Kids Who Skip School Get Tracked By GPS 515
suraj.sun writes with this excerpt from the Orange County Register:
"Frustrated by students habitually skipping class, police and the Anaheim Union High School District are turning to GPS tracking to ensure they come to class. The six-week pilot program is the first in California to test GPS. Seventh- and eighth-graders with four unexcused absences or more this school year are assigned to carry a handheld GPS device, about the size of a cell phone. Five times a day, they are required to enter a code that tracks their locations – as they leave for school, when they arrive at school, at lunchtime, when they leave school and at 8 p.m."
Great plan there (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Great plan there (Score:5, Insightful)
1. make friends with truants.
2. collect their GPS devices.
3. enter codes when called to do so.
4. profit.
Re:Great plan there (Score:5, Funny)
"Excuse me sir, but all the GPS hoodlums are reporting from the same location, every day!"
"Dear god, they've formed a GANG!"
Re:Great plan there (Score:5, Funny)
My thoughts exactly. One problem though... (Score:3, Funny)
I doubt that kids have enough folding dough to make this truly profitable, unless you count pre-tit poontang from the girly-truants. (If inept sex is all you can manage; go for it. :-)
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It was my first thought as well. TFA addresses it though:
Clearly, it won't help a student that doesn't want help. But for students who have trouble remembering where they are supposed to be, it may be just what they need.
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If you need to remind the kids to leave for school, get them free watches with alarms. The whole point of this is so they can watch them at all times (because kids don't deserve any privacy -- especially the kids who dare to ignore the school's authority).
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Agreed. Removing kids' privacy is obviously the goal -- hence the requirement to check in at 8pm. Schools should not know or care where kids are after school.
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Why do they have to do it at 8:00pm? That seems like a really dumb time; its none of the school's business where the student is at 8:00pm.
Four unexcused abscences seems a bit of a low bar; I know my daughter has they many just due to custody hearings this past fall when her mom tried to get her back.
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4 UNexcused are quite different than your daughter's excused absences.
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As I recall from high school, what was excused and what should be excused were two completely different things. There was a very short list of things that would qualify you as excused. Various things I saw count as unexcused included vomiting at school and being sent out by the school nurse and genuine medical emergency of a parent. Your own illness is always unexcused unless it is severe enough to go to a doctor, and I heard it gets tough to get excuses for a parent's medical emergency.
Overall, the high
Re:Great plan there (Score:4, Insightful)
Overall, the high school I recall was more burdened with bureaucracy than any corporation I've worked at since.
They have to be in order to evade any shred of responsibility for their actions. If they didn't have rigid rules on what counted as an excused absence or not, then they might have to make a decision and that could be inconvenient or even cause them trouble.
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Disclaimer: Not all school districts are like this. However, a lot are.
It is more like a vicious circle. Parents with justified issues are completely ignored by the school board muckety-mucks until they start having to get "loud" enough to be heard by having to threaten litigation, or actually start hauling school officials into court.
Schools retaliate by adding more and more paperwork to cover their derrieres, and start adding more levels of bureaucratic crap, to try to make themselves more deaf to pare
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Why do they have to do it at 8:00pm?
To make sure they are at home, awake, and studying at that time; instead of at a friends house drinking, OR sleeping when the school has dictated they should be finishing their homework?
Re:Great plan there (Score:4, Funny)
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I generally find the low unexcused absence threshold in the U.S. to be overboard, by an order of magnitude at least, or maybe two. When I was in 11th grade of high school in Poland, I had 51% attendance rate. You'd get to repeat the grade if it dropped to 50% or less. That was fair, IMHO. I don't think I turned out all that bad, nor do I think I missed out on much. U.S. schools seem to be designed like prisons with "voluntary" attendance.
Never mind that the U.S. school system on one hand tries to promote at
Re:Great plan there (Score:4, Insightful)
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Sorry, have to slice you with Occam's razor.
Public schools lose money for every day a child does not attend.
