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City View Principal Steve Harris visits a geometry class for 10th graders. Harris punishes offenses like untucked shirttails and midriff-skimming t-shirts with spankings. Merrill switched her daughter from City View to Rider High School last year after a rash of arguments with Harris over the unduly harsh policy, she said. After receiving in-school suspension for wearing T-shirts that Harris said were unacceptable, Merrill's daughter eventually got a swat from Harris when a teacher asked her to change her shirt and she refused.
Harris contends that when students dress right, their grades go up. He unapologetically enforces the City View dress code, he said. These kids, we're trying to get them ready for the real world. They're not going to be able to get or hold a job if they can't represent themselves properly or get to work on time. Any school with big problems isn't taking care of the little problems, Harris said. We're very fundamental around here. There's actually one rule: the Do Right Rule.
If you do right, you'll be OK. If you don't, it can be rough on you. You can't always call parents before you swat, either, Harris said. Harris said he instructs his teachers to call parents and keep phone logs of all communication.
Harris agreed that dress code violations prompt many spankings at the school. Students choose between three days of in-school suspension or a swat for each infringement. They know why they're getting a swat when they get one," he said. We're trying to get them trained for the real world. That is our job, and we take our job very serious. You simply can't have education without discipline first. But it is that discipline drove Diane Hargis and her family out of the City View district for good, she said.
When the school sent home its annual announcement about the corporal punishment policy that required a parent's signature, Hargis said she and her husband both signed a statement that the school was not allowed to touch either of their two sons, who were 11 and 15 then. They had teachers stand the children up in the classroom, and the teacher walked up and down checking shirts. This happened quite often, my children told me. One day, the year-old was sent to the principal's office for an untucked shirt.