Monday, June 21, 2010

Text messages become a growing weapon in dating violence Education - Everything you need to know about the world of education.

Education - Everything you need to know about the world of education.

Text messages become a growing weapon in dating violence

The parents of Siobhan Russell, slain by an ex-boyfriend, found alarming text messages.
The parents of Siobhan Russell, slain by an ex-boyfriend, found alarming text messages.(Family Photo - Family Photo)


Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, June 21, 2010

The text messages to the 22-year-old Virginia woman arrived during the day and night, sometimes 20 or 30 at once. Her ex-boyfriend wanted her back. He would not be refused. He texted and called 758 times.
In New York, a 17-year-old trying to break up with her boyfriend got fewer messages, but they were menacing. "You don't need nobody else but me," read one. Another threatened to kill her.
It is all part of what is increasingly called "textual harassment," a growing aspect of dating violence at a time when cellphones and unlimited texting plans are ubiquitous among the young. It can be insidious, because messages pop up at the sender's will: Where r u? Who r u with? Why didnt u answer me?
"It's gotten astonishingly worse in the last two years," says Jill Murray, who has written several books on dating violence and speaks on the topic nationally. Especially for those who have grown up in digital






T.C. Williams hustles to get off urgent-reform list


After landing on the government's in-need-of urgent-reform list, T.C. Williams High struggles to find the prescription for smaller achievement gaps and higher graduation rates.
MORE ON EDUCATION


Hispanic students taking AP Spanish: a scam?

Two of my children, whose parents can’t speak Spanish and didn’t take it in school, worked hard to learn that language and now use it in their jobs. They are truly bilingual. This impresses people. So why are we not similarly gratified when Hispanic students with fewer advantages than my kids work just as hard to master the same two important languages?
Alexandria educators try to reform (TWP)