Now we might extend your reasoning to the motivation BEHIND that policy.
Re:Great plan there (Score:4, Interesting)
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Here in California, there is actually no such thing as "Home Schooling". We have mandatory education laws, and kids are required to go to school. So, when you
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As a parent, it's my business where my kid is. I'll smash that damn device and hand it back to the truant officer on my kid's behalf. Schools have become the Juvenile Executive branch of the government, and
Re:Great plan there (Score:5, Informative)
I missed 40 days of school in 8th grade (a personal high point), and I didn't get much better about it during highschool. Now I'm working on a Ph.D. in Neurobiology at a translation research and teaching hospital. I credit my not-being-at-my-public-school for the level of success I've achieved.
As a parent, it's my business where my kid is. I'll smash that damn device and hand it back to the truant officer on my kid's behalf. Schools have become the Juvenile Executive branch of the government, and it's not their responsibility. "We'll educate you with the information we want you to know, whether you like it or not!"
Send your kids to private school, or home school them; there is no law that says you have to send them to public school (at least in my state). There are options besides teaching them that its OK to completely disregard authority...
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"there is no law that says you have to send them to public school (at least in my state)"
its actually legal in ALL 50 states to even go to the point of homeschooling your kids. http://www.hslda.org/laws/default.asp [hslda.org]
a law maker trying to make it otherwise will be visited by Mr Smith so he can explain reality in the US. http://www.hslda.org/about/staff/attorneys/Smith.asp [hslda.org]
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As Mark Twain famously observed, one should not let one's schooling interfere with their education.
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As petty as it sounds I think he resented me.
Of course he resented you. While I have friends who are public school teachers, and though they're great people, for many of them it's inconceivable that children can learn without them, and they find it threatening, as though the secret might get out that there are alternatives to public schooling which work well for some people. Why do you think states with stronger teacher unions have laws which make it harder to home-school?
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I really don't get the point of this system - they already (hopefully) know whether the kid is in school or not. They could (and should) pass this information on to the parents. Call them, send them a letter and ask for a reply. What's the GPS adding to that? Now you have a record that they are hanging out in the mall, or on the basketball court or whatever. Did you really need to know that? They are not in school, that's what matters.
You can't even go and get them from wherever they are, if they just leave
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That's the point; once they drop / lose / destroy them, administrators can respond that it requires an under-the-skin implant.
Conditioning (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Conditioning (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Conditioning (Score:5, Insightful)
You're joking right? Those students who do this are already truants. They have little interest in actually responding properly to authority and I'd be absolutely and utterly shocked if, in a decade when they're adults, if they have any more respect for the laws of society.
I am not saying it's not an invasion of privacy, it is, but those outfitted with these tracking devices aren't exactly the types you're making them out to be.
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I actually grew up in Anaheim. And I often ditched class. If I was a kid today in Anaheim, I'd probably have one of these devices.
Funny. I'm a fully functional member of society, making a good wage and don't have so much as a traffic ticket on my record.
This has more to do with revenue, I'd gather. I understand that in California school districts get so much money for each student that's in class each day. Kid doesn't come to school, school doesn't get paid.
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Yeah, how's that working out for ya?
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Kids are supposed to be tracked, some times invasively. It's called parenting. Freedom and privacy should be earned through good behavior.
I don't support using devices like this, but if the parents can't keep the kids in check it makes sense to work something out.
Training for the future (Score:5, Insightful)
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You say this as if it wasn't their intention.
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Blame stupidity -- I doubt that the people who devised this program would object to having their own movements tracked by GPS, and so they never considered how this program would impact the students' future perception of their rights.
Their perception of their rights should be thus: If you violate the law (in this case, the law is *go to class*) you will be punished accordingly by having some of your rights (the right to have control over where you go and when) taken away, because you have demonstrated a lack of aptitude for properly exercising that right. It's quite simple. If the alternative is suspension/expulsion, I say strap a tracker on them and watch them 24/7 with updates every 15 seconds. Kids who are on the slippery slope tow
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This, like so many other school programs, is an egregious violation of the students' rights.
