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What are the consequences of suspension for a student?
It’s just a nice vacation without school, or there are bad consequences other than being known as a trouble maker?
The student will miss classes; will those absents be registered and possibly failing the school year(flunking) because of exceeding the maximum number of allowed absents, or those absents would be justified and not registered because he is on suspension?
Getting suspended might get the student in trouble of entering a University or getting a future job?
What other bad consequences might be?

What about expulsion?
It is expulsion just on that year and the student may come back the next year, or is permanent expulsion from that school forever, or possibly maybe from all schools in the State or what?
Will the student get in trouble entering Universities or getting jobs?
What other bad consequences might be?


THANK YOU.

2006-12-12 13:28:55 · 6 answers · asked by f_vidigal 1 in Education & Reference Teaching

"in school suspension"??? I think that is DETENTION! But for two days?

2006-12-12 13:44:04 · update #1

6 answers

The worst consequence is that the student will miss out on part of a free education that could probably better his/her life.

If a student is suspended for a long time then they very well could fail that grade- not only because of absences but also because of the content they miss out on. (The absences do count as absences...At least at all the schools I'm familiar with.) I'm not sure if suspensions or expulsions will affect getting into college or not.

Usually when a student is expelled, it is for the remainder of a year or semester, or possibly for a calendar year...It's up to the Superintend ant, Principal and School Board. While a student is under expulsion, they are not supposed to be able to go to any other school in the state.

It's sad that some students feel no shame at being suspended/expelled. What's sadder is that their parents let them treat it as a mini-vacation. Expulsion and suspension are used to remove people from the school that are making it difficult for other students to learn. It's not so much about punishment as it is about making a safe, positive learning environment for everyone else.

2006-12-12 14:58:50 · answer #1 · answered by Stacy B 2 · 0 0

The information so far is accurate except for the expulsion. If a student is expelled for an extended period of time they still may attend a school in the state. There are alternative schools. Mostly just the "bad kids" go there. A kid brought a knife to my school and that is where he went; they just call it the alternative school. He came back the next year and ended up graduating with his class.

As for ISS, it varies from school to school. At my school the kids MUST be working at all times. They must complete all of the work that the teachers send for them and then turn it at the end of the day. If they complete the work then they must read silently. Some kids bring magazines (if they have already been there and know the policy) but if you do not have anything then you have to read a textbook.

2006-12-12 15:27:50 · answer #2 · answered by Melanie L 6 · 0 0

yeah i totally agree. at my school when kids are in iss then they just sit there in the alternative room. they say the only bad thing is that its boring out of their minds... but yeah they really just sit there, i know a lot of people sleep. in ISS!! come on guys. really. good punishment, school. you really showed em. "YOU! TAKE A NAP IN THE ALTERNATIVE ROOM!" like really. what does that do. they just don't know how to punish people. i think it'd be more effectful if they like made them do extra work somehow? does that even work? cuz most people that have a suspension really could care less. i don't know. i've never had an iss or oss, so i can't say from personal expirience or anything. heck, i've never even had a detention. i don't even know why i answered this question... except that i kind of want to be a teacher so now i'm in the teaching section and you know. one thing led to another. well. have fun with that there. i know i didn't really help but you know what? you're probably reading my whole answer anyway, right? haha. sorry to waste like 4 minutes of your time and all. k im gonna go now. BYE!!

2006-12-12 14:06:38 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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2016-09-03 14:06:03 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I was suspended two days ISS (in school suspension) and two days OSS (out of school suspension). Let me describe my two days in ISS. I spend the entire day on the computer and we watched Lord of the Rings. The coordinator let us do whatever we wanted. And as for the two days of OSS, I slept in and more or less treated those two days like summer. I don't know about other schools, but instead of being punsihed, I was rewarded. When I go to apply to school, chances are they won't really factor in my suspension, they might if I had multiple suspensions, but one is just overlooked.

2006-12-12 13:37:12 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

none

2006-12-12 18:23:04 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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