Administrators and teachers at a California high school recently announced to their students that several teens had been killed in car wrecks over the weekend. It was devastating news that traumatized students, many of whom had lost good friends. The problem? It was a big, fat lie.
Administrators came up with the program to discourage teens from drinking and driving.. The plan was to tell students about the accidents in the morning, then reveal the hoax at an assembly in the afternoon.
Only some students became so upset (and rightfully so), that teachers had to tell them immediately that there was no accident. So for the entire day, rumors were spreading that it was true/wasn't true, and many students didn't really understand until the missing students arrived back at class.
Some students are protesting the schools actions, saying they feel betrayed and that the school played with their emotions. Administrators are adamant, however, that the program was meant to save lives, not to traumatize the children.
I have to wonder, however, if the roles were reversed if school administrators would feel the same way. Imagine if you worked in a large corporation and the CEO came in and told you that several co-workers had died in [name your traumatic even here] over the weekend, then revealed hours later that it was just a hoax to encourage workplace safety. You can bet there would be be some litigation going on for emotional trauma.
What do you think? Did the school go to far? Or are there no limits on what should be done to protect teens from their own actions?







1. When I first heard about this story my stomach just dropped. A couple of years after I graduated high school a young lady I went to high school with passed away from injuries sustained in a drunk driving accident. The accident occured shortly before she was going to graduate and she died the day after graduation. Her older brother was a friend of mine and he accepted her diploma for her (she would have graduated even if she had failed all of her exams.) We were a very small school (250ish students) in a town with a population of 3,500. The shock and horror we as a town went through is something I would not wish on anyone. That these administrators took it upon themselves to subject these students to even a few hours, heck even minutes, is absolutely inexcusible. If I had a child attending this school there would be h*ll to pay.
Posted at 4:15PM on Jun 14th 2008 by Jennifer