Not so. Most parents would happily sign a release if it meant not having to go through truancy charges.
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> not having to go through truancy charges.
Ah, governmental blackmail. "You can go ahead and not do this, but you'll be subject to this shit we just whipped up to punish you."
Even governments are subject to this sort of shit.Consider federally mandated speed limits. Consider WIPO and ACTA.
Re:Training for the future (Score:5, Insightful)
From the fine article
So this is to keep children from getting in legal problems. It's not all kids, just those at risk of getting dragged into the court system.
The entering of the codes isn't just to verify the child has the unit, but also to assist them in planning to get to school. (8PM code entry? Reminder to get stuff ready for the next school day.) In addition, it involves coaching the children to work on their attendance habits.
So it's voluntary, has less impact on the students than the alternatives, and is designed to work with the students to improve their performance. Yep, that sounds like a violation of their rights.
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So much for due process. What this comes down to is a bullying tactic to deny these people due process. Its threat. Accept punishment or we are going to drag you into a supposedly fair process which will all know is stacked heavily in our favor and the result no matter what you say is that you will be assigned a harsher punishment. That is the threat anyway, as to if the truancy hearing in California would be fair or not I can't say.
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No, i am pretty sure the guise here is "think of the fuckups" who will be carrying the trackers; maybe after they spend their freshman year of high school doing so and feeling what its like to be treated like a criminal they will decide they need to start earning trust (by not skipping school). Sure there are other ways to punish, this is just a slightly more convoluted way to do it that has the side effect of maintaining discipline whilst the punishment is being carried out (as opposed to suspension/expul
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Freedom's just another word for "nothing left to lose"... If having a spine means being a colossal fuckup, then i will forgo the spine in favor of the lucrative career and freedoms that most people (especially those who arent US citizens or convicts) cant even imagine.
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Students rights? Seventh and eighth graders don't have or need rights.[1]
Instead of asserting that students of that age should be making their own judgments (the consequences of which only an adult could appreciate), I'd suggest we ask why it is that a child isn't doing what they were TOLD TO DO (by either or both their parents and the school).[2]
The problem, as I see it, is a lack of parenting. The excuse (parents are routinely too busy, overworked, and stressed) may have widespread appeal, but it's a lo
And this will stop what? (Score:2)
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I would have just left this in my locker and ignored it, not bothering to enter the code or keep it on me -- even on the days I was actually at school. I don't know why they expect this to stop anyone.
I think you missed the part where this is an voluntary alternative to the already-in-place harsher bits like holding you back, or prosecution, etc?
What happens when you put it in a faraday cage? (Score:2)
A plastic bag and then aluminum foil. Or one of those mylar lined freezer bags?
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Treat students like livestock! (Score:2)
Parents (Score:2)
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Also, in many places (everyone I lived in) truancy is the school districts problem, because it is one of the metrics by which they are evaluated. Schools with high truancy rates can see funding cuts, l
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Anecdotes like this article make me want to homeschool my kid.
Home schooling is perfectly fine for those parents that can do it (not everyone can - it's just another skill set). Home schooling has its good and bad points, but it will certainly address the truancy issue. Will it fix the reasons why the student doesn't want to learn or go to school? Maybe, maybe not. If you have the choice between home school or reform school, I'm thinking home school is the better solution almost every time.
Optional? (Score:2)
If the District Attorney chooses to prosecute, truant students could be sentenced to juvenile hall and parents could face up to a $2,000 fine, Pardo said.
In other words, if you miss school, we track you or you go to jail.
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extracurricular (Score:3)
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8 PM? (Score:5, Insightful)
GPS isn't a solution (Score:5, Interesting)
Maybe instead of treating students like cattle, schools should become more interesting and figure out why kids are actually skipping school.
I did all the time, until I was old enough to drop out, get a GED and head to college. I never missed classes in College because I was able to determine for myself what interested me and what goals I wanted to achieve.
