Thursday, October 1, 2009

Homecoming cancelled

Doug Wood takes on the district for cancelling homecoming this year.

After the problems of last year's homecoming Principal Brost made a recommendation that Homecoming be canceled because of the escalation of destructive behaviors that he felt were becoming disruptive to the educational mission of the high school. After several years of unsuccessful attempts to improve the situation Paul indicated that in his judgment it was time to hit the reset button by cancelling events for a period of time and then starting over.

The Herald-Independent covered this issue last November, you can follow the link, but I have reproduced the relevant reporting below.

I, for one, support this move. Although we took no formal action my impression was that the board was generally supportive at the time. Principal Brost and Superintendent Gerlach are the ones with experience, expertise and knowledge of the situation to make this difficult call.

I also think Doug misses the point: I'm sure many people view the action as a punishment for past misdeeds, but it is not. It is an attempt to create an enviroment in the high school that is more conducive to learning by changing the in-school activities.

From the HI:
Homecoming Cancelled?

Monona Grove High School Principal Paul Brost told the school board that he is recommending that the school no longer feature a "formal Homecoming week" starting next fall, due to poor behavior by students, particularly involving vandalism.

Brost filed a detailed report outlining various behavior problems related to homecoming, and sought feedback from the board on how to best clean up the event.

"This goes back before my five years at the high school," said Brost. We have made gains in school and in the community, added Brost, saying he was frustrated that "we have reached a standstill in progress."

It is very difficult to control behavior outside the school environment, he said, which is where most of the problems occur.

"This to me is a very big deal, and a decision that has not been taken lightly," said Brost. "I am disappointed that I've been unable to turn this (problem) around."

Brost's report outlined issues that arose during Homecoming 2008, as well as major issues and recurrent themes that have caused problems during the last decade.

"Homecoming continues to be a negative experience in school and in the community and my recommendation is to consider discontinuing Homecoming," wrote Brost in his report. He recommended substituting the week-long event with a formal dance held between the fall and winter sports seasons, sometime in November.

According to the report, major problems past and present include:

• Because the senior class could not have their own shirt this year, they ordered over 100 shirts outside of school that read ".09 Pushing it to the Limit." This is a reference to pushing rules and blood alcohol levels, said Brost. The shirts were deemed inappropriate, of course, and after talking with the parent who had helped place the order, the order was cancelled.

• Seniors taunting younger students at assembly events, particularly junior class members. Seniors boast about how many junior homes they have vandalized.

• Vandalization includes toilet papering of homes and dumping garbage on yards, but also more permanent methods like bleaching yards and vehicles, dumping cooking oil on driveways, spray painting driveways, and vehicles being egged. A parade float trailer was pushed in Lake Monona and a dog was shot with a paintball gun. Students were also removed from cars at gunpoint by Madison police after officers saw a paintball gun. A student was "saran wrapped to a tree" with his pants pulled down.

• Students drive in excessive speeds through neighborhoods.

Brost said that some parents are concerned about this vandalism while others say it is not a big deal, just kids having fun.

Brost outlined numerous tactics he has employed to try and thwart this negative behavior, including working closely with class advisors and officers to "give students more ownership" of homecoming activities. They have also reduced the number of assemblies to help reduce taunting and animosity between grades. Brost said that like most years, in-school Homecoming activities were largely ignored outside of the dance.

Board President John Kitslaar said that this was an administrative decision and that the board would not vote on the matter. District Superintendent Craig Gerlach said he was hesitant to cancel the event outright, but that he respected the recommendation. He said they will continue to discuss this decision leading into next fall.

13 comments:

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Peter Sobol said...

"Peter-
Why does the district think it is their duty to control events outside of the bldg? Frankly, this is a local law enforcement (primarily) issue not a school issue.
"

Note- I deleted the rest of the post because it violated my policy of "no unsubstantiated allegations".

Peter Sobol said...

The primary concern here is with the learning environment in the school, which reportedly takes a significant dive around homecoming week due to behaviours that take place both in and out of school.

In my opinion it is our duty to promote an enviroment in our buildings that is conducive to learning.

Anonymous said...

"The primary concern here is with the learning environment in the school, which reportedly takes a significant dive around homecoming week due to behaviours that take place both in and out of school."

Really, in the article you posted it talks primarily about events outside of the school. Where is the outcry about learning environment in the school?

Anonymous said...

Let's say some of your co-workers came over at night and vandalized your house, another time they pulled your pants down and left you saran wrapped to a tree. Do you think you would consider this as an issue that was outside of work? The idea that this is "outside of school" is a pure fiction.

Anonymous said...

"Let's say some of your co-workers came over at night and vandalized your house, another time they pulled your pants down and left you saran wrapped to a tree."

THe key phrase is SOME in your statement. In your world-work would be canceled at that location.

Futhermore, local law enforcement would take care of the isssues and then HR would bumble and try to act like it was no big deal....tongue and cheek thing here.

Peter Sobol said...

Actually no, any well run company would cancel any work related social events that repeatedly led to such harassment, a failure to take action would risk a lawsuit. Why would we accept anything less for our kids?

(P.S. I forgot to log in before posting this comment the first time, so it appeared as anonymous - sorry 'bout that)

Anonymous said...

I think the principal made the right decision. Cancel the week, give the kids a dance, and let it calm down for a year or two.
Seniors get revenge on the new Juniors because of what happened from the Seniors before. Once the abused Junior class is gone, there will be little memory or need for revenge, and Homecoming can come back.

Anonymous said...

Thank you Mr. Brost and administration for attempting to stop the destructive and dangerous actions of students during Homecoming week. We need our students and communities safety to be most important and past actions indicate that this has not been the case.

MMM said...

I totally support Brost on this one. He is actually taken a stand and made an unpopular decision- standing up to all kinds to folks. Bravo. More administrators should be such leaders.

Anonymous said...

The kids are challenging...kids are painting cars ("safe" paint) during school hours, maybe lunch? They are saying this is Homecoming week. Wonder what will happen.

Anonymous said...

"Anonymous Anonymous said...

The kids are challenging...kids are painting cars ("safe" paint) during school hours, maybe lunch? They are saying this is Homecoming week. Wonder what will happen."

but I thought homecoming is canceled and this activity would stop?

Anonymous said...

":The kids are challenging...kids are painting cars ("safe" paint) during school hours, maybe lunch? They are saying this is Homecoming week. Wonder what will happen."

Would this not fall into your unsubstantiated rumor?