Wasteland Knight
Adventurer
I feel this is a well reasoned theory. As a teacher, this post literally feels like reading a classroom management book.
But, unlike the classroom we do not need to accept everyone. I feel most problems that do occur spring forth out of miscommunication, unclear expectations, or people not gelling personally. There is little that can be done about the third, but the other two can be improved upon.
I have also run the D&D club at high school, and I can tell you their problems generally originate outside the game. The consternation caused at a D&D table about breakups, who's whose best friend, social status decline or incline, etc. is real. But that is the nature of growing up.![]()
The bolded part is incredibly important. Playing at any particular table should be considered a privilege, not a right.