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  3. Is this normal teenage behavior?

Is this normal teenage behavior?

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  • W Warren Stevens

    That all sounds like very typical teenage behaviour where I went to high school (in Aurora, an upper-middle-class suburb of Toronto) in the early 1990's I can't remember a single dance where there wasn't someone who spent the night in the washroom wishing they hadn't had too much to drink. And there was also a large portion of the school that "put the high in high-school". Many of them are doctors, lawyers, MBAs, professors, engineers (etc), so don't think that it will all end in disaster... :)


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    code frog 0
    wrote on last edited by
    #19

    I'm in no way wanting to start a soapy war at all. Your comments just made me want to add this for other readers. Many of them may be doctors, lawyers, MBAs, professors and engineers but how many of them also struggle with alcohol addiction? That's the one thing you don't have to put on a job application or resume. Again, I don't add that to be argumentive just to point out that there's a flawed assumption in your statement that overlooks a very important detail of alcohol abuse and that detail would be addiction.

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    • M Miszou

      This one time, at band camp...


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      leckey 0
      wrote on last edited by
      #20

      Hey! I DID go to bandcamp...twice actually.

      _________________________________________ You can't fix stupid, but you can medicate crazy.

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      • M Marc Clifton

        Let's see. Monday a kid in 10th grade was caught drinking in the bathroom and suspended for a week. Last week, two kids skipped P.E. and were suspended for a day (seems a bit harsh there). Last year's senior class trip to Italy (yeah, wow, I know) had several incidences of drinking. Last year, most of the senior class was caught drinking around a bonfire (without permission for that) on school grounds (by the lake) at 11:30 PM. It seems I've picked a Waldorf school that is apparently known for its highschool drinking issues. Anyways, what's your experience with your kid(s) in highschool and their peers? Is this typical? Especially, is it typical for a private school? Granted, parents often choose Waldorf as the last option/hope for their already screwed up kid (I place the responsibility of all of this behavior squarely on the shoulders of the parents, BTW, not the school). Marc

        Thyme In The Country
        Interacx

        People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
        There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
        People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh Smith

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        Russell Morris
        wrote on last edited by
        #21

        In my experience (public highschool in suburban/rural Georgia), it sounds like that's a relatively tame bunch of HS kids :) I myself didn't drink but a few times in HS (I hung out with the "smart" crowd, not the "cool" crowd, although they intersected a bit sometimes). I had a few friends who did a good bit of drinking towards the end of HS, and there were plenty more where that came from. There's even a picture of the "cool" crowds's drinking shack in my senior-year annual. I saved all of my drinking for my freshman and first sophomore year in college. At the start of my second sophomore year, I got a friendly letter from college saying that if I didn't get my grades up they were going to stop cashing my tuition checks. Bit of wake-up call there :laugh:. I actually wish I'd done more partying in HS, as I would have got it out of my system (and figured out how to deal with it) before I hit college, and I'd have been able to get my college degree with honors instead of being 2 tenths of a point shy. Crap - my GPA in college was under 3.00 from my third quarter freshman year until AFTER my grades were posted for my final semester 5 years later (3.01)! :laugh:

        "I hope he can see this, because I'm doing it as hard as I can" - Ignignot

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        • M Marc Clifton

          Let's see. Monday a kid in 10th grade was caught drinking in the bathroom and suspended for a week. Last week, two kids skipped P.E. and were suspended for a day (seems a bit harsh there). Last year's senior class trip to Italy (yeah, wow, I know) had several incidences of drinking. Last year, most of the senior class was caught drinking around a bonfire (without permission for that) on school grounds (by the lake) at 11:30 PM. It seems I've picked a Waldorf school that is apparently known for its highschool drinking issues. Anyways, what's your experience with your kid(s) in highschool and their peers? Is this typical? Especially, is it typical for a private school? Granted, parents often choose Waldorf as the last option/hope for their already screwed up kid (I place the responsibility of all of this behavior squarely on the shoulders of the parents, BTW, not the school). Marc

          Thyme In The Country
          Interacx

          People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
          There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
          People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh Smith

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          leckey 0
          wrote on last edited by
          #22

          Okay, my theory. If you have a 'wild' kid, no matter how much you try to teach them the principles, they will get into some trouble. Quiet kids you usually don't have a problem. There was no alcohol in my house. I learned about sex from late night HBO. My parents did not prepare me for anything. Plus it was a bad environment so I was a prime candidate for becoming 'troubled.' But I didn't. I didn't drink until I went to Australia in high school, and even after that I went to only two high school drinking parties (including the senior kegger). I drank in college--I was a bit severe in my freshman year. I've never tried pot or even cigarettes. Then I look at my classmate Danny. He comes from a prominent family of do-gooders. But Danny was the odd-ball. He constantly got into trouble including a high speed car chase during his junior year and in college he and his brother set off bottle rockets from a pipe while they were in a boat on the lake. One hit a 25 year old lady who had to have a hysterectomy and has hip problems. I think most kids are in the middle. They want to try, they want to fit it. It takes an awfully strong teenager to rise above the peer pressure. Unless it's YOUR kid caught in the bathroom I wouldn't worry. But then again, I don't have kids. And just an FYI, cockatoos don't like beer. Oh, and don't drink and combine at the same time.