This was because I had moved into a new school district that didn't really evaluate my needs, and instead stuck be in classes that were beneath the level of work I was doing in my previous school. I went from doing algebra and trigonometry to doing long division.
I'm sure that's not why all students skip school. I sure some are getting bullied, some are on drugs, and others are overwhelmed with their homework. Whatever the case, GPS won't solve the problems.
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Exactly. Meeting the needs of your client (in this case, the child) is something that seems to be missed out here.
But then, the US seems to be caught in a web of antiquated behavioural psychology ideas.
The idea of actually caring about how your client feels is missed. Not just schools, but prisons and other institutions also.
It seems to be driven by "conform with authority, or be penalized" - a weird message from the Land of the Free.
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Sorry, no. Just like I'm not one of Google's clients, I'm their product. The client is always the one who pays the bills. For a public school the client is the taxpayers, for a private school it's the parents. Children are their raw material, and their product is (supposed to be) educated citizens.
I won't claim to agree with the message, but in that light "conform with authority, or be penalized" makes a lot more sense.
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I [am] sure some are getting bullied, some are on drugs, and others are overwhelmed with their homework.
I recall that bullies were the ones who were more likely to be skipping. They were also more likely to be the ones on drugs, so maybe you bundled in that consideration with your second option.
As for being overwhelmed by homework... the only reason for this is that you didn't care to either (a) spend the time after school doing what you needed to do, or (b) spend 10 minutes copying answers from your peers who DID do the work the day before. In an ideal high school with lots of over-achievers, everybody w
Is this really a surprise? (Score:2)
Is there any mystery why the fuck they're in massive amounts of debt and suffering the biggest budget crisis of the state's history? Their answer to EVERY problem is to throw money at it. Kids not learning as well? Let's give them all iPads. Kids not eating well? Instead of teaching them healthy choices, let's remove all the vending machines. Kids not showing up at school? Instead of making school more app
Behold - A Magic Trick! (Score:2)
Behold as I ... give it to my friend and tell him the code!!!! UNBELIEVABLE
Also what if I just throw the tracking device in a lake and continue skipping school? This just seems like a waste of resources - buying expensive GPS (they must be at least a GPS module and probably a cell phone radio?) units and giving them to kids who, as they are often skippers, don't really care about school or keeping in good condition the expensive thing you gave them.
This seems like the kind of tactic that would encourage a
so not thought out (Score:2)
What stops a truant from giving it to the class geek for a dollar?
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Be VERY careful talking shit about these kids (Score:2, Informative)
Asian 12.09%
Filipino 3.94%
Hispanic 62.02%
Black 3.33%
White 17.17%
Free & Reduced Lunch 52.0%
Limited English Proficiency 27.6%
Fluent English Proficiency 36.1%
Native English speakers 36.3%
Now, who wants to take back their bigoted statements? Click reply to make apologies for unspoken assumptions about the low achiev
I'm not sure I see the point (Score:2)
What happens if a kid doesn't report in reliably? Why not just make whatever that is the penalty for truancy in the first place instead of trying to fix a social problem with technology?
Yep! (Score:2)
Simply reinforcing my notion that modern schooling is less about education and more about simply "jailing" children so mommy and daddy can go to work.
Is it any wonder why prison is such a growth industry in this country when we're institutionalizing them from age 6 onward?
Enter a code? (Score:2)
What's to stop them giving the codes and devices to someone who is going to class?
This system nicely straddles the horribly invasive and the pointlessly insecure, doesn't it?
I think I like my hometowns method better (Score:2)
Where I live if your child has excessive unexcused absences then both the child and the parent have to report to court. The parent can face fines and/or community service relating to contempt of court if the child continues to be truant or the parent doesn't show up for court.
It makes the parent responsible, and we don't condition our children to believe that "big brother" is normal. That's Google's job :P.
