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  • 24
    Nov
    2012
    10:20am, EST

    Former teacher loses license over questionable massages by students

    By NBC News staff

    A former teacher in Florida's Broward County who was accused of soliciting massages from students has lost her license to teach in the state.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Cheryl Grampa, 46, was barred by the state's Education Practices Commission in an order this month, the Sun-Sentinel reported Friday.

    She had taught at Cooper City Elementary.

    School district investigators said that during the 2009-2010 school year, one boy touched her breasts and vaginal area and she failed to notify the school administration about the inappropriate conduct, according to the state's complaint.


    No criminal charges were filed, but the Broward School Board voted to suspend her for five days and ordered her to undergo classroom management training, the Sun-Sentinel reported.

    Two psychological evaluations later found her "unfit for duty as a classroom teacher" and she resigned last December, according to state records.

    Grampa, who is listed as living in Bellaire, Texas, did not attend the state discussion of her case on Sept. 27 in Orlando, the Sun-Sentinel reported.

    Broward Schools Superintendent Robert Runcie, who was not in the district when the case was investigated, said he did not know why Grampa was not fired, but believed that revoking her license was appropriate.

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    415 comments

    Cheryl Grampa...one boy touched her breasts...Oh great, he touched Grampa's breasts....

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    Explore related topics: school, teacher, crime
  • 5
    Nov
    2012
    11:57am, EST

    Cops: Substitute teacher claims 14-year-old got her pregnant

    By Sevil Omer, NBC News

    A 35-year-old Texas woman accused of having sex with a 14-year-old boy and then claiming to be pregnant from the relationship may have worked as a substitute teacher at least once in the boy’s classroom, a school official said.

    Bexar County Sheriff's Office

    Amanda Sotelo, 35.

    Amanda Sotelo, a resident of Von Ormy, was booked into a Bexar County jail on Nov. 1 on a charge of indecency with a child, Louis J. Antu, spokesman with the Bexar County Sheriff’s Office, told NBC News. Bond was set at $75,000.


    School district officials learned of the allegations Oct. 31 after the boy's mother alerted them of the relationship, Anne Marie Espinoza, spokeswoman for the Southwest Independent School District in San Antonio, told KSAT-TV.

    Excerpts from the affidavit:

    Sotelo stated that the relationship developed over time. She and the victim were both going through problems and confided in each other. It wasn’t until the end of this last school year that they began having a sexual relationship, ‘like grown-ups’ … She further admitted that she and the victim had sex about once a week. Sotelo further stated that she found out she is pregnant when she went to the emergency room the first week of September.

    Sotelo further stated she loves the victim and he loves her.

    "She's in jail but that's about the only thing we've heard. We've got a lot of family problems going on right now," Johnny Lopez, Sotelo’s son-in-law, told KSAT.com.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Lopez said Sotelo is married, and her husband was out of town. They have other children.

    Espinoza confirmed that Sotelo had worked as a substitute in several of the district’s schools, and possibly, substituted at least once in the boy’s classroom, KSAT.com reported.

    Esponiza told NBC News district officials refused to further comment.

    Watch US News crime videos on NBCNews.com 

    “The district learned of an allegation of inappropriate behavior of a substitute with a high school student,” said the district in a emailed statement. “The district immediately took appropriate actions to ensure the substitute was not on any campus pending an investigation. The district made contact with appropriate agencies including law enforcement. The substitute is no longer employed by the district.”

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    708 comments

    "...We've got a lot of family problems going on right now," Johnny Lopez, Sotelo’s son-in-law, told KSAT.com No...really?!

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    Explore related topics: abuse, sex, teacher, crime
  • 4
    Nov
    2012
    8:40am, EST

    Teacher arrested for alleged Halloween sex act

    By NBCBayArea.com

    An art teacher at a charter school in Livermore, California, was allegedly found performing a sexual act in a car in unincorporated San Leandro and trying to attract the attention of passing trick or treaters on Halloween night, the Alameda County Sheriff's Office said Saturday.

    The Sheriff's Office was contacted around 10:30 p.m. on Oct. 31 regarding the man, who was seen disturbing passing children at Mateo Street and Green Court, Sgt. J.D. Nelson said.

