That's one to involve law enforcement, seeing as that's a criminal act. First day on the job, then?
2006-12-18 15:25:46
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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That answer should be found somewhere in the student guide. Maybe not formally addressed as such, but you should have an idea.
I assume that you are talking about a college student since you have selected the "University +" category.
If nothing is spelled out specifically within the student guide, then you will have to use the rule of thumb: Did the student engage in an activity that was immature to the point where other students were inconvinenced, bothered, or otherwise put into unnessary distraction? I think when you can answer that question, then a fair warning should do as long as there is a probational period of a strict "no bad conduct" agreement.
A college student should be over pranks and silly things because soon the student will be called an adult who is working in the real world. College is not high-school, so it is time they grow up and start facing responsibility for their actions.
I would also not hesitate to alert the student that the local authorities will be informed of this illegal activity, and that the school has investigated the case. Although the school is not currently pressing charges, the student is still under jurisdiction of local authorities. Then the dean should tell the student that there is no guarantee the authorities will not pursue the infraction.
2006-12-18 15:49:55
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answer #2
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answered by tristan-adams 4
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I don't know if you are the dean or you are asking what a dean should do ? Anyway, it may seem like a joke to pull a fire alarm, but in reality it's really dumb. It could actually cause death if the firemen are busy at that part of town when a real fire erupts, or they may cause a collision rushing to a false alarm. If you are the dean, I would try and drill this into the kids head. If you are the kid getting punished,??? well whatever the dean gives you, you deserve. Don't do it again.
2006-12-18 15:32:00
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answer #3
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answered by CLAUDE D 3
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Why did the student pull the alarm. Listen to the stuent to help determine the cause of the problem. It could be that the child just wanted out of class. In that case you don't want the punishment to be getting out of class (detention or suspension), but maybe community service (helping in the cafeteria during lunch for a week, helping clean up after a prep rally, etc.) if that is allowed in your district.
If it is general poor conduct, then you have to come down hard to prevent future poor conduct. Reporting th false alarm to local law enforcement or school resource officer will help.
You have to do something, or you will appear weak and powerless. Students often mistake kindness for weakness.
2006-12-18 15:31:26
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answer #4
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answered by Troy 3
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area of the respond could be modern in coverage and the colleges code of habit. for sure the project has ramifications previous the college and so the college shouldn't conceal the student from the wider criminal outcomes (which would be lots stiffer than $2 hundred). even nonetheless, if it became for the duration of finals it could have had bigger outcomes upon different pupils besides (decrease grades and such). i could say that a sturdy diciplinary overview is asserted as for and punishment ought to rely on each and all of the climate in the case. this would comprise suspension, failing all checks, etc.
2016-10-15 05:23:27
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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I would have him or her get all the fire extinguishers from the building so the fire marshal can inspect them or have him or her wash the local firetruck. Its against the law to do that so he or she are getting off easy!!!
2006-12-18 15:27:04
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answer #6
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answered by woodtigerdp 3
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Well the obvious question is "was there a fire"?
Tampering with safety equipment is punishable by law.
2006-12-18 15:25:38
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answer #7
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answered by prairiegurrl 5
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How many times are you going to reword this question!!!
2006-12-18 15:36:53
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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depends on the level of school is it middle school? if so take it easy and give him detention if its highschool supension
2006-12-18 15:26:19
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Suspension if not expulsion.
2006-12-18 15:25:48
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answer #10
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answered by kman 3
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