Post by Harley Scarow on Oct 9, 2007 13:35:49 GMT -5
Sign Finders, Sign Hiders
Many of these possibly innocent-hearted but ignorance filled incidents have started happening around DeWitt Clinton High School lately, in which many fellow high scholars have been seen pulling off the many posters that are on the hallways walls with the plain intention of “toying” school property in a borderline rule-breaking way. Many of these pamphlets generously attached to the walls include club information, high school sports team signups, and general school announcements. From simple poetry to college meetings, many of these leaflets remain tattered on the walls, or only a tiny bit of a scarf of what they used to be.
Delinquent adolescents have been going around between class periods, some occasionally pulling off the posters on these walls and either restating the edifying words on these pamphlets in an epithetical matter, or merely tossing those papers away into the nearby waste cans. This act of ripping off school papers, whether optional or significant, is not only discourteous and uncharitable, but it completely tears down the entire intention of putting them up on the bulletin boards to begin with. The monotonous announcements in the morning to make up for the lack of bulletin board information are too speedy for most to comprehend.
Ripping off announcements on the unpaved school walls can be considered as marring and foolish as destroying school property. Students are recommended to report any of these sightings, as destroying papers can be called as superfluous as demolishing school property. Many teachers have complained that it is a waste of paper to be required to reprint several documents. Teachers should not have to tolerate this, and neither should students.
Many of these possibly innocent-hearted but ignorance filled incidents have started happening around DeWitt Clinton High School lately, in which many fellow high scholars have been seen pulling off the many posters that are on the hallways walls with the plain intention of “toying” school property in a borderline rule-breaking way. Many of these pamphlets generously attached to the walls include club information, high school sports team signups, and general school announcements. From simple poetry to college meetings, many of these leaflets remain tattered on the walls, or only a tiny bit of a scarf of what they used to be.
Delinquent adolescents have been going around between class periods, some occasionally pulling off the posters on these walls and either restating the edifying words on these pamphlets in an epithetical matter, or merely tossing those papers away into the nearby waste cans. This act of ripping off school papers, whether optional or significant, is not only discourteous and uncharitable, but it completely tears down the entire intention of putting them up on the bulletin boards to begin with. The monotonous announcements in the morning to make up for the lack of bulletin board information are too speedy for most to comprehend.
Ripping off announcements on the unpaved school walls can be considered as marring and foolish as destroying school property. Students are recommended to report any of these sightings, as destroying papers can be called as superfluous as demolishing school property. Many teachers have complained that it is a waste of paper to be required to reprint several documents. Teachers should not have to tolerate this, and neither should students.