    Deputies found Carlos Tellez sitting in his gold 1998 Mazda Protege with his pants unzipped and pulled down to mid-thigh and his shirt pulled up to mid-chest, Nelson said.

    Read more at NBCBayArea.com

    He had been placed under citizen's arrest by a passer-by, and was detained without incident. Tellez, an art teacher for the Livermore Valley Charter Preparatory in the city of Livermore, told deputies he was trying to relax after a stressful day of teaching, Nelson said.

    Investigators are looking for other possible witnesses or victims. 

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    203 comments

    So, your method of relaxing after a long day of teaching children is to try to show them your tallywhacker. Sure, yeah, keep your teaching license (/end sarcasm). Lock this creep up and drop the key down a well. Tragedy averted.

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    Explore related topics: california, teacher, crime-courts, nbcbayarea, us-news-nbcbayarea-com
  • 2
    Nov
    2012
    1:20pm, EDT

    Texas teacher reportedly duct taped student's mouth shut

    By NBC News staff

    A teacher at Palo Alto Middle School in Killeen, Texas, has been placed on paid leave while the Killeen Independent School District reviews a report that he taped a student’s mouth shut, according to The Associated Press.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Enesto Ortiz claims his 11-year-old son had three pieces of duct tape put on his mouth by teacher Clarence Williams, according to the AP. The incident allegedly happened Oct. 23.

    The boy’s mouth, Ortiz says, became swollen and some skin came off when the tape was removed. A school nurse had to help remove the duct tape, AP reported.


    The tape was left over the student’s mouth for 45 minutes, Ortiz claims.

    AP’s request for details on what prompted the alleged incident went unanswered by school officials.

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    232 comments

    This story doesn't deserve space without a word from the teacher or administration. Perhaps the kid simply wouldn't shut up when asked multiple times. Perhaps he was disrupting the class. Perhaps he has been sent to the pricipals office so many times they told him not to send him again. Perhaps, per …

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    Explore related topics: texas, schools, education, teacher, featured, duct-tape, killeen
  • 31
    Oct
    2012
    7:04pm, EDT

    Women file $15 million claims against California school district, contending sexual abuse by teacher

    By NBC News staff

    Two women who say they were sexually abused in the 1990s by a teacher who later committed suicide have each filed a $15 million claim against a California school district and three former administrators.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The women, referred to as Jane Doe #1 and Jane Doe #2 in court documents, contend the Moraga School District had received multiple complaints of inappropriate conduct by the teacher, Dan Witters, over the years but did little or nothing to stop it.

    Witters, who taught at Joaquin Moraga Intermediate School, killed himself in 1996 shortly after the Jane Does came forward with allegations of sexual abuse, according to the Contra Costa Times. 


    Witter never faced criminal charges and Moraga police stopped their investigation upon his death, according to the newspaper.

    The tort claims filed last week follow an earlier claim filed in August by Kristen Cunnane, now a 30-year-old swim coach at UC Berkeley, against the same defendants. Cunnane alleges she was abused by Witters and another teacher two decades ago. Her claim was denied, and she filed a lawsuit Sept. 25 seeking unspecified damages, the Contra Costa Times reported.

    According to the latest Jane Doe claims:

    Claimant never suspected wrongdoing by Moraga School District until late May or early June 2012, when, for the first time, it was revealed to her that Moraga School District had received multiple complaints demonstrating that Witters was sexually abusing certain female students during the 1990-1994 timeframe and then had covered-up and concealed its knowledge after Witters killed himself in 1996. Claimant learned this information for the first time when she read an investigative news story in a local newspaper that detailed the District’s culpability. The news story was based on internal District documents that had never been previously released to the public and, in fact, had been previously concealed by the District.

    After Witters committed suicide, the school district concealed and covered up its knowledge of past complaints, the claims allege.

    “Claimant now knows that if District officials had simply done what the law required of them to do – report suspected child abuse and supervise their teacher appropriately – then Claimant would never have been abused or harmed by Witters,” the claims say.

    Bruce Burns, superintendent of the Moraga School District, did not immediately return a telephone call for comment on Wednesday from NBC News.

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    99 comments

    Ever hear the old saying, "You can't squeeze blood from a turnip"? It applies here.

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    Explore related topics: schools, education, california, sex-abuse, teacher, crime, moraga
  • 16
    Oct
    2012
    2:03pm, EDT

    Bronx teacher banned from district after racy photos of student found

    By Sevil Omer, NBC News

    A history teacher for the nation’s largest school district has been banned from teaching in New York City for fondling and forcing a student to pose for explicit photos inside a storage cage, according to authorities.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Special investigators for New York City School District say 57-year-old Raemon Matthews took racy photographs of a 17-year-old girl inside a cage used for storage in a classroom at the Samuel Gompers Career and Technical Education High School in the Bronx in 2009.

    Earlier this year, Matthews pleaded guilty to one count of misdemeanor sex abuse for fondling the student. He was sentenced in June to serve one year of probation. Matthews resigned in April.


    Attempts by NBC News to contact school officials or union officials to request terms of Matthews’ resignation were unsuccessful on Tuesday.   

    According to the investigators’ report, Matthews convinced the student to pose for the photos by telling her she needed a portfolio for college recruiters.

    Investigators say the student complied with Matthews’s photo sessions because she feared failing the class. She told investigators that when she tried to put a stop to the photo session, Matthews told her “No, boo-boo, we’re just getting started,” The New York Daily News reported.

    A custodian found the photos on a CD in 2010 and alerted school officials.

    Officials with the New York City Department of Education said Matthews will not be allowed to teach in the district.

    Matthews’ lawyer, Jonathan Goltzman, also was unavailable for comment on Tuesday.

    He commented earlier that all sides had been satisfied with Matthews' plea. Goltzman told the Daily News: “My client accepted responsibility and he’s moving on with his life.”

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    230 comments

    What a reprehensible mongoloid. I sincerely hope he gets a little prison time, where his new "roomie" will make him pose in the showers.

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    Explore related topics: nyc, abuse, education, sex, teacher
  • 20
    Sep
    2012
    10:49am, EDT

    Mom: Substitute teacher duct-taped kid's mouth shut

    By NBC News staff

    A mother in Louisiana is pursuing legal action against a substitute teacher she says put duct tape across her child’s mouth.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Michelle Droody says it took her a week to figure out why her 9-year-old son, a student at J. Wallace James Elementary School in Lafayette, La., was so upset.

    “He just told me he didn’t want to go back to school no more,” Wallace told KATC TV in Lafayette. “And he didn’t want to be friends with anybody in his class or school.”

    Only after school officials interviewed about 100 students did Droody learn that a substitute teacher used red duct tape, normally used for arts and crafts projects, to quiet her son.


    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    Dr. Pat Cooper, superintendent of Lafayette Parish Public Schools, confirmed the incident to KATC, which happened Sept. 12, and said the substitute treated the student both “outside the boundaries of [their] discipline matrix” and “outside the boundaries of common sense.”

    Cooper said the teacher had been disciplined.

    “We fell like we’ve taken the necessary disciplinary action against that teacher, but the parent always has the right to take additional charges.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com

    Droody said she intends to pursue further criminal charges. 

    “Now he has to face these same kids for the rest of the year that were sitting there laughing at him, the embarrassment and the shame that goes along with having someone you’re supposed to respect that comes and duct tapes your mouth shut in front of everybody," Droody said.

    Lafayette Police Department Public Information Officer Paul Mouton told NBC News police were contacted by the school, and a report has been filed and police are actively investigating the incident.

    “If investigators determine that enough probable exists, the detective in charge will issue a warrant and have the substitute teacher arrested,” Mouton said. “If there’s not enough cause, the case will be submitted for review.” 

    This isn't the first time a teacher has tried to quiet a student by using duct tape. 

    A third-grade teacher in Albuquerque was placed on administrative leave last October for allegedly duct-taping the mouths of two students to keep them quiet. A first grade teacher in Massachusetts was fired after she duct-taped 20 students, although she insisted the duct tape was tied to a book her students read earlier in the year. 

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    442 comments

    Well, if this student would have listened to the teacher and kept his mouth shut he would not have duct tape over his mouth. There are consequences for every action. The mother should be working with her kid on his behavior and how to act in class as opposed to filing a ridiculous complaint.

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    Explore related topics: education, louisiana, school, teacher
  • 15
    Sep
    2012
    7:20pm, EDT

    Striking Chicago teachers rally to wrap labor deal

    Scott Olson / Getty Images

    Chicago Teachers Union President Karen Lewis speaks to supporters Saturday during a rally at Union Park in Chicago, Ill.

    By NBC News and wire services

    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    CHICAGO -- Thousands of striking Chicago teachers rallied on Saturday to keep the pressure on Mayor Rahm Emanuel to wrap up an agreement with their union to end a strike that has closed the nation's third-largest school district for a week.

    The rally brought labor leaders, community activists and teachers to Chicago's Union Park for one of the largest demonstrations against Emanuel's education reforms since the strike began Monday.


    "You have proven to the world that you're not going to take it anymore," Lorretta Johnson, secretary-treasurer of the American Federation of Teachers, told demonstrators the day after the two sides reached a tentative labor deal.

    See strike coverage and more Chicago news at NBCChicago.com

    Kids may be back in school Monday if the Chicago Teachers Union is able to reach an agreement about salary increases, teacher evaluations and rehiring policy for laid-off teachers. NBC's Rehema Ellis reports.

    “We are on strike,” CTU President Karen Lewis told the crowd estimated to be about 25,000 decked out in red. “We have a framework; we do not have an agreement.”

    Lewis was one of 20 speakers who spoke at the event, which lasted more than two hours.

    Led by Lewis, a former high school chemistry teacher, 29,000 unionized teachers, counselors, nurses and other support staff staged their first strike in 25 years, leaving 350,000 Chicago students with no school this week.

    Emanuel angered the Chicago teachers by trying to push through proposals to radically reform teacher performance evaluations and weaken job protection for teachers whose schools are closed or perform poorly academically.

    Related:

    • 'Framework' of strike deal in place, Chicago schools official say 
    • Could Rahm Emanuel deal big blow to union power? 
    • theGrio: 'Safe havens' for kids offered during Chicago teachers strike
    • Question at heart of Chicago strike: How do you measure teacher performance?

    Emanuel retreated from some of his proposed reforms, although details of what he has agreed to with the union have not been made public. Negotiators for the mayor and the union announced a tentative agreement on Friday that could lead to an end to the strike.

    The confrontation has left many Democratic mayors and politicians supporting Emanuel, a former White House chief of staff for President Barack Obama. Other Democrats have sided with the unions, which are major financial supporters of the party and are needed to help Obama win re-election in November.

    Watch the Top Videos on NBCNews.com

    Emanuel denied Saturday there had been any pressure from the White House to settle the strike.

    "The short answer is no," Emanuel's spokeswoman, Sarah Hamilton, said. "There was no pressure, and no pressure would have worked, because they know that the mayor firmly believes that what we are doing to reform and improve our schools is the right thing."

    The union is wary of Emanuel, who has been called a "bully" and a "liar" by Lewis.

    Organizers hoped Saturday's rally would rival some of the huge demonstrations last year that protested the efforts of Republican Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker to curb the power of unions. The Wisconsin protests were unsuccessful but drew tens of thousands of government workers, including teachers.

    Activists and supporters from other unions joined the sea of strikers wearing red T-shirts at Saturday's rally.

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    "This is not just a Chicago struggle; this is a struggle for workers everywhere," civil rights leader Jesse Jackson said. "You've led a new struggle for courage."

    If all goes well in the negotiations between the Chicago School Board and the union this weekend, Lewis said she would ask some 800 union activists on Sunday to suspend the strike and teachers would return to classrooms Monday morning.

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    499 comments

    What great roles models. Would love to watch just one of these supposed "teachers" explain to their students why it's ok for the kids to have evaluations but it's not ok for the teachers to have evaluations.

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    Explore related topics: chicago, talks, strike, education, school, teacher, featured
  • 14
    Sep
    2012
    3:29am, EDT

    'Framework' of strike deal in place, Chicago schools official says

    Kids may be back in school on Monday if the Chicago Teachers Union is able to reach an agreement about salary increases, teacher evaluations and rehiring policy for laid off teachers. NBC's Rehema Ellis reports.