          _________________________________________ You can't fix stupid, but you can medicate crazy.

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          • S stephen hazel

            Joe Woodbury wrote:

            I place it on the shoulders of the fifteen and sixteen year olds

            Yep. They ain't babies no more. You've (hopefully) done all you could =well= before this point. For my daughter, it all hit RIGHT at 13. Well, we had rumbles before that, but she basically blew the hell apart. It started simmering down at 15, and now it's basically just dome building activity... Mostly about boyfriends and household rules and the constant yelling she can do - hoo boy.

            Joe Woodbury wrote:

            for one, I'm still not a grandfather

            Preach it !! Thank god for birth control...:(( Sometimes it's mighty hard bein' a Dad... Almost as hard as it was bein THAT age. Wouldn't wanna go thru THAT again... ...Steve

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            Joe Woodbury
            wrote on last edited by
            #23

            Steve Hazel wrote:

            For my daughter, it all hit RIGHT at 13.

            You're lucky, since my oldest girl was born, she wanted to be eighteen. Fortunately, our youngest, also a girl, now eleven, is pretty much the opposite. On the flip side, my almost nineteen-year-old not only just got her hair cutting license, but announced she's going to start college in the fall studying accounting. (Yes, we almost rushed her to Area 51 to make sure she wasn't an alien who had taken over her body:)) Now if only her fifteen year old brother would grow up....

            Anyone who thinks he has a better idea of what's good for people than people do is a swine. - P.J. O'Rourke

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            • W Warren Stevens

              That all sounds like very typical teenage behaviour where I went to high school (in Aurora, an upper-middle-class suburb of Toronto) in the early 1990's I can't remember a single dance where there wasn't someone who spent the night in the washroom wishing they hadn't had too much to drink. And there was also a large portion of the school that "put the high in high-school". Many of them are doctors, lawyers, MBAs, professors, engineers (etc), so don't think that it will all end in disaster... :)


              www.IconsReview.com[^] Huge list of stock icon collections (both free and commercial)

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              PJ Arends
              wrote on last edited by
              #24

              Warren Stevens wrote:

              Many of them are doctors, lawyers, MBAs, professors, engineers (etc)

              True, but some are jail, and others did not live long enough to graduate from high school. Chances are the successful ones would still have been successful without the alcohol and drugs, but there is a far better chance that the dead ones or the ones in jail would have turned out better without it.


              You may be right
              I may be crazy
              -- Billy Joel --

              Within you lies the power for good, use it!!!

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              • C code frog 0

                I'm in no way wanting to start a soapy war at all. Your comments just made me want to add this for other readers. Many of them may be doctors, lawyers, MBAs, professors and engineers but how many of them also struggle with alcohol addiction? That's the one thing you don't have to put on a job application or resume. Again, I don't add that to be argumentive just to point out that there's a flawed assumption in your statement that overlooks a very important detail of alcohol abuse and that detail would be addiction.

                W Offline
                W Offline
                Warren Stevens
                wrote on last edited by
                #25

                code-frog wrote:

                Many of them may be doctors, lawyers, MBAs, professors and engineers but how many of them also struggle with alcohol addiction? That's the one thing you don't have to put on a job application or resume.

                Actually none of the people I was thinking about "struggle with alcohol addiction". Not everyone who drinks when they are teenagers turns into an alcoholic.

                code-frog wrote:

                very important detail of alcohol abuse and that detail would be addiction.

                Alcohol is not addictive (chemically). My point was that finding out that your child drinks is not unusual or anything to really get freaked out about.


                www.IconsReview.com[^] Huge list of stock icon collections (both free and commercial)

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                • W Warren Stevens

                  code-frog wrote:

                  Many of them may be doctors, lawyers, MBAs, professors and engineers but how many of them also struggle with alcohol addiction? That's the one thing you don't have to put on a job application or resume.

                  Actually none of the people I was thinking about "struggle with alcohol addiction". Not everyone who drinks when they are teenagers turns into an alcoholic.

                  code-frog wrote:

                  very important detail of alcohol abuse and that detail would be addiction.

