Why do presumably intelligent school principals sometimes do
really stupid things?
One such person in Long Beach, California, overheard a
student discussing his science fair project.
It didn't occur to the principal that a middle school student could
not possibly make thermonuclear weapons from information
seen on the Internet.
It did not seem odd to the principal that the boy's
parents were providing the materials for the device.
It did not seem necessary to ask some simple questions
about the design of the device, or to
read the instructions
for it, which would have made it clear that the device
was harmless.
No, the principal thought it was important to suspend the
student, and call the sheriff's department and have the
boy's house searched at taxpayer's expense.
On Thursday, April 11th, 2002, I received the following letter from
attorney Michael I. Schiller, asking for my help in clearing the
school record of his client. The letter said:
I suggested to Schiller that it might be useful to look
up "bomb calorimeter" in an encyclopedia or a high school
chemistry or physics book (or on the Internet).
I also suggested that if I had called the device a "squirt gun"
the student might still have been suspended for bringing a
"gun" to school.
On the same web site I also show how to make a
"cannon"
from a
film canister, which has been used on a number of occasions to
win science fairs by my readers. Another very popular item for
science fairs that is shown on my web site is the
Gauss Rifle,
which I am certain would also upset the person who suspended
his client. It rolls marbles across a room.