Miami-Dade and Broward school officials said they want to
allow students to be heard in peaceful walkouts planned across the
country.
MIAMI, FL — Students who leave their schools in Miami-Dade and
Broward Counties to participate in Wednesday's national school walkout
will not face disciplinary action, according to officials in both
districts. The 10 a.m. event coincides with the first-month anniversary
of the deadly school shooting in Parkland, Florida that resulted in the
deaths of 17 students and faculty members. The marches are intended to
honor the victims while calling for stricter gun laws.
"We're not
going to discipline them. We're not going to discourage them from doing
it," Daisy Gonzalez of Miami-Dade County Public Schools told Patch.
But Gonzalez said that students will not be permitted to leave campus or engage in any unruly behavior.
"We respect the First Amendment," Gonzalez said.
Gonzalez said that she did not know which specific schools would be participating in Wednesday's walkout.
"It's individual," she explained. "Some schools' kids haven't even approached the principals."
In
Broward County, which is where Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School is
located, Superintendent Robert W. Runcie posted a letter saying that his
schools would also honor the protests.
"Across Broward
County, our hearts remain with the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School
community," Runcie said. "Over the past few weeks, as we have worked to
begin the recovery and healing process, students have been expressing
their hurt, anger, disbelief and a flood of other emotions. We are proud
of our students' focus and determination to turn their grief and
outrage into action, as they dedicate themselves to effecting positive
change in this country."
Runcie said that school leaders were recently given a set of guidelines on how to handle such demonstrations.
"Because
we do not want continued disruption of our daily school routines,
guidelines have been provided to our school leaders, should walkouts or
protests continue this school year," he explained. The guidelines state
that school staff will not interfere with "peaceful student-led protests
or gatherings" at Broward schools.
Runcie called the protests
"teachable moments," which is particularly the case in Broward since the
Stoneman Douglas shooting occurred there.
"In the event students
walk out or gather, school principals and assigned staff will remain
with students in a designated walkout area, so that supervision is in
place," Runcie added.
A letter was distributed to parents of
secondary students in Miami-Dade on Monday from Miami-Dade
Superintendent Alberto M. Carvalho.
The letter said that school officials expect similar demonstrations to also be held on March 24 and April 20.
"Many
of our schools plan to provide structured activities and lessons to
help students express their support for Marjory Stoneman Douglas High
School and learn about the issues," Carvalho said. "Students are also
being encouraged to honor the lives of those lost by walking up, not
out. Students can express themselves by walking up to 14 students and
three teachers and saying something kind."
Carvalho said that the district's top priority is to support the academic and emotional needs of students.
"We also respect those students who choose not to participate in these planned events," Carvalho added in the letter.
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