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Teacher suspended for locking violent, screaming child out of classroom

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Tripon

Member
Wait, how is locking him out escalating the situation?
He's not getting access to what he wants, which is escalating the situation. The SOP in this situation is to allow him in and send everyone else outside when there is a potential violent situation.
 

Chaos17

Member
By the way, I witnessed a kid lose it in elementary school once. He was freaking out and yelling and the teacher made him go sit down. He ended up stabbing the girl next to him in the arm with a pencil that broke off in her arm. It was pretty much the worst thing I ever saw in school. I can still hear her freaking out afterwards when I think about that moment. She wasn't even bothering him, he just targeted her because she sat by him and he was pissed off at the world. This was 3rd grade.

The teacher must had a similar fear for her students so she locked out that kid out.
But the protocol say she was wrong and should've not let that kid alone.

It's difficult to think straigh in high stress situation without a reminder.
 
Teacher here, you don't lock a child out of your room unless there is an official lock down called by the administration. It's May, this teacher and student have had a relationship since August. It's more likely that the teacher got fed up with his antics and locked his ass out of the room and cited concern for her other students as the reason. We all have tough kids, but you can't lock a 9 year old out in the hall by themselves. The admin is a button press away.
 

Mesoian

Member
time to lawyer up and stick it to the school.

Yurp.

If they aren't prepared to discipline unruly students, they are pushing an unsafe work environment onto already underpaid teachers.

Get yours, get out.

Teacher here, you don't lock a child out of your room unless there is an official lock down called by the administration. It's May, this teacher and student have had a relationship since August. It's more likely that the teacher got fed up with his antics and locked his ass out of the room and cited concern for her other students as the reason. We all have tough kids, but you can't lock a 9 year old out in the hall by themselves.

I am a little confused about why she wouldn't send him to the principle's office though. Seemed like the obvious course of action.
 

spyder_ur

Member
I would have probably kept him at my desk. That's one of the positive aspects of being a male teacher. No one does stuff like this.

I used to teach kids around this age. I think what you say is true to an extent that a male is more easily able to assert control. That being said, I felt like I had to be way more careful. Girls tended to give me more trouble than boys, to be honest.

And yeah, we were told to never lock a student out of the classroom under basically any circumstance.

Teachers have it really tough in spots like this.
 

bigkrev

Member
He's not getting access to what he wants, which is escalating the situation. The SOP in this situation is to allow him in and send everyone else outside when there is a potential violent situation.

It appears that what he wanted was to "Fucking kill her", so yeah, I guess by not letting herself be killed by this kid she was escalating the situation.

Put this teacher in jail
 
Remember, the law and associated rules are there to protect property first and foremost. Thats why they were more concerned about damage to the school than potential harm to students.
 

Nimby

Banned
I wonder how she was able to lock him out of the classroom? And I'd imagine a teacher next door would hear a child "screaming" a room over. Why not call the principal first thing?
 
Without knowing details, it's uncertain if the kid causing harm was even a major risk. Some kids have documented symptoms to shout agressive talk or to get abnormally angry, by not result to physicality. Again, it would be based on a BIP. The question is did the teacher follow proper protocol related to the kid's plan? Did she notify the proper people immedietly? Did her actions agitate the child further?
 
He's 8-10yrs old. While he was destroying the whole classroom, she could have easily sent someone to the school office.
If the kid was blocking the door with a knife then ok, I understand. But that wasn't the case. Instead she chose to lock a violent, screaming kid (mentally ill) outside of the class room, unattended, alone.

The teacher doesn't even have to send a student to someone at the school office. I'm sure the classroom has a phone that she could use to get administration. The teacher ultimately didn't handle the situation properly here. But I don't think the teacher should be suspended, unless this isn't the first time this teacher hasn't handle a situation properly.
 

DonasaurusRex

Online Ho Champ
Teacher here, you don't lock a child out of your room unless there is an official lock down called by the administration. It's May, this teacher and student have had a relationship since August. It's more likely that the teacher got fed up with his antics and locked his ass out of the room and cited concern for her other students as the reason. We all have tough kids, but you can't lock a 9 year old out in the hall by themselves. The admin is a button press away.

Now what happens when the child starts making verbal threats like, im going to kill you or ill blow this place up? Isn't there a law about that now in public places would that change how things are handled because what he was yelling is what really stood out to me.
 

Ferrio

Banned
Now what happens when the child starts making verbal threats like, im going to kill you or ill blow this place up? Isn't there a law about that now in public places would that change how things are handled because what he was yelling is what really stood out to me.

Don't know about regular students, but my GF is an intensive SPED teacher.. and when the kids get violent they have special holds and stuff. They also sometimes lock them in a room by themselves.
 
The teacher doesn't even have to send a student to someone at the school office. I'm sure the classroom has a phone that she could use to get administration. The teacher ultimately didn't handle the situation properly here. But I don't think the teacher should be suspended, unless this isn't the first time this teacher hasn't handle a situation properly.

