Kathya Anguiano
Editor-In-Chief
With the new tardy center at the Rough Rider house, hallways have gotten lonely and classes have gotten crowded. Many people rush to class to ‘Start On Time’, but mainly to stay away from lunch detention. How well do our teachers take this new tardy center and the ‘Start On Time’ policy?
“I think it’s a good system, I can focus on starting class as soon as the buzzer goes off now,” Mrs. Janet Gensheimer, World History teacher, said.
As some teachers get to actually start on time, others have rooms full of challenging behavioral issues.
“It gives me a room full of tardy little know it all’s and boy with that attitude they will get more than lunch detention, but they’ll learn to behave. The classrooms are getting fuller and the hallways are getting emptier,” Mr. Roger Kramer, Algebra teacher, said.
All teachers seem to really like the new tardy center.
“I feel it brings a better grade to their effort and input in work time.” Mrs. Kimberly Rose, World Geography teacher, said.
As students seem to not like it very well, but some do. All teachers love the tardy center and what it is doing to the Rough Riders and their schedule for education.