I was a high teacher for three years. One of my favorite students did not come to school one day. She die in her sleep form asthma. It was my hardest day at school. That nurse needs to be fired. Schools are very good at having many rules that never seem to get to the parents.
It may be the way the article is written, but it sounds like the nurse locked the student in her office when he had his asthma attack and just watched him through the window in the door. That almost sounds like depraved indifference or an attempt to murder him.
I was a high teacher for three years. One of my favorite students did not come to school one day. She die in her sleep form asthma. It was my hardest day at school. That nurse needs to be fired. Schools are very good at having many rules that never seem to get to the parents.
I believe that once again common sense is bereft at the schools. But in severe case of self-honesty I believe that the real culprit for that lack of common sense can be laid at the feet of the Trial-lawyers. Their willingness to sue on behalf of anyone regardless of the commonsensical nature of the case has lead us down this dark and dangerous path where thinking is bad and following the rules blindly is good.
This case has to be called *The Lazy Stupids Times Three*.
Surely, the parent was notified the inhaler was confiscated.
A HS student should know by now, what the rules are [stupid rules or not] and hounded the parent to get the form processed; by this age, he would know how serious his attacks could be, unless, of course, he was SpEd.
The school nurse should have been all over the parent for the form; she had to know the student’s medical history, which was probably in the file cabinet.
Cool.
She die in her sleep form asthma.
This is hugh and series. ;)