Today's Topic: What Causes Someone to be Forced to Transfer Schools?
First, let me lay down some groundwork. Transferring schools are not easy. It is one of the most severe measures, it's just one level below expulsion
Disciplinary actions are evaluated based on several factors such as intentionality, persistence, severity of the offense, degree of reflection by the student, and efforts toward reconciliation. Each factor can receive a maximum of 4 points. If the total score exceeds 16 points, the student may face a forced transfer as a disciplinary measure.
For example, let's say a student punched another student so hard that it caused the victim to break a tooth and have their nose displaced. If it was that serious, that student would be given 4 points.
Next, the school would also consider the persistence of school violence. If it was the perpetrator's first time assaulting the victim, the school would give them 0 or 1 point. If the perpetrator intentionally waited for the victim after school hours to assault them, it's considered intentional. In that case, the school would give them 3 or 4 points.
If the perpetrator sincerely apologizes or shows remorse, the school would decrease their points. If the perpetrator and the victim reconciled, the school would also decrease their points.
Decisions are fundamentally made based on various factors like these. The total score should range from 16 to 20 points.
In conclusion, punching the victim's face so hard that it caused a broken tooth and dislocated nose only totals up to 11 points, which does not warrant expulsion.
In other words, for expulsion to happen, the perpetrator must be intentional and persistent, while the victim's condition should be serious, and there should be no remorse and reconciliation.
Summary:
Criteria for determining expulsion measures:
1. Basic Assessment Factors:
- Intentionality, Persistence, Severity, Degree of Remorse, Level of Reconciliation.
- Each factor is evaluated on a scale of None (0), Low (1), Moderate (2), High (3), Very High (4).
- Expulsion decision if total score is 16 points or higher.
2. Additional Judgment Factors:
- Decided at the discretion of the committee.
- Possibility of reducing score if there's potential for rehabilitation; possibility of increasing score in cases of misconduct against disabled students.
- No legal regulations exist regarding upper or lower limits for each factor.
-At this point, she must've beat up a teacher to face multiple expulsions...
-I was born in the 90s and I have never seen any of my friends getting forced to transfer schoolsㅎㅎ
-If it was 20 years ago, it was the time when teachers would've just scolded the troublemakers. If she was to forced transfer school multiple times, it must've been a big deal.
-At that time, schools rarely force students to transfer schools for getting into fights. It was better to just let them drop out.
-I'm the same age as Song Hayoon and throughout my school years, I've only witnessed one student facing expulsion.
-Back in those days, expulsions were rare. If someone was expelled from their school, the rumors would've spread across the city quickly.
-This is based on the recent standards. Back then, there wasn't even a school violence committee. Teachers mostly handled cases like that by scolding them or forcing the students to reconcile.
-I was born in the '90s and I have never witnessed expulsions. I have never even heard rumors about it.
-I never witnessed one myself. I've seen disciplinary notices posted on the bulletin board. To be forced to transfer schools... It must've been really severe.