I'm for it
2/8/2010 7:39:44 PM
You idiots aren't looking at the correct law. 4 years older, any age, teacher, felony. Less than 4 years, misdemeanor.
2/9/2010 9:42:03 AM
It isn't about simply providing a deterrent, but rather a consequence that can prevent the situation from happening again. if they can no longer teach then the likelihood of the teacher picking another student is dramatically reduced. once blacklisted the teacher no longer has an immediate conflict of interest with the student and as such their relationship can continue should the two of them see fit.
2/9/2010 10:08:02 AM
But they are already blacklisted in addition to being put on the sex offender's list. Do you think a registered sex offender is going to get a job teaching children ever again?So that's not stopping them from doing it, so why would lessening the consequences do the trick?
2/9/2010 10:49:50 AM
I believe that you're clearly missing the point. a point which was well established from the OP forward.The point is these guys aren't raging pedophiles picking up children at parks and locking them in their vans. These are adults who are engaging in relationships with fully developed people who are at the age of sexual consent. As such the penalties often applied can be deemed overkill.the assertion is that since being blacklisted and added to a sexual offenders list essentially does the same amount to resolve the issue there is no need for the harsher penalty due to the circumstances of these involvements in contrast to the others mentioned above.[Edited on February 9, 2010 at 11:31 AM. Reason : edits]
2/9/2010 11:30:52 AM
2/9/2010 12:41:48 PM
I think the moral of this story is: Never be a teacher.
2/9/2010 12:46:31 PM
Or, keep it in your fucking pants, even when that jailbait is trying to get you in trouble.
2/9/2010 12:47:49 PM
Or, take on any other profession and pull it out of your pants whenever you want.
2/9/2010 12:50:08 PM
2/9/2010 1:11:04 PM
I think the power a school employee has over an adult student is being grossly exaggerated.[Edited on February 9, 2010 at 1:27 PM. Reason : An]
2/9/2010 1:23:46 PM
Very much so. I'm entertained that although teachers can't convince students to sit down, pay attention, do their homework, and not smoke in the bathrooms people imagine these teachers are able to coerce and prey on these people in their utmost vulnerable of states.
2/9/2010 1:51:24 PM
disco_stu:
2/9/2010 2:31:11 PM
2/9/2010 2:53:06 PM
Point 1: They aren't pedophiles going after children, they are of legal consenting age. As such, the penalties are overkill.Point 2: Teachers shouldn't be sleeping with students because of their position of power. They deserve the proverbial 'book' be thrown at them.You didn't dispute point one, you gave a counter point, or point 2. So yes, you are retarded.
2/9/2010 3:06:49 PM
what ^ said and in your ramblings you failed to address my inquiries into the consistencies of your belief that were posted above, thus "responding to a point and explaining [your] position" is hardly applicable. Even though you failed to address my questions I will entertain yours.
2/9/2010 3:27:49 PM
I think the implication was "a teacher can ruin a studen'ts life through academic fraud", not by any direct consequences of sexual interaction. This is a power that can be used to coerce a student into sex.
2/9/2010 3:35:00 PM
^DING DING DING^^Nope, I'm comfortable with the law as it is now as it genuinely protects the students that will be coerced at the detriment only to mythical teachers having real mature relationships with students.I'm curious as to how you plan to change the law so that it takes each case on a case-by-case basis...the state shall interview in great detail the motives of both the defendant and the victim and shall determine if the victim really loves the defendant but not in any way that would suggest that the victim's love was coerced...
2/9/2010 3:54:05 PM
I think the coercion is what needs to be proven, not the lack therof.However, I understand that such coercion is quite easily hidden, so I tolerate this law. I do think it's scope should be narrowed significantly. Just because you work at a school doesn't mean you have an academic relationship with every student there.[Edited on February 9, 2010 at 4:06 PM. Reason : .]
2/9/2010 4:03:14 PM
^^^I'll admit that I misread that the first time, but did not realize it until after all of the bottom part was typed. feeling that the position a student's life may not necessarily be ruined by such a relationship was important to acknowledge i chose not to erase it.^^you still have failed to address any of the questions that address your consistencies regarding if a person at age 16 is responsible for the decisions they make. I suppose the easiest way to never question your beliefs is to never actually discuss it.
2/9/2010 4:14:31 PM
2/9/2010 4:18:40 PM
Academic fraud should be treated as a separate offense.
2/10/2010 11:24:34 AM
2/10/2010 2:53:20 PM
Cause we are the United States of Freedums duh
2/10/2010 6:03:22 PM
2/10/2010 6:53:01 PM
I agree with
2/10/2010 6:57:38 PM
Any sexual relationship between a teacher and student should be criminalized, regardless of age. I'm surprised at how few people here have focused on the essential problem with this type of relationship.When a student enters the classroom, they are in a position of subjugation to the teacher. There is an authority gap that is significant, regardless of level of maturity, age, or actual intelligence. The teacher, by the very nature of their role within the classroom or the school, is given a degree of power. If two strangers of the same age were to meet on the street, that same power dynamic would not come into play.Both the student and the teacher have certain responsibilities and expectations given the nature of their roles within the learning environment. