I was flipping through the Chicago Tribune on Sunday morning and I saw an article about
an 11 year old boy who poked a classmate in the knee with a pencil. Harmon Dehnert, who suffers from severe ADHD, was expelled from his school until next fall for this "act of violence." As to why he was expelled, the Plainfield Community Consolidated School District 202 board (in Plainfield, Pennsylvania) "unanimously decided Harmon used the pencil as a weapon and expelled him on Oct. 26."
I understand that this school is trying to protect their students from weapons and violence, but I think this punishment is harsh and unnecessary. All kids make mistakes, and I think Harmon made a small mistake that was blown out of proportion. First of all, his ADHD had a huge impact on this situation-- Harmon does not have someone monitoring his actions in class, and his ADHD is a known cause for his lack of focus and periodic outrages in the classroom. This being said, this incident could have easily been prevented if there was a teacher helping him stay on task in class.
Had Harmon been carrying or using a more threatening "weapon," I think this punishment would have been appropriate. The father of the poked child says that his son is fine, but asks the question, "what if it had been his eye instead of his knee?" I think there is a big problem with this argument as the basis of Harmon's expulsion. Yes, it could have been his eye,
but it wasn't. The school board is overlooking what actually happened and instead focusing on what
could have happened. But if you apply this idea of "what could have happened" to the whole school, anyone could poke another's eye out, and therefore everyone- not just Harmon- poses a danger. For this to be a logical argument, pencils would have be seen as weapons throughout the school, not just in this particular situation.
Due to the basis of Harmon's expulsion, I think this article raises an interesting question, one that is relevant now in a time of frequent school shootings and acts of violence at school.
Do you think Harmon's punishment is fair? What constitutes a weapon? And more importantly, what constitutes an act of violence?