Even though I graduated in 1986, I remember high school pretty well, especially the bad parts. I don't think this is the kind of bad you were talking about, though. I had a "problem" with a teacher. He caused the same "problem" for other girls. None of us went to the police in time, and the teacher is still there. I don't know if he is still causing a "problem" now, although he was still at it in 1999.
But that was many years ago and despite my ongoing obsession over what happened to me, I have technically moved on. Now, I have a son in high school and a daughter in junior high, and I know that parents do get called into the school for various reasons, usually if the school is concerned that there is a serious issue that must be addressed.
My son wrote a creative writing assignment that included a "terrorist bomber" and I was called in to meet with the school nurse and Vice Principal to discuss whether or not my son was a threat to himself or others. He'd modeled the "bomber" after a certain puppet used by a well-known ventriloquist comedian. The school has a zero tolerance policy for terroristic threats. My son was trying to impress his friends by cracking an offensive joke. He served a week in detention.
The schools also call if there is a homework or grade problem, although now the schools are connected to the internet through a Powerschool program that allows parents to track their kids' assignments and grades. I admit, I haven't taken the time to use the Powerschool program. My kids bring home all As (with the occasional B) and I am not too worried about their daily assignments.
I would say that most of my "stunts" in high school involved smoking cigarettes in the bathroom without getting caught, or doing drugs on the bus and in school. I am still friends with one person who rode the school bus with me over 20 years ago, and we still get a few laughs over the horrible things we did back then, especially the open drug use. I would guess that plenty of Catholic school kids who smoked pot used a bible page as a rolling paper at least once during high school.