013 #2
Suspensions should only be after progressive stages of discipline or Skeeter Barnes Apr 2013 #3

Skeeter Barnes

(994 posts)
3. Suspensions should only be after progressive stages of discipline or
Wed Apr 24, 2013, 05:18 PM
Apr 2013

an offense of extreme seriousness. Seems to me like school admins sometimes use punishment to lash out at students they disagree with.

"in accordance with district procedures"

authoritarian pricks

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