Kids will work around even this (Score:2)
Kids won't be stopped by that. Maybe each day they'll nominate one friend to carry all the stupid devices to school and log in while the others goof off. Or worse, they'll probably threaten some small kid to do it for them.
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The sort of kids who are skipping school regularly enough that they need to be part of this kind of tracking program are the same sort of kids who are likely to stay out until all hours of the night cruising with their mates (or their gang) and potentially causing trouble.
By requiring an 8pm check-in it ensures the kids are actually at home and not out causing problems.
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By requiring an 8pm check-in it ensures the kids are actually at home and not out causing problems.
Wouldn't that be the parents responsibility?
A better system would probably be to call their parents every evening and ask where their kids are.
Re:8PM? (Score:4, Insightful)
No, it wouldn't. This parent would respond "It's 8pm in the evening, not during school hours, and it's none of your business where my children are."
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... and if they're not home at 8PM, and (somehow, I mean what else could they be doing*) happen to not be causing problems?
While I was hardly a chronic skipper (fairly rare), I had plenty of friends who did so far more often (because of boredom, retarded curriculum etc) - and we were a far cry from the stupid troublemakers they associate with skipping.
* - that was sarcasm by the way.
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Are you enquiring of the dictionary definition [princeton.edu], or making a joke about fellatio in prison?
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Don't Explain The Joke [tvtropes.org]
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I was excepted
I was accepted. What kind of English teacher did you.. oh wait.
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He probably learned that at his first high school. Seriously, having only one grammatical error in a post of that length puts him in the top 95% around here...
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California is also known for having a budget excess to pay for this.
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Re:Big Brother (Score:5, Insightful)
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Threatening someone with jail time or fines if they don't volunteer is like saying there is a mandatory donation required to attend a free event.
So should they also scrap community service and probation options and stick everyone with pure jail-time instead? If you've done something you can be jailed for but they think you'll reform with some minimal oversight I don't see the issue with offering it as an option.
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Threatening someone with jail time or fines if they don't volunteer is like saying there is a mandatory donation required to attend a free event.
So should they also scrap community service and probation options and stick everyone with pure jail-time instead? If you've done something you can be jailed for but they think you'll reform with some minimal oversight I don't see the issue with offering it as an option.
He didn't say that. He's just pointing out, correctly, that "volunteering" means there is little to no incentive to do something, but you do it anyways. Convicted criminals don't "volunteer" to accept community service or probation, they choose it as an alternative to options they consider worse. Just like I don't "volunteer" to go to work every day.
These kids are the same. To call it voluntary is a joke.
Re:Big Brother (Score:4, Interesting)
Threatening someone with jail time or fines if they don't volunteer is like saying there is a mandatory donation required to attend a free event.
They're not picking random kids off the street for this. These kids are already facing juvenile hall. They a had a choice: go to school or get in trouble. Now they have another choice: go to school and be tracked or go to juvenile hall. These kids already made the first choice so now they (and their parents) are forced to make the second choice.
I'm not thrilled with the program - I think they should just lock the kids up in reform school/juvenile hall/whatever. They have free will and they made their choice so let them live with the consequences. Maybe they'll learn from their mistakes, or maybe not.
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How many of you guys are actually teachers? As an educator, I actually this is a great idea. Students under 16 are required to be in school, so if they are truant we have to spend resources to sends truancy officer after them, then the kids have to show up in court, etc. This seems it would reduce those costs, both financial and educational.
It would only reduce costs if the child complies with the terms of the tracking or it causes the child to attend school instead of skipping. I honestly can't see why it would. If the threat of going to juvie didn't stop the kid from cutting in the first place, why would it stop them from not using their tracker?
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As an educator, you are even below the lawyers because you pretend to do something useful while serving a barely-functional system that students escape from with exactly two things:
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As an educator, it's your right and responsibility to lobby to change fucked up laws. And truancy laws are truly overboard in the U.S. Change the laws and you won't have to bleed tax money on court proceedings, sending truancy officers, etc. It's really simple -- don't complain of it if you do nothing to change it.
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