Some Mysteries of Common Sense For Lower Merion
Lower Merion school officials just don’t get it. Defensive in nature since the beginning of the Spygate scandal, they know say that a second lawsuit filed by a student whose privacy was allegedly invaded by a web camera, “is not the way to go”, considering action taken to prevent it from happening again.
First of all, anyone has the right to get justice for alleged improprieties. Lower Merion has always been a silk stocking district where nothing can ever go wrong. The Police Department in that community has a horrid history of dealing with candor with the media. I know this. I witnessed it. A call to Lower Merion police was like a call to some country trying to hide state secrets. So the reaction from the fumbling school district was no surprise. The township’s leaders are top flight. Some have extraordinary vision for their community. But it is time they took a look at the school system to find out why a great township has been embarrassed by a school administration that appears to have mishandled the spying, and certainly mishandled the aftermath.
A few months ago, on assignment in England, I was constantly asked, “Are you from Philadelphia? That’s where they use computer cameras to spy on students, right?”
Well, we all know it’s not that simple. But people sometimes read headlines, and they get images from reading those headlines. This is not good.
There’s another important factor here. Students are rarely taught the keys to communication in real-life experiences. The example set by the school district is not a good one.
The School Board might consider acting with more vigor to erase this negative imagery in what is one of the finer school districts in the region.
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