    By NBCChicago.com

    Updated at 7:45 p.m. ET: President of the Chicago school board said on Friday that school negotiators had reached a "framework" agreement with the Chicago Teachers Union on a new contract that will end a strike in the third-largest school district in the nation.

    "I am pleased to tell you we have in place frameworks around all of the major issues that should allow us to conclude this process and conclude it in time for our kids to be back in school on Monday morning," school board President Dave Vitale said.

    Moments earlier, the attorney for the Chicago Teachers Union said the final deal wasn't done yet.

    Read more from NBCChicago.com


    "The agreement has not been fully drafted and until an agreement is completed, the House of Delegates will not make a decision on whether to suspend the strike," CTU attorney Robert Bloch told reporters.

    The union's delegates still will meet at 2 p.m. as planned, Bloch said, and a report will made to them about the progress of contract talks. Negotiations ended for the day, and Bloch said the two parties hope to have a deal drafted by Sunday. The union's delegates is a larger consultative body than the negotiating team.

    "If the delegates so vote, we will suspend the strike and students can return to school on Monday," Bloch said.

    Talks are expected to continue at 9 a.m. Saturday.

    Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel issued a statement:

    "This tentative framework is an honest and principled compromise that is about who we all work for: our students. It preserves more time for learning in the classroom, provides more support for teachers to excel at their craft, and gives principals the latitude and responsibility to build an environment in which our children can succeed. Now, our most important work continues: providing every child in every community of Chicago an education to match their potential."

    Question at heart of Chicago strike: How do you measure teacher performance?

    After a late night and early morning of negotiations, school officials had said they were confidently close to an agreement that would end Chicago's teacher strike over education reforms sought by the mayor.

    Sitthixay Ditthavong / AP

    Public school teachers rallying at Chicago's Congress Plaza protest against billionaire Hyatt Hotel mogul Penny Pritzker, who is also a member of the Chicago Board of Education on Thursday.

    Thousands of teachers walked off the job Monday after months of negotiations failed to result in a new contract, affecting more than 350,000 students. It's the city's first teacher strike since October 1987.

    "There were some creative ideas passed around, but we still do not have an agreement," Karen Lewis, the fiery former high school chemistry teacher who leads the union, told reporters. "We're going to go back to our respective shops and do some numbers crunching."

    "It was a really, really long night," CPS chief education advisor Barbara Byrd-Bennett told NBCChicago.com. "We believe it was a beneficial night. We are so close I do believe it is very, very possible we could have a deal today."


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    She said she remained hopeful that students and teachers could return to class on Monday.

    theGrio: 'Safe havens' for kids offered during Chicago teachers strike

    "I think that we made some pretty good progress," Chicago School Board President David Vitale said on Thursday night. "We're closing a lot of gaps."

    'A sense of urgency'
    A more recent offer included provisions that would protect tenured teachers from dismissal in the first year of the evaluations.

    It also altered categories that teachers can be rated on and added an appeals process. Additionally, evaluations could work on a graduated scale throughout the term of the contract, comprising between 25 and 35 percent of a teacher's total score.

    "There's a sense of urgency today,'' said the Rev. Jesse Jackson, who stopped by the hotel where the negotiators were working Thursday and spoke to reporters. A day earlier, he said the two sides were talking past each other. 

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    498 comments

    Good old Jesse Jackson, he seems to stick his nose into every corner.

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    Explore related topics: chicago, talks, strike, education, school, teacher, featured
  • 11
    Sep
    2012
    2:58pm, EDT

    Question at heart of Chicago strike: How do you measure teacher performance?

    M. Spencer Green / AP

    Parents of Chicago public school students, Carmen Brownlee, left, and, Latonya Williams, right, walk a picket line outside Shoop Elementary School in support of striking CPS teachers, Sept. 11, 2012.

    By Sevil Omer, NBC News

    With negotiators trying to hammer out an agreement that would end Chicago’s teachers strike, one of the key sticking points is how to evaluate whether a teacher is doing a good job, an issue that has riled school boards across the U.S. in recent years.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Chicago’s school leaders are proposing that student performance on standardized tests count toward 25 percent of a teacher’s assessment, growing to 40 percent in five years, according to NBCChicago.com.

    But Chicago Teachers Union President Karen Lewis is critical of Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s push to make great use of standardized tests in teacher reviews, calling the process flawed. Union officials say the system wouldn’t do enough to take into account outside factors such as poverty, crime and homelessness.


    "Evaluate us on what we do, not the lives of our children we do not control," Lewis said in announcing the strike. It was unclear what union officials proposed instead.

    The battle in Chicago over using student test scores to judge teachers is just one front in a nationwide battle over how to make sure teachers are doing a good job, and that taxpayer dollars and student time aren’t going to waste.

    "This is going to become a long-term battle that everyone's watching very closely," said Eric Hanushek, a senior fellow in education at the Stanford University’s Hoover Institution, a conservative research center. "Teacher unions are at a crossroads: Are they going to participate in designing better teacher evaluations or resist and not change anything. The Chicago union seems to be taking the resist option, drawing their line in the sand."

    The Chicago Teachers Union and the city's public school district returned to the negotiating table Tuesday as thousands of teachers walked the picket lines for a second day in a strike that affected more than 350,000 students. NBC's Rehema Ellis reports.

    Watch the Top Videos on NBCNews.com 

    The Obama administration, through its $4 billion Race to the Top competition and waivers from the Bush-era No Child Left Behind, has urged states to change teacher assessments to make use of test data as a key component to set a teacher's pay or end their employment. The administration granted waivers to states that promised to show improvements in student and school performance and link teacher evaluations to student test scores.

    Supporters say current review tools fail to give administrators a reliable assessment of a teacher's effectiveness, while critics argue there's no evidence linking student performance to a teacher's worth.

    "Teacher evaluations should be based on multiple measures," said Marcus Mrowka, a spokesman for the American Federation of Teachers, which has 1.5 million members. "Testing has a role but should not sanction teachers but inform instruction."

    Twenty-four states now require teacher evaluations based on some measure of student growth, according to an analysis by the National Council on Teacher Quality, a research and policy group. Public school districts in Tennessee and Washington, D.C., recently implemented new teacher evaluations tying outcomes to merit raises, while Colorado and New York are deep in the process of developing an evaluation system, the council noted.

    In the past three years, at least 20 state legislatures have passed bills setting up new teacher evaluation processes, according to the council. Illinois joined the ranks last year when its legislature passed a law mandating new teacher evaluations, with Chicago’s leaders rushing to embrace the system, called the Performance Evaluation Review Act.

    “The evaluation system should be built around continuing improvement of instruction,” said Rob Weil, AFT’s director of field programs and educational issues in Washington, D.C. “Evaluations should help people improve and we need to build systems that give teachers the information they need so they can improve. The process should not be punitive.”

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    In Chicago, Lewis has warned that as many as 6,000 teachers could lose their jobs under the new evaluation system. The union represents about 25,000 teachers and staff, who walked off the job Monday.

    School officials say they do not know how union leaders determined that number, and telephone calls by NBC News to union headquarters went unanswered Tuesday.

    Emanuel has promised that teachers would not be fired in the first year of the evaluation process.

    Union leaders, however, are still resisting.

    “This is no way to measure the effectiveness of an educator,” said the union in a statement. “Further there are too many factors beyond our control which impact how well some students perform on standardized tests such as poverty, exposure to violence, homelessness, hunger and other social issues beyond our control.”

    About 60 percent of students in Chicago public schools complete high school, according to the Illinois Policy Institute, a nonpartisan think tank. 

    “We are spending more and more on students, throwing more and more money into the system,” said Ted Dabrowski, vice president of the Illinois Policy Institute. “If you want the best teachers in the system, then teachers should be paid and promoted based on their performance. It’s important that we improve the system, which has become a failed system.”

    Do you have an education-related story? Contact Sevil Omer at sevil.omer@msnbc.com

     

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    997 comments

    The NEA is the biggest and greediest labor union in the nation, and they don't care about your child- they only care about getting three months of paid vacation every year, and making it impossible to fire crappy "teachers".

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    Explore related topics: chicago, strike, education, teacher, union, emanuel
  • 20
    Aug
    2012
    4:24pm, EDT

    Chicago teachers staff informational picket lines at 6 schools

    By Sevil Omer, NBC News

    Members of the Chicago Teachers Union staffed informational picket lines at six elementary schools on Monday, threatening to strike if a deal on a new contract is not reached by Labor Day, NBCChicago.com reports.

    Teachers staged the protests at schools already in session to call attention to stalled contract negotiations, according to NBCChicago.com.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    “Students come first, but you can’t have a quality school district by putting a fair and equitable labor agreement last," said Chicago Teachers Union President Karen Lewis in a statement. "After Labor Day we want to be where we belong — in the classroom. However, if talks continue as they have been, we will be where we need to be (and that is) on the line.”


    Union officials have begun printing strike signs, The Associated Press reported on Monday. Upwards of 400,000 students would be affected by a walkout.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com 

    Teachers and school officials have been locked in contract talks since last year and still disagree on wages, health benefits and job security. The Chicago Teachers Union represents 25,000 members.

    The union and Board of Education already agreed on one big issue — hiring more teachers to help the district manage a longer school day rather than asking existing teachers to work more hours.

    Chicago’s public school students have the shortest school day — 5 hours and 45 minutes — among the nation's 50 largest districts, according the National Council on Teacher Quality. The national average is 6.7 hours in school.

    Chicago pushes longer school days as key to achievement

    Leaders of the Chicago Public Schools hope more time in the classroom will mean better grades and more high school graduates from the nation's third-largest school system.

    "Our focus should be on our kids and reaching a fair agreement at the negotiation table, where we have made significant progress over the last few weeks,” CPS spokeswoman Becky Carroll told NBCChicago.com. “Students must always come first and shouldn't be distracted from their learning especially now that kids throughout the district are benefiting from the start of the full school day." 


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    9 comments

    Students come first? Let us try to be honest here. Teacher's salaries seem to come first, that and keeping the union leaders well paid. Most people I have discussed educational experience with say that in all of the years of schooling they can count the good teachers, the ones the taught them well a …

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    Explore related topics: chicago, teacher, contract, negotiations, ctu, cps, educatioon
  • 17
    Aug
    2012
    3:46pm, EDT

    Texas teacher sentenced to five years in prison for having sex with five students

    View more videos at: http://nbcdfw.com.

    By Chris Van Horne and Frank Heinz, NBCDFW.com

    Updated 8 p.m. ET: FORT WORTH, Texas -- Brittni Colleps, the Kennedale teacher accused of having improper sexual relationships with several of her students, has been found guilty on all counts of five indictments against her.

    Colleps was sentenced to five years in prison Friday afternoon.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Colleps showed no emotion as the guilty verdicts were read on all 16 counts of the indictments. Her husband, on the other hand, was emotional and crying as his wife, with her bail now revoked, was led from the courtroom in the custody of the state.

    Colleps was indicted on five charges of having an inappropriate relationship between a teacher and student after school officials learned of the allegations and took the matter to the Arlington police.


    See the original report  |  More from NBCDFW.com

    The trial began earlier this week with graphic testimony including text messages and a cell phone video that showed one of the alleged sexual incidents. The prosecution wrapped up their case Thursday before closing arguments began Friday morning. 

    The five victims all testified to having a sexual relationship with the married mother of three in her Arlington home between April and May of 2011. All five of the students were in Colleps' senior English class in the spring of 2011 and all of the victims were at least 18 when the incidents occurred.

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    NBCDFW.com

    Brittni Colleps, shown in court on Thursday, has been found guilty on all counts of five indictments against her for having improper relationships with five of her students.

    Despite their age, Texas law forbids sexual relationships between teachers and students, even if the students are legal adults and consent to the relationship. Several of the victims testified Thursday to not wanting to testify in the trial with one of them saying he didn't want to press charges.

    After closing arguments, the jury took about an hour to render the verdict.

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    1941 comments

    Wow. I'm speechless. How dumb can a person be, really? I mean, if you're going to bang a few guys that aren't your husband, you're going to allow someone to tape it??

    Show more
    Explore related topics: schools, teacher, crime
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