6-Year-Old Boy Suspended for Playing with Imaginary Bow and Arrow
Zero tolerance for pretend violence


Our Lady of Lourdes elementary school in Cincinnati, Ohio, has a zero tolerance policy against violence—even pretend violence—and so a first-grader has received a three-day suspension for shooting another student with an imaginary bow and arrow.
The six-year-old boy used a weapon that in no way, shape, or form actually existed to commit an act of non-violence that injured no one (he was pretending to be a Power Ranger). But the principal, Joe Crachiolo, is standing by his decision to harshly discipline the boy, parent Martha Miele told WLWT:
He told me that he was going to stand firm and that he was not going to change it," Martha Miele said.
On Friday, Crachiolo sent a letter home to parents stating in part,
"I have no tolerance for any real, pretend, or imitated violence. The punishment is an out of school suspension."
The family has contacted the archdiocese that oversees the school. Our Lady of Lourdes is a private institution, which means the principal has wider authority to arbitrarily punish students than a public administrator would. Private officials can run their schools like little prison camps, if they wish.
But they deserve criticism for doing so. The boy's actions weren't violent; they weren't even inappropriate. Little boys pretend to fight bad guys. That's what they do. It's perfectly normal and absolutely healthy. If the arrow-flinging was disrupting class, a teacher should have told him to stop—and that's it.
Like this boy, I also attended first-grade at a Catholic school. I can recall some of my rowdier classmates pretending to be Power Rangers characters and causing mischief; a teacher eventually sent a note home to parents asking them not to let their kids watch the show before coming to school. The goal was to prevent actual physical confrontations—kids beating each other up—not imaginary violence.
We should encourage kids to be more imaginitive—and administrators less so. As Reason's Lenore Skenazy wrote about the 6-year-old's punishment:
Ironically, it is limitless imagination that has gotten us to this point in the first place. In a country already obsessed with the idea that all children are in constant danger for their lives, no danger is too small to punish. That includes even a non-existent danger.
Read more about school zero tolerance insanity here.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
The six-year-old boy used a weapon that in no way, shape, or form actually existed to commit an act of non-violence that injured
Oh Reason your obfuscation of the facts is so darling. Was it not a simulated act of violence?
Perhaps the young lad was playing Cupid and shooting a love arrow. Would that be violent ?
The parent should have climes the 6 year old is gay and that is exactly what he was doing.
Voila...no black mark on his record or criminal record if the principal gets pushy.
Really though. I love how says......I have no....not the school has no......or even the rules are.....he comes straight out with....I have no tolerance.
Maybe his ego got a little bruised when someone dared question his authoritah.
That would be sexual assault.
If he's being Cupid, then the gay part isn't even necessary.
Thank you, Zeb. You're faaaabuluuuusss!!
If he claimed he was the Hinger Games chick, it would really start catching fire. (I hope I got the sub-title right.)
You didn't even get the regular title right.
You didn't even get the regular title right.
...and so a first-grader has received a three-day suspension for shooting another student with an imaginary bow and arrow.
How about he pretends to serve the suspension.
Sounds like they're doing him a favor, not a punishment.
I got a few suspensions in high school. For cutting class. That still amuses me.
"I sentenced boys younger than you to death row. Did want to. Felt I owed it to them"
Replace *Did*/*Didn't*
A simulated punishment. I like the cut of your jib.
cut of your jib
Are you simulating violence, Paul?
No, just simulating wit.
Lucky little guy. Three days away from a school run by idiots sounds like just what he needs.
I remember back when there was a legitimate theory that lawsuits stopped this kind of thing through the magic of incentive. And then we noticed that lawsuits against the government are paid out with other peoples' money.
I remember when private schools beholden to self-interested parents were supposed to prevent this sort of thing, but it turns out many of those turning to private education are goofy leftists who celebrate backward thinking but can't bring themselves to commit their children to public schools.
Mostly they're just morons, though.
The right people are in charge... they just need more training.
more training? more shaming maybe
good principal's contact info still cached, if anyone cares:
http://webcache.googleusercont.....clnk&gl=cl
Well, it's a Catholic school, so they or the church would have to pay. But they also don't have to respect free expression as a non-government entity, so the threat of a suit probably doesn't work here either.
Shouldn't they apologize for the Crusadezz before they punish faux archery?
So no Bible readings at this Catholic school then?
That's God's violence. God's violence is not like a square's violence.
Some of it is the violence of God's enemies.
And those bad little boys would have been suspended from Lady of Lourdes, too.
Yeah, and look what happened to them. Three day suspensions all around.
And on the third day....
