Beecher Parents Protest “Silent Lunches” and Mass Recess Punishments; Elementary Principal Vows Changes
Beecher Board of Education Meeting | April 15, 2026
Article Summary: Parents confronted the Beecher Board of Education on Wednesday to protest the elementary school’s use of “silent lunches” and whole-class recess cancellations as disciplinary measures. In response, Elementary Principal Nicole Black issued new written directives to staff, effectively ending the practice of “carte blanche” group punishments.
Student Discipline Key Points:
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Parents reported that entire classes were losing recess and lunch talking privileges due to the misbehavior of a few individual students.
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Principal Nicole Black met with recess and lunchroom staff to issue clear, written expectations regarding student discipline.
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Staff are no longer permitted to take away entire recess periods from groups of students to punish the actions of an individual.
The Beecher Board of Education on Wednesday, April 15, 2026, faced complaints from local parents regarding the disciplinary tactics used by lunch and recess supervisors at Beecher Elementary School.
During the public comment period, Beecher residents Stephanie and Erica Gardner addressed the board, expressing frustration over the school’s ongoing use of “silent lunches” and group recess revocations. The parents argued that entire classes of students were being routinely punished for the actions of a few disruptive individuals.
“I don’t know why they are giving our children no talking time sometimes. But if it’s like one individual acting foolish, and the whole lunch is getting in trouble, and that’s going for recess too,” Stephanie told the board. “I know my nephew is in fifth grade and they got their recess taken away because of a couple kids. I don’t know how we can fix that, but I’m kind of over it. They’re kids. They’re going to be loud sometimes and recess is when they’re trying to let loose a little bit.”
Erica Gardner echoed the sentiment, noting she had previously reached out to the district superintendent and was attending the meeting to seek a final resolution.
Later in the meeting, Beecher Elementary School Principal Nicole Black directly addressed the parents’ concerns, confirming she had intervened to overhaul the procedures used by the building’s recess and lunchroom supervisors. Black held a meeting with all relevant staff earlier in the week to formalize disciplinary expectations in writing.
“I never in any circumstance feel like taking away an entire amount of recess is okay,” Black explained to the board and the public. “That has never been brought to my attention. If it has happened, it’s definitely happened without my knowledge. Moving forward, I spoke to them about any time that any student is missing time, I need to be made aware and know about why that happened.”
Black clarified that while supervisors are permitted to have a loud group sit for a minute or two to calm down—especially if they are disrupting other classrooms—the focus must shift to correcting individual behavior rather than group retribution.
“The key component of this is to address the student behavior on an individual or small group basis. The carte blanche of ‘well you 45 kids are all going to be doing something’ [is not allowed],” Black stated. “To say ‘you’re all going to sit here for 15 minutes because Johnny in the back of the line is acting a fool, so let’s everybody get disciplined’—moving forward, if that does happen, we’ll be addressing that as a personnel matter at a higher level. We do apologize to our families who have been affected by that.”
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