TEACHER IN TROUBLE AFTER POSTING FACEBOOK PIC OF DUCT TAPED STUDENTS
An Ohio math teacher could be fired after posting a Facebook photo of her students with duct tape over their mouths.
Middle school teacher Melissa Cairns in Cleveland said that she gave a female student a roll of duct tape after the girl asked for tape to fix a binder. Cairns claims the student then cut a piece of tape, put it over her own mouth and laughed. The incident happened last October at Buchtel Community Learning Center in Akron.
“The other kids in the class thought it was funny also, and they proceeded to pass the tape and scissors around the class,” Cairns said.
Ultimately, eight or nine students put tape on their mouths. Thinking her Facebook privacy settings would only show her friends, the math teacher posted a picture of the duct-taped students on the social network, with a caption that read: “Finally found a way to get them to be quiet!!!”
It was all supposed to be a joke, Cairns said, adding that the students had encouraged her to take the picture. But the photo was spotted by another employee, who alerted a supervisor, and Cairns was asked to take the picture down. The Akron School Board is pursuing termination, but the teacher’s attorney is filing paperwork for an appeal process. School board president Jason Haas said the act violated the students’ privacy.
“I would never in a million years do anything to harm students,” Cairns said, adding that she regrets the decision. “Do I feel that this one, stupid mistake should cost me the last 10 years of all the good I’ve done? Absolutely not.” But Cairns was disciplined in 2007 over references to sex, marijuana and alcohol on her MySpace account.
Cairns is on unpaid leave. A referee — requested by a local teachers union — will hear the case and present a recommendation to the school board, which will meet on Jan. 28. The issue of teachers questionably engaging with social media isn’t new. In 2011, a Chicago teacher posted a photo on Facebook, mocking a 7-year-old schoolgirl’s hairstyle. Last summer, a teacher in Florida got in trouble for a Facebook post comparing a student to an orangutan. In 2011, a New Jersey teacher who made anti-gay posts on Facebook was placed on leave. She eventually resigned.
SOURCE: NBC
Middle school teacher Melissa Cairns in Cleveland said that she gave a female student a roll of duct tape after the girl asked for tape to fix a binder. Cairns claims the student then cut a piece of tape, put it over her own mouth and laughed. The incident happened last October at Buchtel Community Learning Center in Akron.
Ultimately, eight or nine students put tape on their mouths. Thinking her Facebook privacy settings would only show her friends, the math teacher posted a picture of the duct-taped students on the social network, with a caption that read: “Finally found a way to get them to be quiet!!!”
It was all supposed to be a joke, Cairns said, adding that the students had encouraged her to take the picture. But the photo was spotted by another employee, who alerted a supervisor, and Cairns was asked to take the picture down. The Akron School Board is pursuing termination, but the teacher’s attorney is filing paperwork for an appeal process. School board president Jason Haas said the act violated the students’ privacy.
Cairns is on unpaid leave. A referee — requested by a local teachers union — will hear the case and present a recommendation to the school board, which will meet on Jan. 28. The issue of teachers questionably engaging with social media isn’t new. In 2011, a Chicago teacher posted a photo on Facebook, mocking a 7-year-old schoolgirl’s hairstyle. Last summer, a teacher in Florida got in trouble for a Facebook post comparing a student to an orangutan. In 2011, a New Jersey teacher who made anti-gay posts on Facebook was placed on leave. She eventually resigned.
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