The college does not go on your file. Schools only notice serious transgressions in their academic disciplinary history, such as suspensions or expulsions. Incarceration does not materially affect your ability to attend high school, be accepted into university, or get stable employment. They can continue after it has been rung to finish the lesson they are giving. Some teachers don`t know what respect is. They think just because they have the power to keep students after school doesn`t mean they should. They should better manage their time and teach within the limits of their time. Instead, they claim that deadlines do not exist. This is a problem for many students. Often, high school teachers use the term «master file» as an alarmist to prevent student misconduct. In reality, however, college incarcerations are not serious enough to create your permanent record.
Therefore, incarcerations at college will not take you to other schools or workplaces. There are situations where the school has a legal right to keep you in school. As mentioned earlier, anything that involves life-threatening situations gives the school increased authority over its students. This is due to the In-Loco-Parentis principle, which we have already discussed. The decision to punish the student and the detention itself must be made on school grounds or if the teacher is responsible for the student off campus, for example during a class trip. Not technically, but to some extent. If you`re looking for legal evidence that it`s not illegal, you can see what the U.S. Supreme Court has to say: It`s not illegal. School officials who act as parents of their students have the right to legally punish a student when he or she is in the care of the school. This means that schools can keep children after the bell rings, provided that the detention is carried out within a reasonable time and is not considered «cruel and unusual punishment». Teachers can no longer beat or physically punish a child, but it is not illegal to detain a student after class.
In addition, parents usually have more free time on weekends to ensure that their children can serve the sentence. During the week, it can be difficult for parents to see their child coming to and from school. The complications of incarceration make it difficult to arrange transportation, as we have already mentioned. Unfortunately, not all families can provide transportation accommodation for their children when they are detained. Under in loco parentis, parents (or a guardian if parents are not available) entrust the safety, well-being and education of their child to school. This means that the school is obliged to provide them to all its students. Thus, if the parents are not present, the school assumes some of the responsibility and authority that the parents have and has the right to act in the best interests of the student. So if the United States is not occupied by an enemy from outside the country, then this law does not apply to the classroom. It may be a fool for your teacher to get angry with everyone because the class clown was a little too rowdy a few minutes before the bell, but he`s not doing anything illegal against the Geneva Convention because it doesn`t apply to your situation.
On the one hand, participation in sports activities, clubs or high school organizations makes it difficult for students to serve a prison sentence during the week. Remember that these extracurricular obligations take place before or after school, at the same time that schools are incarcerated. Each college expects its students to follow certain codes of conduct to ensure the smooth running of the courses. Without such rules, students would not get the optimal learning experience they deserve. For this reason, there must be consequences if the rules are broken at school. But Article 33 of the Geneva Convention prohibits collective punishment in times of conflict, so it does not apply even to the most recalcitrant schools. In most schools, teachers rarely impose detention on Saturdays. In general, they rather give arrests on weekdays. For detention outside the school day, a consultation with parents is required.
Teachers at the college arrest students for a variety of reasons, the most common being: in some cases, it is possible to keep students much longer in case of safety. In Cleveland, 800 students were kept in school overnight because flooding in the area prevented them from leaving. Meanwhile, school officials in loco parentis acted by providing students with food and cots until their parents and guardians could pick them up. What would a parent do if their children were in danger? They would do their best to protect them. If the best course of action is to detain students after school, the school can do that. Saturday detention is legal because of the doctrine of the Supreme Court in loco parentis. This doctrine states that parents and guardians surrender their parental duties and powers to the school authorities when lessons take place. Therefore, schools have the right to discipline students as a parent. In addition, many schools cannot afford to pay instructors to monitor incarceration on weekends. Unfortunately, many schools can only pay educators for work during the week. However, the school must inform parents and students that they are using detention centers.
As a parent, you may be wondering if you have the right to say no to your child`s detention. Of course, schools have the right to be detained, but do you have the right to refuse? Incarceration in college usually lasts an hour or less. The length of a student`s detention depends on the seriousness of the crime. Lunch lasts 20 to 30 minutes, after-school detention for an hour and weekend detention one to three hours. Incarceration is one of the most common forms of punishment in the education system, as it forces students to face the consequences of their actions. Because of their incarceration, they have to spend more time at school instead of enjoying their free time. If students miss the opportunity to relax at home, spend time with friends, play outside, or do whatever they enjoy, they begin to correct their behavior at school to avoid further impacts. But here`s the thing.
There is no real way for the school to enforce this rule. If the student does not consider the detention arrangement and leaves, there is not much the school can do about it. It may impose other sanctions, such as a suspension from school, but it cannot physically force the student to stay there. The law explicitly states that school sentences may not cause physical or psychological harm. Although the waste of time is not in itself a psychological harm, it causes unnecessary stress to students. It is a matter of respect. Teachers should find a better way to punish students. Because of the doctrine, the school has certain responsibilities that normally only parents would have. The first is to teach their students what they see fit. Public schools are generally inclusive in all areas of life, and as with private schools, parents agree with the school`s curriculum (for example, if the school is Catholic and intends to teach religion) by enrolling their children.
Another is to protect and supervise students from foreseeable dangers. However, if students took a look at section 2, they would find that there is a good chance that this law would not apply to them. The Geneva Convention applies only in times of war and conflict. Geneva`s laws were introduced not to tell schools that it is illegal to keep children after the bell, but to tell all countries that the military and civilians must be treated humanely, even in times of war. This is usually described on a school`s website under the Disciplinary Policy and Procedures section. Students who want to leave on time will try to argue that it is illegal to keep them after the bell rings. And what`s the best way to prove something illegal? Look for the law that says this is the case. Unfortunately, for some reason, most students invoked Article 33 of the Fourth Geneva Convention. As a reminder, it is not illegal for a teacher to keep his students after the bell. It is your teacher who applies the powers of in loco parentis and tries to punish bad behavior by keeping you in detention, non-corporal punishment, making it legal. It`s about teaching students that bad behavior doesn`t go unpunished just because they`re out of school.
As students, we`ve all heard this phrase before. Any attempt to leave without their permission will result in either reprimand or imprisonment that will keep us in school much longer.