The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Cobb students get walkout suspension­s

Some in March 14 protest get 1-day, in-school suspension.

- By Vanessa McCray vanessa.mccray@ajc.com

The students will serve a oneday in-school punishment for joining in the national March 14 protest against gun violence.

Some Cobb County students will spend a day serving an in-school suspension as punishment for walking out last week.

Thousands of students across metro Atlanta joined students around the country in walking out of school March 14 to protest gun violence after 17 people were killed in a Parkland, Florida, school shooting.

At Pope High School, walkout organizer Lian Kleinman estimated 170 of the roughly 200 students who walked out received

one day of in-school suspension. Lian, a junior, said the students are scheduled to serve their suspension­s Monday in the theater, a space big enough to accommodat­e everyone.

“Our walkout was in no way disruptive. We were quiet walking through the school and peaceful and respectful throughout the entire event. We missed 17 min- utes of school and as a punishment for that we are going to be missing 7 hours of school,” Lian said, in an email.

Some students did not receive a punishment, she thinks because their names weren’t written down when they re-entered the school.

Unlike Atlanta, Clayton, and DeKalb — school districts that per

mitted peaceful walkouts — Cobb took a strict stance. Before the demonstrat­ion, the district cited safety as a top priority and said students who “disrupt the normal

operation of a school may be subject to consequenc­es in accordance with the student code of conduct.”

Rumors about what the punishment would be had ranged from being barred from prom to out-of-school suspension­s.

On March 14, some Cobb students reported tactics such as teachers standing in front of exit doors that they said discourage­d students from walking out.

District spokesman John Stafford confirmed Wednesday that schools were “in the process of administer­ing appropriat­e consequenc­es to students who violated the Student Code of Conduct,” but he declined to answer questions.

Gwinnett County Public Schools warned students of consequenc­es if they violated school policy on tardiness and unexcused absences, but virtually all disciplina­ry actions taken were what administra­tors call “Level 1.” Whether that was an administra­tive conference or something more punitive depended on that student’s individual record, said Associate Superinten­dent Steve Flynt.

“If it was their first offense, there may have been nothing more than a tardy mark on their attendance record,” he said.

The only incident that disrupted learning was a student pulling a fire alarm at Berkmar High School. That falls into a different category, said Flynt.

Flynt said there have been no complaints from parents. A group of lawyers that encouraged students to report civil rights violations said they didn’t receive any calls from Gwinnett County.

The Cobb County chapter of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, which has supported students who walked out, is collecting and reviewing informatio­n from parents who want to challenge the Cobb disciplina­ry decisions.

Students and parents at

Wheeler and North Cobb high schools reported that students who demonstrat­ed received a one-day, in-school suspension. A Walton High School walkout organizer said Wednesday participan­ts had yet to hear about discipline.

John and Susan McCullough said their son, a North Cobb senior, is scheduled to serve a oneday in-school suspension today. He joined other students in a sit-in in a hallway. The penalty means the McCullough­s’ son will miss his Advanced Placement physics and AP macroecono­mics classes.

Cobb rules state that students serving in-school suspension­s will be isolated in a separate space and receive academic assignment­s that align with their current classroom instructio­n.

“I am just really wondering what the lesson is supposed to be if the goal is student success,” Susan McCullough said.

Lian said Pope students will wear orange on the day of their punishment — the color associated with activists against gun violence — and sport the “Not One More” pins they donned during the walkout. They also plan to write letters to their elected representa­tives.

“We rightfully earned this punishment and plan to make the most of it,” Lian said.

Requests to interview Cobb Superinten­dent Chris Ragsdale have not been granted.

‘I am just really wondering what the lesson is supposed to be if the goal is student success.’ Susan McCullough Mother of North Cobb senior who participat­ed in a sit-in at school

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