                  Alcohol is not addictive (chemically). My point was that finding out that your child drinks is not unusual or anything to really get freaked out about.


                  www.IconsReview.com[^] Huge list of stock icon collections (both free and commercial)

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                  code frog 0
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #26

                  Again not going to go much past this reply but this statement:

                  Warren Stevens wrote:

                  Alcohol is not addictive (chemically).

                  Is utterly false. http://www.addictionrecov.org/cdwhat.htm#alcohol[^]

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                  • L leckey 0

                    Hey! I DID go to bandcamp...twice actually.

                    _________________________________________ You can't fix stupid, but you can medicate crazy.

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                    David Wulff
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #27

                    Do you play the flute? :~


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                    • P PJ Arends

                      Warren Stevens wrote:

                      Many of them are doctors, lawyers, MBAs, professors, engineers (etc)

                      True, but some are jail, and others did not live long enough to graduate from high school. Chances are the successful ones would still have been successful without the alcohol and drugs, but there is a far better chance that the dead ones or the ones in jail would have turned out better without it.


                      You may be right
                      I may be crazy
                      -- Billy Joel --

                      Within you lies the power for good, use it!!!

                      W Offline
                      W Offline
                      Warren Stevens
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #28

                      PJ Arends wrote:

                      True, but some are jail, and others did not live long enough to graduate from high school.

                      Nobody from my school died from drinking (or anything else, for that matter).

                      PJ Arends wrote:

                      Chances are the successful ones would still have been successful without the alcohol and drugs

                      That's very close to my point. In my experience the use of alcohol/drugs had virtually zero bearing on "success" later in life (compared to the level of education of the parents, which I have seen to play a major role in determining the success of children). The idea that everyone is just a few drinks away from jail or death is simply not the case.


                      www.IconsReview.com[^] Huge list of stock icon collections (both free and commercial)

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                      • W Warren Stevens

                        PJ Arends wrote:

                        True, but some are jail, and others did not live long enough to graduate from high school.

                        Nobody from my school died from drinking (or anything else, for that matter).

                        PJ Arends wrote:

                        Chances are the successful ones would still have been successful without the alcohol and drugs

                        That's very close to my point. In my experience the use of alcohol/drugs had virtually zero bearing on "success" later in life (compared to the level of education of the parents, which I have seen to play a major role in determining the success of children). The idea that everyone is just a few drinks away from jail or death is simply not the case.


                        www.IconsReview.com[^] Huge list of stock icon collections (both free and commercial)

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                        O Offline
                        Orcrist
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #29

                        Warren Stevens wrote:

                        Nobody from my school died from drinking (or anything else, for that matter).

                        I saw both types. - One died from alcohol (choked to death on their own vomit) - One died in a car crash (drinking and driving) - One overdose (drugs) And this wasn't an urban school. It was a school in a rural middle income suburban community. I guess you were just lucky. Cheers, David

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                        • C code frog 0

                          Again not going to go much past this reply but this statement:

                          Warren Stevens wrote:

                          Alcohol is not addictive (chemically).

                          Is utterly false. http://www.addictionrecov.org/cdwhat.htm#alcohol[^]

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                          Joe Woodbury
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #30

                          code-frog wrote:

                          Warren Stevens wrote: Alcohol is not addictive (chemically). Is utterly false. http://www.addictionrecov.org/cdwhat.htm#alcohol\[^\]

                          No, Warren is correct. Alcohol does not create a chemical addiction, though in terms of real world effects, it's a distinction without a difference. In the end, Alcohol abuse causes more damage and harm than any other abusable substance. (In moderation, there is strong evidence it can be good for you but the benefits aren't worth the risk of starting to drink.) (For the record, I'm a life-long teetotaler. The closest I've come to drinking is licking some mint julip off a finger tip once. Funny thing is, I've never had the desire to drink and never even liked the smell of alcohol. I still don't.)

                          Anyone who thinks he has a better idea of what's good for people than people do is a swine. - P.J. O'Rourke

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                          • O Orcrist

                            Warren Stevens wrote:

                            Nobody from my school died from drinking (or anything else, for that matter).

