OCTOBER 31, 2025
Time to Reserve Your Yearbook!
OCTOBER 31, 2025
CAMELS HUMP MIDDLE SCHOOL MOUNTAINEERS
“Kindness in words creates confidence. Kindness in thinking creates profoundness. Kindness in giving creates love.”
- Lao Tzu
The last day of October is here. We had another great week at Camels Hump Middle School. Our days have been busy filled with learning, laughter, connections and growth. As we move into a new month, we will be nearing the end of the first trimester. It’s important that students are consistent with their attendance and completion of work as students will be working on final projects and assessments. If you know your student is going to be out, please be sure to contact the main office as well as your student’s teachers. Communication is super important and we want to work collaboratively to ensure the success of students.
Next week, students will have an early release day on Wednesday. Please be sure your student has a clear plan for the early dismissal at 12:45pm.
We hope everyone has a great weekend. Be sure to turn your clocks back one hour. We will everyone back here in November!
Gretchen Muller
FRI., NOV. 21
MON.-TUE., NOV. 24-25
Staff Professional Development
WED.-FRI., NOV. 26-28
School Recess - No School
Over the past few weeks, a concerning behavior known as “Rage Baiting” has been gaining traction both online and in person, particularly in student and fan culture. I want to take a moment to define what it is, why it’s harmful, and what we as adults can do when we notice the signs.
Rage baiting is the intentional act of provoking or antagonizing others to elicit an emotional response: most commonly anger, outrage, or humiliation. It can occur through social media posts, group chats, or even during athletic events (chants, signs, or taunts aimed at opponents, officials, or fans). The goal is not genuine dialogue or competition, but rather to “get a reaction” and often to record or publicize it.
Unfortunately, yes. This behavior has grown in visibility with the rise of short-form content and viral moments. Platforms like TikTok and Instagram often reward engagement of any kind—meaning posts that spark outrage can spread faster than those that model good behavior. This “attention economy” has trickled into in-person environments, including student group chats, our stands and sidelines, where students may seek attention by provoking reactions from peers, adults, coaches, or opposing fans.
The Goal of Rage Baiting
The intent is simple but dangerous: to create chaos and control the narrative. Those engaging in rage baiting are often trying to film or witness an emotional overreaction that can be shared, mocked, or used as “proof” that their target was in the wrong. It feeds off escalation and thrives when adults or authority figures or even peers take the bait.
Recognize the Signs: Look for behaviors designed to provoke—mocking, filming others, instigating verbal exchanges, or exaggerated reactions.
Avoid Immediate Confrontation: Stay calm and avoid engaging emotionally. Responding in anger only validates the bait.
Redirect and Document: Use calm, clear directives (“That’s not appropriate. Let’s step outside and talk.”) and, if needed, document the behavior for follow-up.
Model Regulation: When students see adults remain steady and composed, it removes the power from the provocation.
Educate Early: Incorporate discussions about digital citizenship, sportsmanship, and emotional regulation into home conversations, advisory periods, team meetings, and pre-season assemblies.
Set Clear Expectations: Make sure your student, fan, athlete, and coach codes of conduct explicitly reference online and in-person behavior that targets others for reaction or humiliation.
Rage baiting only works when people engage. Our best defense is composure, consistency, and community expectations that center respect and safety. When adults recognize the tactic, refuse to feed into it, and address it calmly, we disrupt the very cycle that gives it power. If your student is the receiver of messages, pictures, etc that appear to be used as rage Bait, please interrupt the behavior, help your student by ensuring they do not respond, report the behavior.
Thank you for continuing to lead by example and for helping our students learn that true strength is shown not through reaction but through restraint.
The 2025 Hannaford Helps Schools Program experienced a record-breaking year, generating $1,493,267 for 1,751 schools across New England and New York! Included in every school’s total is a $300 base donation provided by Hannaford.
Camels Hump Middle School raised $450.00 from the redemption of 45 coupons that were redeemed and redirected to our school. These funds raised are a direct result of the efforts and participation of our school community.
Thank you for creating such a positive impact on our school!
In the weeks ahead, we’ll be telling you how we’ll use these funds to benefit our students and how you can gear up for the 2026 program.
District guidelines remain in place - If you are sick, please stay home. If your child requires cold medicine, ibuprofen, or acetaminophen for an illness, they are not well enough to attend school. Please keep them at home. Please read this link District Illness Guidelines
Please also take a few minutes to review these guidelines for
The Management and Treatment of Head Lice.
If you still have to review and submit your student's 2025-2026 Annual Health Update Form in the PowerSchool parent portal, please do so as soon as possible.
If you need support accessing the powerschool parent portal, Wendy Garrapy is MMUUSD powerschool parent portal resource person, and Wendy can be reached at wendy.garrapy@mmuusd.org