Very likely based on the disciplinary action taken. It's not like administrators have their hands tied in situations like this, they have some amount of discretion when it comes to meting out discipline. At the very least this teacher doesn't have the best classroom management instincts. I don't want to snap to any judgement because some administrators are just spineless idiots, but where there's smoke....
 
I thought SPED teachers have two teachers per classroom just in case of this kind of thing happening. It's stupid to suspend her as you don't know what the hell that kid might have thought of doing to either the teacher or the students.

And did the little shit get suspended as well?
 
Now what happens when the child starts making verbal threats like, im going to kill you or ill blow this place up? Isn't there a law about that now in public places would that change how things are handled because what he was yelling is what really stood out to me.

If you called the cops every time a kid had a tantrum and said something that would get an adult in legal trouble we'd need a lot more cops.
 
Don't know about regular students, but my GF is an intensive SPED teacher.. and when the kids get violent they have special holds and stuff. They also sometimes lock them in a room by themselves.

They need to stop that immediately. Your gf is risking a lawsuit should something happen to that child.
 

MIMIC

Banned
Now what happens when the child starts making verbal threats like, im going to kill you or ill blow this place up? Isn't there a law about that now in public places would that change how things are handled because what he was yelling is what really stood out to me.

You have to determine whether or not it's credible. I mean, you can call down to the office for all threats, but administration would probably get sick of you for not using discretion. I've had students make all kinds of threats and most of them are just running their mouths. Only once have I ever got administration involved after a student made a threat against the school.
 

Ferrio

Banned
They need to stop that immediately. Your gf is risking a lawsuit should something happen to that child.

As a SPED teacher, she always is as it's a touchy subject with very protective and worn out parents. But Restraint and Seclusion are allowed when they're needed. Lot of paperwork to fill out afterwards too.

These kids don't fuck around. I've heard some pretty bad horror stories. She frequently comes home looking like she wrestled a bear, huge cuts, gouges, teeth marks.
 

RangerX

Banned
I can't really blame the teacher here but the child should of been escorted to the principles office. Also as a non American, do parents have to pay if their kid skips school? What the fuck is that.
 
As a SPED teacher, she always is as it's a touchy subject with very protective and worn out parents. But Restraint and Seclusion are allowed when they're needed. Lot of paperwork to fill out afterwards too.

These kids don't fuck around. I've heard some pretty bad horror stories. She frequently comes home looking like she wrestled a bear, huge cuts, gouges, teeth marks.

Locking a kid behind a closed door (where they can't get out on their own) is NOT what is meant by seclusion. I don't want to derail the thread anymore, but there is grey area especially in special ed. but were something to happen (if the child hurt themselves while locked behind a door) the law would not be on her side.
 
nothing that wont lead to a lost job in PC america

Call an administrator and remove the child from the class. And you have to perform this while also maintaining control and supervision of your other students. Standing in the doorway with the problem student in the hall while waiting for an administrator does the trick.
 

Ke0

Member
They knew but never made an attempt to better accommodate him to prevent this type of incident?

But,

Not saying the kid would've done it but these days can you afford to take a threat like that lightly?

One_eight_seven_ver1.jpg


Wow. Teachers have a tough job these days.

Is that Vin Diesel on the right?
 

Ferrio

Banned
Locking a kid behind a closed door (where they can't get out on their own) is NOT what is meant by seclusion. I don't want to derail the thread anymore, but there is grey area especially in special ed. but were something to happen (if the child hurt themselves while locked behind a door) the law would not be on her side.

I'm sure they're taking all the precautions, and something they don't do very often and try to actively avoid if possible. The woman is a saint, I don't know how she does it. Anyone with any sanity would of quit long ago. Not only does she stick with the job (even though she's paid the same as if she was gen ed), but she still loves the kids no matter how much physical and emotional pain she's had to endure.
 

MIMIC

Banned
Call an administrator and remove the child from the class. And you have to perform this while also maintaining control and supervision of your other students. Standing in the doorway with the problem student in the hall while waiting for an administrator does the trick.

This has worked for me, too. You're in the doorway and the student is in the hall.

Me to class: "Everyone get a book out and start reading. If anyone gets up, I swear to God...." lol
 

Somnid

Member
You have to determine whether or not it's credible. I mean, you can call down to the office for all threats, but administration would probably get sick of you for not using discretion. I've had students make all kinds of threats and most of them are just running their mouths. Only once have I ever got administration involved after a student made a threat against the school.

I find this a little problematic. Policy in these sorts of cases are designed to remove judgement because judgement can be bad. Rather you always want a failsafe despite the fact that it is bothersome and inefficient. It also seems like such talk could be grounds for instant expulsion so a zero-tolerance policy to threats would quickly eliminate the problem (at least for the school anyway). The parents could complain but they would likely not get public sympathy.
 

Maximus.

Member
So kids basically get to do whatever they want and get away with it because parents do not want their kids to be disciplined or taught their actions are wrong? That is what I get out of articles like this and other similar instances that have been posted here as well.
 
I find this a little problematic. Policy in these sorts of cases are designed to remove judgement because judgement can be bad. Rather you always want a failsafe despite the fact that it is bothersome and inefficient. It also seems like such talk could be grounds for instant expulsion so a zero-tolerance policy to threats would quickly eliminate the problem (at least for the school anyway). The parents could complain but they would likely not get public sympathy.

It's that sort of thinking that gets 5 year olds suspended for playing cops and robbers on the playground.
 
So kids basically get to do whatever they want and get away with it because parents do not want their kids to be disciplined or taught their actions are wrong? That is what I get out of articles like this and other similar instances that have been posted here as well.

Then I would suggest you read the posts here because there are logical reasons on how the teacher could have handled the situation incorrectly.

Edit: that sounded too direct. There is a lot of truth to what you say. I would say in this instance, there may have been reason for the teacher to get in trouble. We don't have he proper info to really make that assertion though
 

Somnid

Member
It's that sort of thinking that gets 5 year olds suspended for playing cops and robbers on the playground.

Perhaps but that's on the merits of the policy not necessarily the enforcement. It's also true people do sometimes take the letter of things too serious which can also be bad, but by setting it up this way you invert the concern. Rather than "I'm not reporting little Billy because I'm afraid administration will think I'm annoying" you then get "Unless there is pressing and good reason not to report little Billy, I need to report him or I'll get in trouble." In the first case the worst-case scenario is someone gets hurt because you didn't want to annoy someone else, in the second the worst case is Billy doesn't get expelled because it really didn't warrant it and you get a slap on the wrist for policy breach.
 

Cuburt

Member
My old boss when I used to work at Target got fired when he took down a violent customer that attacked him.

Usually 'escalating the situation' means 'escalating the lawsuit situation'

Now this makes sense.

Call special services and an administrator.

My wife works in special services and this is exactly their protocol that they have to follow.

She's had kids that have torn up classrooms and what the teachers are supposed to do is to get the other kids out, call special services and administration, and step aside.

classroom.jpg


This is a picture she took of the damage done by a 4th grader.
Ah, somehow shuffle all the rest of the students through the door past the rampaging, tantrum throwing kid into the hall to leave the one trouble making student unsupervised in the classroom instead of unsupervised in the hall and let bureaucracy take it's course.

Sounds like a damned if you do, damned if you don't situation to me.

It does seem likely the kid was just acting out and that it doesn't necessarily mean he would be violent to the other kids, but imagine if there was a similar scenario with adults. Police would taze, mace, and choke hold the fuck out of that guy and the teacher would be called a hero, whether or not the people in the classroom were in any immediate threat of danger or not. As if unstable children aren't capable of murdering people and if any upset adult is automatically a threat to everyone's life around them.

Weird world we live in.
 

Baron Aloha

A Shining Example
So the Texas school board thought the teacher was overreacting huh? Is this not the same school board that suspended a student for pretending to have a Hobbit ring? Pot, meet kettle?

The teacher's actions were justified.
 

TheStruggler

Report me for trolling ND/TLoU2 threads
There's just no winning as a teacher these days.

being a teacher we are fucked either way, damned if you do, damned if you dont. Only thing I would have suggested would be if she wanted to lock the door OK, then page the office and get an admin down their right away. Or lock the door with the students inside, go outside yourself and try to calm down the student. But hey we are screwed whatever we do
 

Tripon

Member
It appears that what he wanted was to "Fucking kill her", so yeah, I guess by not letting herself be killed by this kid she was escalating the situation.

Put this teacher in jail
I work with kids identified with special needs, emphasis in emotional disturbance. unfortunately kids will say outrageous things in order to get what they want. But you document that , and write an intervention strategy in order to combat it. You don't get to lock them out of the classroom.
 

SURGEdude

Member
You're a teacher, you're responsible for the wellbeing and safety of your students. The teacher should have sent another student to go get a nurse, or any other responsible adult in charge. You can't just leave the child alone without surveillance; what of if he harms himself or others? She's pretty lucky they didn't fire her.

So you just send out a student into the hall with the deranged child and hope they make it to the nurse unharmed?

He's not getting access to what he wants, which is escalating the situation. The SOP in this situation is to allow him in and send everyone else outside when there is a potential violent situation.

So just magically transport the whole class into the hall and him into the room and somehow make sure he stays there and destroys everything while avoiding locking the door and having him come out and threaten the other students?

The only point I'm curious about that the people who think she made a mistake have brought up is whether or not she informed the administrators while she had him in the hall. If not that was a mistake, though a verbal warning and reminder would seem the most apt punishment.

What a fucking horrible job with zero room for mistakes or common sense it seems.
 
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