                            I saw both types. - One died from alcohol (choked to death on their own vomit) - One died in a car crash (drinking and driving) - One overdose (drugs) And this wasn't an urban school. It was a school in a rural middle income suburban community. I guess you were just lucky. Cheers, David

                            W Offline
                            W Offline
                            Warren Stevens
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #31

                            Orcrist wrote:

                            One died in a car crash (drinking and driving)

                            There was plenty of drinking (and drugs) in my high school, but very little drinking-and-driving (i.e. probably a lower level than I've seen in the general adult population)

                            Orcrist wrote:

                            this wasn't an urban school. It was a school in a rural middle income suburban community

                            Sounds mostly like the community I went to school in(Aurora, which is about 40km north of Toronto)


                            www.IconsReview.com[^] Huge list of stock icon collections (both free and commercial)

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                            • O Orcrist

                              Warren Stevens wrote:

                              Nobody from my school died from drinking (or anything else, for that matter).

                              I saw both types. - One died from alcohol (choked to death on their own vomit) - One died in a car crash (drinking and driving) - One overdose (drugs) And this wasn't an urban school. It was a school in a rural middle income suburban community. I guess you were just lucky. Cheers, David

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                              Joe Woodbury
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #32

                              There was a lot of drinking in my High School, though I never did any. I do recall several of the ring leaders doing condom checks and designated driver checks on Friday nights after track practice. Unfortunately, in my junior year two students were killed by a drunk driver and as was the former center of our football team a year after we graduated.

                              Anyone who thinks he has a better idea of what's good for people than people do is a swine. - P.J. O'Rourke

                              O 1 Reply Last reply
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                              • M Marc Clifton

                                Let's see. Monday a kid in 10th grade was caught drinking in the bathroom and suspended for a week. Last week, two kids skipped P.E. and were suspended for a day (seems a bit harsh there). Last year's senior class trip to Italy (yeah, wow, I know) had several incidences of drinking. Last year, most of the senior class was caught drinking around a bonfire (without permission for that) on school grounds (by the lake) at 11:30 PM. It seems I've picked a Waldorf school that is apparently known for its highschool drinking issues. Anyways, what's your experience with your kid(s) in highschool and their peers? Is this typical? Especially, is it typical for a private school? Granted, parents often choose Waldorf as the last option/hope for their already screwed up kid (I place the responsibility of all of this behavior squarely on the shoulders of the parents, BTW, not the school). Marc

                                Thyme In The Country
                                Interacx

                                People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
                                There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
                                People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh Smith

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                                Lost User
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #33

                                Steiner Waldorf ways not working? Maybe the code of practice needs to be enforced more. Source http://www.steinerwaldorf.org.uk/documents.htm[^] 4.2 Discipline Basic practice a. The school will have a behaviour and discipline policy which is clearly supported by suitable procedures which are age appropriate and implemented by all members of staff. b. Disciplinary matters arising in each department of the school (Kg, lower school etc) are reviewed and discussed by the relevant staff (e.g. weekly). c. Procedures will cover informing parents at the earliest stage (in many cases on the same day). d. Class teachers and guardians will inform all staff of particular special needs that may have an effect on behaviour. e. There will be a policy and procedures for drugs and substance abuse by pupils. Anyhow Marc, I'm sure things are not too bad otherwise your language would be more seething.

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                                • J Joe Woodbury

                                  There was a lot of drinking in my High School, though I never did any. I do recall several of the ring leaders doing condom checks and designated driver checks on Friday nights after track practice. Unfortunately, in my junior year two students were killed by a drunk driver and as was the former center of our football team a year after we graduated.

                                  Anyone who thinks he has a better idea of what's good for people than people do is a swine. - P.J. O'Rourke

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                                  Orcrist
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #34

                                  Joe Woodbury wrote:

                                  do recall several of the ring leaders doing condom checks and designated driver checks on Friday nights after track practice.

                                  Thats pretty responsible. My High School (early 80's) certainly was not that progressive / responsible and we were just on the cusp (as I recall) of the start of the Drinking Driving Counterattack programs and the whole Aids scare. The alcohol use doesnt terribly concern me but that Ecstacy sh#t, I admit, really scares the bejesus out of me (in concern for my daughters) as it is apparently cheap, extremely addicting, and damaging. But my parents certainly had their own things to worry about. David

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                                  • O Orcrist

                                    Joe Woodbury wrote:

                                    do recall several of the ring leaders doing condom checks and designated driver checks on Friday nights after track practice.

                                    Thats pretty responsible. My High School (early 80's) certainly was not that progressive / responsible and we were just on the cusp (as I recall) of the start of the Drinking Driving Counterattack programs and the whole Aids scare. The alcohol use doesnt terribly concern me but that Ecstacy sh#t, I admit, really scares the bejesus out of me (in concern for my daughters) as it is apparently cheap, extremely addicting, and damaging. But my parents certainly had their own things to worry about. David

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                                    Joe Woodbury
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #35

                                    Actually this was in the late 70s. We had no programs, official or otherwise, and the administration never brought it up. We were given a huge amount of latitude, especially compared to the over controlling schools of today and I think that was a big part of it. Seriously; I grew up in a era where children were given a lot more trust than today and I think it paid off. (I'm also convinced that increasing the drinking age to 21 and demonizing sex to the degree it has happened has done more harm than good.)

