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-   -   Teacher Body Slams Student Over a Box of Chocolates (http://www.coltfreaks.com/forum/showthread.php?t=35880)

Colts And Orioles 02-20-2018 06:07 PM

Teacher Body Slams Student Over a Box of Chocolates
 
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Substitute Teacher is Fired after Body-Slamming a Student Over a Box of Chocolates

(By Jessica Chia)

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/nati...icle-1.3830530




THE VIDEO: ll https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0LIq4UQBqhg


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Racehorse 02-20-2018 07:12 PM

There is a vast difference between a teacher and a substitute teacher. Your title is incorrect.

Colts And Orioles 02-20-2018 09:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Racehorse (Post 56323)



There is a vast difference between a teacher and a substitute teacher. Your title is incorrect.




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I'm sorry about the oversight. However, while there is a difference between substitute teachers and permanent teachers in terms of experience and tenure, fundamentally that doesn't matter much in this particular case. The person was still a teacher that was employed and entrusted by that school district. Teachers are screened and scrutinized much more heavily these days before being allowed to be in charge of a classroom of kids than they were 40-50 years ago ........ even substitute teachers.



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Racehorse 02-21-2018 10:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Colts And Orioles (Post 56345)
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I'm sorry about the oversight. However, while there is a difference between substitute teachers and permanent teachers in terms of experience and tenure, fundamentally that doesn't matter much in this particular case. The person was still a teacher that was employed and entrusted by that school district. Teachers are screened and scrutinized much more heavily these days before being allowed to be in charge of a classroom of kids than they were 40-50 years ago ........ even substitute teachers.



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Some school systems are so hard up for subs that they don't go through all of the protocols when hiring subs.

Colts And Orioles 02-21-2018 10:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Racehorse (Post 56461)



Some school systems are so hard up for subs that they don't go through all of the protocols when hiring subs.



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If they are that hard-up for substitute teachers, then they are probably are also hard-up for permanent teachers. And in those cases, they are almost always the poorer and severely disadvantaged school systems. School systems that are at least average or better (middle class or higher) rarely find themselves in such dire straits with their teacher and/or their substitute teacher situations which would force them to take such major risks.



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Racehorse 02-22-2018 08:08 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Colts And Orioles (Post 56466)
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If they are that hard-up for substitute teachers, then they are probably are also hard-up for permanent teachers. And in those cases, they are almost always the poorer and severely disadvantaged school systems. School systems that are at least average or better (middle class or higher) rarely find themselves in such dire straits with their teacher and/or their substitute teacher situations which would force them to take such major risks.



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Finding someone to work for ~$30K/year is much easier than finding someone for ~$50/day.

Colts And Orioles 02-22-2018 12:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Racehorse (Post 56487)



Finding someone to work for ~$30K/year is much easier than finding someone for ~$50/day.



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Yes. And as I just explained, that is not a problem for well-run school districts, as it is for poorer school districts that are underfunded and have overcrowded classrooms.

More significantly, that has little to do with the topic at hand. A teacher that was employed and entrusted by that school district body-slammed a student over a box of chocolates, and was immediately fired. The fact that it was a substitute teacher as opposed to a tenured teacher has no relevance to any of the parents of the kids from that school district who were horrified and outraged at what happened. They're not particularly concerned about the distinction, and I'm sure that they take no comfort in the fact that it was not a tenured teacher.



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Racehorse 02-22-2018 06:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Colts And Orioles (Post 56501)
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Yes. And as I just explained, that is not a problem for well-run school districts, as it is for poorer school districts that are underfunded and have overcrowded classrooms.

More significantly, that has little to do with the topic at hand. A teacher that was employed and entrusted by that school district body-slammed a student over a box of chocolates, and was immediately fired. The fact that it was a substitute teacher as opposed to a tenured teacher has no relevance to any of the parents of the kids from that school district who were horrified and outraged at what happened. They're not particularly concerned about the distinction, and I'm sure that they take no comfort in the fact that it was not a tenured teacher.



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No, a babysitter did it, not a teacher.

Colts And Orioles 02-22-2018 08:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Colts And Orioles (Post 56501)
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Yes. And as I just explained, that is not a problem for well-run school districts, as it is for poorer school districts that are underfunded and have overcrowded classrooms.

More significantly, that has little to do with the topic at hand. A teacher that was employed and entrusted by that school district body-slammed a student over a box of chocolates, and was immediately fired. The fact that it was a substitute teacher as opposed to a tenured teacher has no relevance to any of the parents of the kids from that school district who were horrified and outraged at what happened. They're not particularly concerned about the distinction, and I'm sure that they take no comfort in the fact that it was not a tenured teacher.



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Quote:

Originally Posted by Racehorse (Post 56554)



No, a babysitter did it, not a teacher.



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Considering how obstinate you continue to be, I'm not going to bother explaining this to you anymore.

It was a teacher that did this to the kid, whether you like it or not. Nobody involved in this particular situation (the kids that witnessed it, the parents of said kids, the school system which fired him, or even the press which covered it) is making the distinction and arguing the point of it being a substitute teacher as opposed to a tenured teacher, and why that subsequently changes everything (which is what you are bent on insisting.)



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Racehorse 02-23-2018 07:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Colts And Orioles (Post 56560)
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Considering how obstinate you continue to be, I'm not going to bother explaining this to you anymore.

It was a teacher that did this to the kid, whether you like it or not. Nobody involved in this particular situation (the kids that witnessed it, the parents of said kids, the school system which fired him, or even the press which covered it) is making the distinction and arguing the point of it being a substitute teacher as opposed to a tenured teacher, and why that subsequently changes everything (which is what you are bent on insisting.)



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Yeah, I'm being obstinate. And, yeah, you're not going to explain it again.

As for accuracy, compare your thread title to the title of the article. There is where the real story is.


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