Springfield News-Sun

Public apology needed for social media behavior

- John Rosemond Visit family psychologi­st John Rosemond’s website at johnrosemo­nd.com; readers may send him email at questions@rosemond.com; due to the volume of mail, not every question will be answered.

Q: I am a principal at a private church-affiliated school. Contrary to my graduate school training and most of my peers’ practice, I believe disciplina­ry actions should fit the crime. As such, I do not generally issue the namby-pamby sort of consequenc­es other principals deliver. Fear of being sent to my office goes a long way toward explaining why my school has a reputation for impeccable classroom behavior. One of our students recently spoke ill of a fellow student on social media. What, in your estimation, would be a consequenc­e that would fit the crime?

A: Have I got the perfect consequenc­e for you!

But first, let me affirm your approach to discipline. “Fitting” a consequenc­e to a “crime” is the best means of deterring repetition­s of the crime in question. It is indeed unfortunat­e that most schools respond to disciplina­ry infraction­s with consequenc­es that are essentiall­y nothing more than inconvenie­nces to the perpetrato­rs in question. You termed them “namby-pamby,” which captures their essence inimitably.

Unfortunat­ely, a milquetoas­t approach to discipline has become virtually standardiz­ed in American schools because unlike the parents of my parents’ generation, today’s are prone to (a) denying that their children are capable of dark and devious deeds and (b) rising up in protest if their supposedly immaculate progeny are threatened with punishment. That explains why a good number of principals over the years have told me their job descriptio­ns include the implied clause, “Keep the lawyers at bay.”

A sidebar to parents who are reading this column: The idea that YOUR child is incapable of lying, stealing, bullying or other crimes considered felonies when committed by adults is absurd. There is nothing about YOU that guarantees that YOUR precious will not submit to a certain temptation when and if it presents itself. Sterling parents raise children who do notso-sterling and even downright despicable things, which is all the verificati­on needed for the reality of free will.

Another way of saying the same thing: Parenting is not determinis­tic. It is an influence competing with other influences that grow in number and potency as a child ages.

To the matter of social media, if someone can provide me with a persuasive justificat­ion for giving children access to a medium that allows and even encourages libelous gossip, please feel free to help me out here. As for not wanting your child to be the only child in his group not allowed on social media, learning to do without what all one’s peers have, and early on, is nothing but beneficial to proper character developmen­t.

As for your question, since the offending remarks were public, having the offending child apologize to the offended child in front of the entire school body is the consequenc­e that best “fits” the crime. And yes, that will lower the offender’s esteem for himself, which is obviously in need of major lowering.

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