                                    Anyone who thinks he has a better idea of what's good for people than people do is a swine. - P.J. O'Rourke

                                    1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • M Marc Clifton

                                      Let's see. Monday a kid in 10th grade was caught drinking in the bathroom and suspended for a week. Last week, two kids skipped P.E. and were suspended for a day (seems a bit harsh there). Last year's senior class trip to Italy (yeah, wow, I know) had several incidences of drinking. Last year, most of the senior class was caught drinking around a bonfire (without permission for that) on school grounds (by the lake) at 11:30 PM. It seems I've picked a Waldorf school that is apparently known for its highschool drinking issues. Anyways, what's your experience with your kid(s) in highschool and their peers? Is this typical? Especially, is it typical for a private school? Granted, parents often choose Waldorf as the last option/hope for their already screwed up kid (I place the responsibility of all of this behavior squarely on the shoulders of the parents, BTW, not the school). Marc

                                      Thyme In The Country
                                      Interacx

                                      People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
                                      There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
                                      People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh Smith

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                                      Colin Angus Mackay
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #36

                                      Marc Clifton wrote:

                                      Monday a kid in 10th grade was caught drinking in the bathroom

                                      What?! Like a dog out of the bowl!? :-D :doh:

                                      Marc Clifton wrote:

                                      Last year's senior class trip to Italy (yeah, wow, I know)

                                      My school had class trips all over. If I'd taken the appropriate subjects I could have had the choice of France, Germany, Belgium, Italy or Canada. As it was, the only class that I was in that qualified for an overseas trips was French. (I also remember one of the music classes going off to Austria once too) I went to a little town in the Loire called Bléré

                                      Marc Clifton wrote:

                                      trip to Italy had several incidences of drinking

                                      That was the highlight of the French trip. Discovering at 14 that it was okay to buy wine in a supermarket. And it only cost 5F70 (57p or $1) for a bottle. Tastes like fermeted vinegar. I've never liked wine since. The folks on the German trip discovered that 1DM coin was similar enough to a 10p coin (but worth 3 times more) that vending machines would accept them.


                                      Upcoming events: * Edinburgh: Web Security Conference Day for Windows Developers (12th April) * Glasgow: AJAX, SQL Server, Mock Objects My: Website | Blog | Photos

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                                      • M Marc Clifton

                                        Let's see. Monday a kid in 10th grade was caught drinking in the bathroom and suspended for a week. Last week, two kids skipped P.E. and were suspended for a day (seems a bit harsh there). Last year's senior class trip to Italy (yeah, wow, I know) had several incidences of drinking. Last year, most of the senior class was caught drinking around a bonfire (without permission for that) on school grounds (by the lake) at 11:30 PM. It seems I've picked a Waldorf school that is apparently known for its highschool drinking issues. Anyways, what's your experience with your kid(s) in highschool and their peers? Is this typical? Especially, is it typical for a private school? Granted, parents often choose Waldorf as the last option/hope for their already screwed up kid (I place the responsibility of all of this behavior squarely on the shoulders of the parents, BTW, not the school). Marc

                                        Thyme In The Country
                                        Interacx

                                        People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
                                        There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
                                        People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh Smith

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                                        Gary R Wheeler
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #37

                                        My high school class had a kid arrested for shooting heroin in the bathroom. Of course, this was in the decadent late 70's, so...


                                        Software Zen: delete this;

                                        Fold With Us![^]

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                                        • M Marc Clifton

                                          Joe Woodbury wrote:

                                          I place it on the shoulders of the fifteen and sixteen year olds.

                                          Good point. The parents can't do much at this point anyways. Marc

                                          Thyme In The Country
                                          Interacx

                                          People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
                                          There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
                                          People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh Smith

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                                          Gary R Wheeler
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #38

                                          First of all, I'm not the one who 1-voted you on this one.

                                          Marc Clifton wrote:

                                          The parents can't do much at this point anyways.

                                          I have to disagree. If you really believe that "parents can't do much at this point", then you've given up, which your kid will sense immediately. I firmly believe that you can not, must not, ever let your kid feel like you've given up on them. This belief stems from my own personal experience. I was the 'good kid' and my brother was the 'bad kid' in our family. My brother has turned out OK, but he's had lots of issues that I think wouldn't have happened if my mother would have been more persistent.


                                          Software Zen: delete this;

                                          Fold With Us![^]

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