I Would Like to Know if You Get Exspelled From Middle School Can You Go Back?

Question by trell: I would like to know if you get exspelled from middle school can you go back?

Best answer:

Answer by Rocky
You go to a different school.

Answer by CuriousOne
I don’t think you can. Back in my place. If you are expelled, you can’t go back in or even go to other school, unless it’s the cheap and horrible school filled with easy class when you’re suppose to learn something else higher which will help you in the future.

 

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2 Responses to “I Would Like to Know if You Get Exspelled From Middle School Can You Go Back?”

  • Luly:

    Yes, but not the same school you will have to register in a alternative school that exist for expelled kids

  • George:

    No–and yes—depending on multiple factors and combination of multiple factors–such as the nature of your offense(s), prior disciplinary offenses, type of middle school you attended (e.g. public or private); involvement in the criminal justice system (potentially); policies of the school district, any relevant rehabilitation–or relevant “rehabilitative efforts” you have made or are continuing—whether court-ordered and/or voluntary (e.g. counseling; drug detox/and/or rehab, juvenile hall/related programs; probation terms; any programs you have enrolled in, cooperation, passing drug tests; community service/employment efforts/current; current participation and plans for the future; compliance with terms of probation (of course, if criminal charges were involved; and/or if criminal charges were already imposed and you were successful); any community involvement; length of time since expulsion and what has happened since then.

    As far a private schools are involved, there is a VERY slim chance that you will be allowed back; however, some probably do have an official appeals/hearing process.

    As far as public schools go, most school districts–including middle schools–have policies in which expulsions are not officially decided by the school principal but are recommended by the school principal; suspensions for serious offenses (e.g. second or multiple possession of authorize drugs/and/or alcohol; any sale of drugs/alcohol; severe fighting/harassment; possession of weapons or firearms; certain number of suspensions–in which such disciplinary action has failed to correct behavior); or second or multiple suspensions for a serious offensive– are followed by a mandated “recommendations for expulsion” to the school district board/superintendent–by the school principal.

    Often, a hearing is allowed. If you are actually expelled, you might get an opportunity to attend an independent study-type “continuation high school” within your district–with conditions of strict “disciplinary probation”. Alternatively, you might be eventually allowed to, say, the regular high school, or even your middle school (depending what grade you are in), if the offense is something like merely “multiple suspension offensives possession of drugs)—and, say, you have been convicted within the juvenile court system and complied with strict protocols—e.g. terms of probation, drug tests, shown exemplary behavior and attendance in the “continuation high school” or “alternative school” (some communities actually have such a “last chance” alternative school)—and have an otherwise “clean” or mostly clean prior school disciplinary history.
    You would probably have to petition the superintendent of that district for a hearing—present your case well, and be prepared to answer questions.