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In reply to the discussion: Not to sound like a codger, but I would walk a mile and a half to and from kindergarten [View all]KamaAina
(78,249 posts)71. In Cockeysville, Md., we called them "safeties".
I should have known that volunteering to be one permanently marked me as a dork.
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Not to sound like a codger, but I would walk a mile and a half to and from kindergarten [View all]
Recursion
Jan 2015
OP
In my California town, we definitely have crossing guards by the elementary and jr. high schools.
Hekate
Jan 2015
#2
Crossing guards are supposed to be adults, not children. I've never seen a kid in that role. nt
Hekate
Jan 2015
#7
I remember seeing a Peanuts comic strip where Charlie Brown was a crossing guard
Art_from_Ark
Jan 2015
#16
I was a crossing guard in the 4th grade. A residential street divided the grammar school. . .
Journeyman
Jan 2015
#10
Hell, my friends and I would pack camping gear on our bikes and be gone all weekend
FLPanhandle
Jan 2015
#64
Early '60s, I walked 6 or so blocks to school, and crossed a 4 lane road with no stoplight. . .
Journeyman
Jan 2015
#8
I was a crossing guard when I was 11 years old in Portage, OH. I loved it.
Luminous Animal
Jan 2015
#15
don't most cases of missing kids involve a parent or some other family that took them ?
JI7
Jan 2015
#21
The school district in Silver Springs still expects first graders to walk a mile to school.
pnwmom
Jan 2015
#36
This is the policy of the Montgomery County schools. No buses for elementary kids who live within a mile
pnwmom
Jan 2015
#42
So what? The kids weren't trekking across the whole county. They were walking for a mile
pnwmom
Jan 2015
#44
Here's a link to an interview with the kids and their parents, who are both scientists
pnwmom
Jan 2015
#74
Oh yeah? "When I was in Kindergarten, we had William Howard Taft on the wall!"
Warren DeMontague
Jan 2015
#53
We used to ride our bikes a couple miles to the Woolworth's and buy candy, and we were probably 7.
Warren DeMontague
Jan 2015
#54
Most of the parents I am friends with do let their children roam free in the neighborhood.
NCTraveler
Jan 2015
#61