Disciplinary Action/Disciplinary Office/First Quarter/Mean girls
As you are arriving at the start of the day, you are greeted by the sound of a crying girl in the waiting room.
You step into the office to find Miss Curtis, the 2nd grade teacher and recess monitor, standing imposingly with her back turned to a crying child who looks like she's in the upper age-range of elementary school next to an irritated looking girl who seems much older, somewhere in the older middle-school to early high-school range.
"Oh, good. Mr. Gardner. You're here. These two girls were fighting. I saw little Miss Coralee here shove Victoria, and then Miss. Owen responded by slapping her in the face. I will let you deal with this from here I have to get back to making sure the kids get in to class before the first bell rings." The very prim and proper lady informs you.
You exchange parting pleasantries, and then she leaves in a mild hurry to get back to her job. Meanwhile, you are left stunned looking over the two girls. You most certainly did not expect to have two girls with such a huge gap in age to be brought in for fighting. The younger one's tears and the fairly obvious hostility radiating off the older one serve to help you suppress your lust at the situation. You realize in the back of your mind that fighting is considered a severe offense and the implications that brings, but right now you are just a little lost for what you should be doing with this situation.
- Take them both into your office to ask them what happened
- Take the Victoria, the older girl, to your office first while you let Coralee calm down
- Take the younger girl, Coralee, to your office first so you can console her and stop her crying
- Ask your secretary, Ms. Varano, for some information on the girls Request --MrPib (talk) 01:08, 28 August 2022 (CEST)