Here's an appropriate Bible reading. As the Good Book says, "The man who acts presumptuously by not listening to the priest who stands there to serve the LORD your God, nor to the judge, that man shall die; thus you shall purge the evil from Israel. Then all the people will hear and be afraid, and will not act presumptuously again." (Deuteronomy 17:12-13)
This devil child is lucky to have the guiding hand of a Godly man as principal. Without the stern but kindly help of good people such as Mr. Crachiolo, this presumptuous boy might grow up to doubt authority.
"I was re-enacting the martyrdom of St. Stephen. Through the eyes of the sinners. "
How do you explain something like this to a kid without sending him back to the school with an attitude that will get him suspended again?
Change school, trash the old one on Yelp.
The boy's actions weren't violent; they weren't even inappropriate. Little boys pretend to fight bad guys.
He should have claimed to be venerating Saint Sebastian.
What's St. Jerome, chopped liver?
He told me that he was going to stand firm and that he was not going to change it," Martha Miele said.
Goosestep it, Crackholeio, goosestep it!
It's nice that it's a private school, as the parents can meaningfully respond that they have no tolerance for moronic principals with moronic principles.
Though I agree with the above posts: I'd celebrate the kid having a few days off. He can spend the time watching better shows than Power Rangers. Get on Amazon Prime and binge-watch Avatar. One season a day is sensible.
Avatar, TLAB should be required viewing for all children between the ages of 2 and 52.
Unless you sell cabbages for a living, in which case it would probably be too triggering for you to watch most episodes
SNEAK ATTACK!
The only person being punished here is the parents...who now have to find care or take time off work for 3 days for no legitimate reason
I'd hardly call a break from school 'no legitimate reason'.
It gives little Timmy's knuckles a chance to heal.
And time some extra time to find a better school.
So you're telling me that there's times when children and schools main purpose is not punishing parents?
The only person being punished here is the parents
Nope. The kid is wondering what he did wrong and why what he did was wrong. He feels punished. Hopefully he'll realize that the adults are wrong.
Educators are working diligently to "correct" this.
By fighting the bad guys.
I think you meant by fighting the good guys.
The kid deserved his punishment. He shot Charlie Callas right in the heart.
/You gotta be kinda old to get this joke
I know me some Charlie Callas, but I don't get the joke.
He'd do his fake-arrow-in-the-heart shtick while making a buzzing sound. vvvvvvvVVVip!
Why are you called Diane Reynolds now? I'm assuming you are the original Paul.
Diane Reynolds (it turns out) is the nom du plume of Chelsea Clinton, as discovered in Hillary's email-gate.
Everyone else has done name changes, I figured it was my turn. I am the Original(tm) Paul. The one and only. The one people love to hate. Or hate to love.
Never knew of the Diane/Chelsea thing.
Has anyone reported if there is some meaning to that particular pseudonym?
I mean, why not Debbie Reynolds?
Regarding children with imaginations, I was just verbally accosted in a park while jogging by a band of children who were concerned that Big Foot was on the loose.
I am currently alerting the local authorities that these children are spreading lies while harassing innocent, lean men. I hope that they are kept inside from now on, as obviously they do not know how to properly behave in public.
I blame the parents, or better yet, lack of proper parenting.
"harassing innocent, lean men"
Wait, I thought you said they were harassing *you.*
It's far worse than that, Rusty Smuggler.
Those children were in a park sans parents!!!
Where's OMWC when we need him?
He's still recovering from Halloween. Hundreds of kids coming directly to his door kind of overloads his system.
Every school administrator in the US should read this book: Killing Monsters: Why Children Need Fantasy, Super Heroes, and Make-Believe Violence
I make up to $90 an hour working from my home. My story is that I quit working at Walmart to work online and with a little effort I easily bring in around $40h to $86h? Someone was good to me by sharing this link with me, so now i am hoping i could help someone else out there by sharing this link... Try it, you won't regret it!......
http://www.4CyberWorks.Com
The kid will remember that shit for life. When I was 6 I was in Catholic school. The only thing I remember about it were the harsh punishments from the nuns. I don't remember what I was being punished for (usually it was for asking questions). I just remember that I fucking hated those nuns for smacking me with a ruler, making me kneel on a stack of pencils, writing lines, and writing numbers. I was constantly being punished. My mom was no help either. She just assumed I was a terrible child. All it taught me was to keep my thoughts to myself, no adult is my friend ever, do not trust them, and to hate my parents and teachers.
In a few more years he'll be imagining having sex with his teacher.
I really feel bad for kids today. The shit I pulled when I was this kid's age would land him in Guantanamo Bay. In fourth grade I brought a morning star to school and was swinging it around in the hallway. All I got was a stern talking to. My teacher didn't even confiscate the thing and it was motherfucking medieval weapon!
Likewise. It was sure different 45 years ago.