ANDOVERVIEW Staff
The new tardy policy being enforced at Andover High School is causing controversy and uproar left and right. The new policy states that students are expected to be sitting in their seats at 8:15 a.m. and will receive an in-school detention on the fourth tardy. On the seventh tardy, the student is subject to detention, loss of parking privileges, or suspension.
The tardy line has been horrendously long each day, with over 100 kids waiting in the lobby the first week after the implementation of the new policy. As these students wait in line, they miss valuable class time, even if they had walked in at 8:15. Additionally, what is the purpose of reprimanding someone for being late by giving them a consequence that causes them to miss more class time?
Not all students have cars and can decide when they get to leave to be on time. Many students are driven to school by others, take the bus, or walk to school. How is this policy fair to students who might be driving from another parent’s house in a different town? These students are being reprimanded for being late when they may already be leaving 30-40 minutes early to commute. Furthermore, how is it fair for students to have consequences when the traffic system at AHS is a horrific mess?
There is only a fifteen-minute window for students to be dropped off in the morning where they can enter the entirety of the school, 8:00-8:15. Yet, according to this new policy, students have to be in their seats at 8:15, so technically this time window shrinks from 8:00-8:10. Ten minutes.
In previous years, having access to the rest of school in the morning truly encouraged students to come earlier because students used this time to freely hang out with friends, finish homework, go to teachers for extra help, use the printers in the library, and many more things. However, now there is no motivation to get there before 8 a.m. because we are all locked up in the cafeteria until then. Everyone tries to come to school at the exact same time, adding to the traffic, the tardy line, all the missed school, and the early morning headaches.
So, administrators, please fix pre-existing problems first by considering the use of the entire building before 8 a.m. and add an element of compassion, understanding, and empathy that all students have different situations at home. Instead of detention and suspension, how about sitting down with the student to truly understand what their situation is and coming up with a plan to improve it?




