Harmony stated:
A 15 year old's understanding of acceptable and unacceptable behavior, and an 8 year old's understanding of the same are quite different. Any 15 year old indulging in the behaviors I listed above (and several others of equal or worse acceptability) knows exactly how to remedy the situation... and if he/she doesn't change behaviors he/she has enough understanding to know that, over the long run, inescapable consequences are attached to those behaviors, whether from the law or from the parents. postIt’s important to focus on the fact that “understanding” as well as maturity is incremental not absolute. Some children “8” are more responsible and more mature than others “15.” Your point is well taken that
generally children 8 have less capacity and half the experience of those “15.”
However the second sentence claiming that “Any 15 year old … knows exactly how to remedy the situation…” is an over-reach. You attribute far too much
know how to children 15. They are minors. While some adults (parents, teachers, etc.) can advise and attempt to hold children 15 responsible, in fact, those children are still minors and do not “know exactly how to remedy the situation.”
There are always “consequences” for behavior. A child of “8” may locate a gun and shoot his playmate. There
are consequences for “behavior.” But the
behavior was that of several not one. Behavior is a product of multiple factors and interactions. How did the child of “8” get hold of a gun? Who was responsible for the keeping and safety of the gun? The same analysis could be applied to a child of “15.” Hence there is
shared responsibility. It is not singular with anyone. In your posts, you appear to hold children of some age (perhaps 15)
solely responsible for their thought processes and rationale for behavior. It’s an incorrect understanding of psychology. Being rebellious often accompanies teenage years. It comes in degrees and in different manifestations. Psychologically, one size treatment does not fit all. Additionally, mistakes in treatment can and often do make matters worse rather than better.
The issue is the conduct of those who ran (or now run) West Ridge Academy and their treatment of minors. That West Ridge is a Mormon sponsored
facility, that it is sanctioned by a Mormon dominated state does not make for reliable, accurate review of that
facility. That is, if Mormons ran West Ridge and Mormons at governmental levels approved or licensed the
facility, there is no objective oversight. If we know the latter, the particulars of what was done were not given dispassionate, nonpartisan, or unbiased scrutiny.
Harmony stated:
Once he (Eric) arrived at the facility, GoodK is smart enough to quickly pick up on which behaviors were acceptable and which ones were not. At that point, he, as a 15 year old, was old enough and had enough understanding of the world to know that consequences followed specific behaviors in that place, and I suspect it's well within the realm of possibility that those consequences were spelled out quite clearly the day he landed at the ranch. It’s incorrect to conclude that a chronological age “15” is “old enough” or that any child of
15 “had enough understanding of the world to know that…” (as you stated). It’s not age. There are other factors of far greater influence on the capacity of a child of some age to make choices that comply with all the mores and laws (which that child had not read). Included, but not limited to those is the conduct of the parents, the capacity of those parents to understand and relate appropriately to that child.
Spelling out consequences is arbitrary and capricious. Such an approach may or may not produce prescribed results. It’s inadequate as protection of a child from possible abuse within an organization.
Secrecy of a group is a red flag which should call to attention a skeptical, public examination and review.
Regarding marg’s post
here, the statement by Kathryn Whitehead seems compelling with much specifically detailed. While this is not a statement by GoodK, there are similarities in examples of abuse. How similar is Mountain Mission School to West Ridge Academy? From the detail offered by GoodK, it appears that there are multiple parallels even if the specific treatment of Kathryn was not a duplicate of the treatment of GoodK.
An organization which is intent upon maintaining secrecy and which is financially supported by families who have the resources to send their children there has far more power to control information than individuals like Kathryn or GoodK. In addition, such an organization has multiple individuals to protect as well as the
facility itself.
Is there a video of a response from Mountain Mission School to the statement by Kathryn Whitehead? If there is, those who defend Mountain Mission School (or similar facilities) might find that response and give us a link.
From the link which marg gave above, there are multiple YouTube, many of which are statements by parents and families supporting a facility other than Mountain Mission School.
Of course organizations which put up websites are going to put the best possible light/spin on their facility. They are selling themselves. But are the statements by people such as found
here representative or reliable? Are there no individuals who had a bad experience here?
JAK