Call from Iraq gets student suspended from school

More patriotism and tolerance in our society

Found via Drudge Report, from the Ledger-Enquirer.com (Columbus, Georgia). Headline is linked.


Posted on Fri, May. 06, 2005


Mother's call gets son in hot water

BY ANGELIQUE SOENARIE
Staff Writer


Kevin Francois gave up his lunch break to talk to his mother, but it ended up costing him the rest of the school year.
Francois, a junior at Spencer High School in Columbus, was suspended for disorderly conduct Wednesday after he was told to give up his cell phone at lunch while talking to his mother who is deployed in Iraq, he said.
His mother, Sgt. 1st Class Monique Bates, left in January for a one-year tour and serves with the 203rd Forward Support Battalion, 3rd Brigade, 3rd Infantry Division.
"This is our first time separated like this," said Francois, 17, on Thursday.
Bates came to Fort Benning with her son from Hunter Army Airfield in Savannah, Ga. She enrolled him at Spencer in August. Since her deployment overseas, Francois, whose father was killed when he was 5 years old, lives with a guardian who has five children in Columbus.
The incident happened when Francois received a call from his mother at 12:30 p.m., which he said was his lunch break. Francois said he went outside the school building to get a better reception when his mother called. A teacher who saw Francois on his phone told him to get off the phone. But he didn't.
According to the Muscogee County School District Board of Education's policy, students are allowed to have cell phones in school, but cannot use them during school hours.
"They are really allowed to have those cell phones so that after band or after chorus or after the debate and practices are over they have to coordinate with the parents," said Alfred Parham, assistant principal at Spencer. "They're not supposed to use them for conversating back and forth during school because if they were allowed to do that, they could be text messaging each other for test questions."
Francois said he told the teacher, "This is my mom in Iraq. I'm not about to hang up on my mom."
Francois said the teacher tried to take the phone, causing it to hang up.
The student said he then went with the teacher to the school's office where he surrendered his phone. His mother called again at 12:37 p.m. and left a message scolding her son about hanging up and telling him to answer the phone when she calls.

Control issue
Parham said the teen's suspension was based on his reaction when he was asked to give up the cell phone and told about the school's cell phone policy.
"Kevin got defiant and disorderly with Mr. Turner and another assistant principal," Parham said Thursday. "He got defiant with me. He refused to leave Mr. Turner's office. When a kid becomes out of control like that they can either be arrested or suspended for 10 days. Now being that his mother is in Iraq, we're not trying to cause her any undue hardship; he was suspended for 10 days."
Wendall Turner is another assistant principal at Spencer.
Parham said the student used profanity when he was taken into the office. He said he tried to work out something with the student. But Francois said he was too frustrated he couldn't answer the phone when his mother called him the second time.
"I even asked Kevin, 'You know we can try to work something out to where if your mother wants to call you she can call you at the school,'" Parham said. "So we've tried to work with Kevin and we're going to continue to try to work with Kevin and his mother and his relatives. In the course of good order and discipline, we have to abide by our policy."
Francois admitted he was partially at fault for his behavior but said he should have been allowed to talk to his mother.
"I was mad at the time, but I feel now maybe I should've went about it differently," he said. "Maybe I should've just waited outside to pick up the phone. But I don't I feel I should've changed any of my actions. I feel I was right by not hanging up the phone."
For Francois, he said he gets to hear from his mother once a month, and phone calls vary depending on when she can use the phone in Iraq. Francois said his mother calls as late as 1 a.m. to 3 a.m. and tries to catch him during hours he's awake. He said the phone call Wednesday was the first time she called him while he was at school.
Francois, who said he's been struggling with his grades in school, wants to go back to school and finish the rest of his year. He fears he may have pay for summer school because of his punishment.
"My grades had been low, but I was bringing them up. My grades were coming back up. On one of my report cards I had like a 'F' in one of my classes, but I brought it back up to a low 'C.' This just brought me all the way down."




Wow, another group of people for me to wish some relatives of get to have similar fun with phone calls from their relatives and friends.

More ignorance among those trusted with educating our children.

I understand perfectly how the young man could get upset when his mothers call is interrupted, and how he would get even more upset when he was not allowed to take the second call.

Perhaps the school teacher, principal, and others involved in the treatment of this student's case should be declared enemy combatants and get to spend some time at Gitmo. Either that, or perhaps they could be recalled to active duty (if they had any military experience) and shipped to Iraq so they too could experience the heart break and homesickness this mother and son have been experiencing.

Can you tell that stuff like this makes me a little M A D
2,147 views 6 replies
Reply #1 Top
Am I in the Twilight Zone? Didn't you already post this, and weren't there a half a dozen or more responses (including one from me) just this morning?
Reply #2 Top
Am I in the Twilight Zone? Didn't you already post this, and weren't there a half a dozen or more responses (including one from me) just this morning?


Not in the twilight zone that I know of. I didn't post on this one this a.m. (or previously), though I had posted about a similar topic (Woman welcomes home daughter to Coral Gables area only to have the yellow ribbons and welcome home signs taken down by over-zealous picky government compliance people).

If someone else posted on this one, then apologies. I didn't see the prior JU article, but either way, it is a topic that gets my goat.

As with most law-and-order issues, I support the idea of maintaining order in our schools, but I know for a fact that our schools have gotten totally out of hand in their rules and regulations. The zero tolerance drug policies mean that kids can't even take baby aspirin to school, and young females can't even take Midol, Pamprin and other similar products and share them with others that might need them without fearing that they'll be suspended.

Cell phones have been an issue at schools for a while, and while they can be very useful tools, they can also be abused by young students that are more interested in texting other students than they are in listening to whatever topic the teacher is lecturing on. Because of that, normally I don't believe students should have cell phones in schools, or at least not on their persons during the school day, but scheeeeze, for this student, for this reason, I have nothing but support for his conversation with his mother when she calls from Iraq. Especially given that (from my reading of things) he took the call outside, during his LUNCH period.

Sorry, but the NAZI type school administrators in this case need to be disciplined, and this student needs to be back in school on Monday as if nothing happened.
Reply #3 Top
Point of clarification: This incident happened in Columbus, Georgia; not Columbus, Ohio.
Reply #4 Top
Point of clarification: This incident happened in Columbus, Georgia; not Columbus, Ohio.


Thanks for the clarification.
Reply #5 Top
If I'm the parent (or guardian) of the student, I would rest only after the school's officials -- and the school board who condones this "policy" -- are all replaced with people more inclined to balance structure and common sense. Unfortunately, that happy medium is not easily achieved in this society.
Reply #6 Top

We have a 5 year old brat that Jesse jackson is defending the parent for her atrocious behaviour.

We have a teen being harrased by brain deprived school administrators for talking to a mother half a world away, and who is in constant peril.  And no Jesse Jackson.

is it only me that sees this as PC gone wild?  As the Triumph of modern liberalism?

Guess so.  After all, he is just a post partum fetus.  And deserves no rights until he can vote.