Curiosity Rewarded: Florida Teen Heading to Space Camp, Not Jail
Kiera Wilmot, the Florida high school student who was expelled from her school after an unauthorized science experiment was misperceived as a weapon (at least for purposes of arrest and charging), won't be going to jail. She will, though, be going to Space Camp, thanks to a crowdfunding campaign started by author and former NASA engineer Homer Hickham. All charges against her have been dropped.
It scares me shitless that my kindergartner could be kicked out of school for folding his hands and saying bang in this insane and litigious age.
I'm glad to see that at least some people have morals. Wanting to experiment with science and NOT hurting anyone in the process shouldn't be met by being kicked out of school, she's getting what she deserves.
I believe rules are rules and you break them, you should be punished, not rewarded. In this case, thanks the publicity, she is greatly benefitting from breaking the rules.
Congratulations, you are exactly what is wrong with the world. Rules are made for people, they are not sacred.
Einstein broke Newton's rules. Is that bad?
"I believe rules are rules and you break them, you should be punished, not rewarded." - Congratulations, you have met the requirements for German citizenship.
Her being punished for an "unauthorised" science experiment will tend to discourage curiosity and scientific inquiry in other children. This is bad for America. By rewarding her we encourage curiosity and scientific inquiry, which is good for America.
We could even get away from the mindless "zero tolerance" crap and maybe send a nuanced message. Send her to Space Camp, but have her write a paper on the risks of experimenting with homemade explosives and what safety measures she should have taken, but didn't and how it could be done more safely next time.
None of them can see the clouds; The polished wings don't care.
He performed countless experiments throughout his high school days most of which were dangerous but he never gave up.
He eventually graduated high school and went on to Virgina Tech and got a BS in Industrial engineering.
He then went into the military and got into NASA and I'm sure I'm missing things in between.
The point is, after seeing who elected to send her to space camp, the reasons become clear and make sense.
Homer Hickam
Whenever a player quits EVE to go play WoW, the Average IQ of both games increase.
It's time we started making very loud and angry noises about zero tolerance being utterly unacceptable[1]. Students need the freedom to screw up in the pursuit of fooling around with some learning.
Things need to be exploded, burnt, and launched. Children need to have the freedom to throw balls at each other, wrestle, and do other dangerous things. Criminalizing mistakes and foolishness is as near fascist behavior as I have ever heard.
Tomfoolery for all, everywhere!
[1] Don't make a false equivalency between things that look scary and acts that are harmful.
I think your confusing punishment with rehabilitation. This is a child that had bad judgement. She got her punishment, she got arrested, she got expelled, and she got charged with a felony. For a child those are all major. But on the other side she has been given a chance to push her energies into an area where she will not be endangering or causing heart attacks for school administrators. With children it is always better to drive the energy in the direction you want rather than straight up stop it.