Teacher conduct cases hit high

http://www.stuff.co.nz/4812028a11.html

Teacher conduct cases hit high

By LANE NICHOLS – The Dominion Post | Thursday, 08 January 2009

Nearly 1300 teachers have faced allegations of serious misconduct, violence, viewing pornography, sexual misconduct, dishonesty, alcohol and drug use, or incompetency since 2002.

Last year was the worst on record, with 233 formal complaints lodged against teachers with the Teachers Council nearly a third for alcohol and drugs.

But unions say teachers are easy targets for “spurious and vexatious” complaints by aggrieved parents, who are free to make formal allegations often groundless to employers and police.

“There are some parents who won’t be happy unless they see somebody getting punished,” Educational Institute president Frances Nelson said.

“And it doesn’t matter how guilty that teacher is, they still want a pound of flesh.”

There are 90,000 registered teachers, but since 2005, just 40 have been referred to the council’s disciplinary tribunal for formal proceedings over the most serious misconduct allegations.

Nearly all those cases resulted in censure and 26 teachers were struck off for misbehaviour mostly for sexual misconduct or viewing pornography.

The cases included:

Former Wairarapa College drama teacher Luke McIndoe eloped with a 16-year-old pupil after they developed a sexual relationship.

A teacher in her 30s had sex with a secondary school pupil, later saying a breakup with her fiance left her “emotionally vulnerable”.

Retired Havelock North principal Ian James Wilson was convicted on child pornography charges after 9000 illegal images were found on his home computer.

Figures made available under the Official Information Act show misconduct, including inappropriate communications with pupils or parents, was the most common allegation against teachers. Then came incompetency, violence, alcohol and drugs, dishonesty, sexual misconduct and pornography.

Since 2004, misconduct complaints have been investigated by the council’s complaints assessment committee.

It can dismiss complaints if groundless or vexatious, recommend a teacher’s suspension for reasons of safety, impose conditions or refer the most serious cases to the disciplinary tribunal for possible deregistration.

Post Primary Teachers Association president-elect Kate Gainsford said teaching was a public job and there had always been spurious complaints.

“Sometimes they’re just not substantiated enough to take further. There is a concern if there is a lack of natural justice, if people are criticised or attacked unfairly. But that’s why the process is so important.”

Teachers supported having an independent body to assess complaints and discipline wayward colleagues, provided the process was fair and robust.

The 157th carnival of homeschooling

From the blog  Practical Homeschooling…

As we wrap up another year, it’s time to look back at what we have experienced and what we’ve learned. The great thing about life is that it’s a constant learning experience. We continuously find opportunities to gain more knowledge and experience.

To read more go to:

http://practical-homeschooling.org/2008/12/157th-carnival-of-homeschooling-a-carnival-of-reflections/

Am I Doing Enough?

*Am I Doing Enough?* – by Lennie Harrison.

This agonising question tends to fill our minds with either a quivering
questionmark, a grey cloud of confusion or a mental look the other way,
because we can’t find the answer. I will present a workshop (entry by
donation) on this topic on Tuesday 3rd February at Bishopdale Reformed
Church. For more details, see the end of this article.

In order to try and dispel needless anxiety, we should first define the
question a bit more, so we can tackle it bit by bit. By asking “Am I
doing enough?”, mostly we mean to ask: “Am I doing enough to satisfy the
ERO (and through them the MoE)?”. Sometimes we mean: “I’m not sure what
my child’s needs are – what are they and am I answering them?; Half the
time I have this feeling that I don’t know what I’m doing; Everyone else
(or school) seems to be doing so much more than what I do; Am I doing my
child a disservice?”, and other thoughts of this kind. Occasionally we
mean to ask: “What does God think about my
performance/choices/decisions/methods?”

So starting with the ERO – what will they think of what I’m doing? Will
they be satisfied? We know that they will check whether our children are
taught as regularly and as well as in a registered school, but what does
that really mean? We’ve so often heard that the quality of our teaching
is superior to that of schools, but surely it’s not enough just to say
that to an ERO officer. How can we be sure we’ll pass scrutiny?

Regularity applies to the amount of hours that a child receives
teaching, as well as to the amount of hours that each subject is being
taught, as well as the frequency of teaching received. Of course this
kind of measuring is meant for public schools and doesn’t so easily fit
the picture of home-education lifestyle, at least at first glance. But
expressions like ‘amount of hours’, ‘teaching’, ‘subject’, etc. can all
be freely and widely translated to let our home-education lifestyle
emerge very favourably. More about this, as well as a closer look at
‘teaching quality’, which relates to the “as well” part of the law, at
the workshop.

The next aspect – whether you do enough to recognise and satisfy the
learning needs of your child – can get overlooked in the midst of the
search for clear answers. And of course, as soon as you’ve read the
previous sentence, you know the importance of it.
This point doesn’t need a lot of belabouring, but still it may be
helpful to look at what your child’s needs are and where they transform
into wants and where the needs and wants are actually your own (or even
other people’s and other outside pressures) rather than the child’s.
“The child’s needs” is quite a vague expression, and in today’s
predominantly materialistic society “needs”, even educational needs, can
easily escalate and the top of the ladder is difficult to find. But we
do have the freedom to cut them down to size if we have a mind to. More
about this at the workshop.
In my mind the most important aspect by far is whether God is happy with
what you’re doing. I hope that most of us will feel at least fairly
secure about this, but some may suffer the grey cloud of confusion and
some may not have any answer whatever to this part of the question.
It doesn’t matter where you’re at, though. For every one of us I think
it’s probably a good idea to look at God’s Word to see what He has to
say on the matter. Contrary to what you might think, God is certainly
not silent on the subject, and a closer look may give some beneficial
clarification. I’m looking forward to sharing some of my favourite
scripture verses, and their implications, at the workshop.

*Details: *Am I Doing Enough?*

*Where: Bishopdale Reformed Church, Highsted Road, Bishopdale, Chch.*

*When: Tuesday 3rd February 2009.*

*Time: 7.00 p.m.*

*Entry: By Donation.*

*Booking: Please book with Lennie at jandl@e3.net.nz or ph 03-3143720.*

The Call to Dunkirk

Christian Home Educators in the USA are getting serious about helping their fellow Christians rescue the next generation — their own children — from Moloch’s pagan schools.

The featured speakers in this video clip “The Call to Dunkirk”, E. Ray Moore, Bruce Shortt and Vodie Baucham, are all passionate Christian home educators. E. Ray Moore is one of the early pioneers of home education in the USA, and our family has stayed with both E. Ray Moore in South Carolina and with Bruce Shortt in Houston, Texas.

Like these men, I can find little … well, let me be honest … I can find nothing positive to say about NZ’s state, compulsory, secular schooling system. It is a total disaster area, way beyond any kind of reform. We Christians MUST pull our children out — and I am particularly concerned about the primary school aged children. Christian children are not just forced to attend by law, they are being defiled in spirit, in body and in mind…and often also suffer physical violence and abuse as well.

And Christians pay for this abuse of their own Children with their taxes.

It’s time to get out of it, get serious, makes some sacrifices and think of creative and effective ways to help our Christian friends and relations disciple their children at home.

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The YouTube Video produced by Exodus Mandate, “A Call To Dunkirk”  calls parents to get their children out of government schools and to provide them with a Christian education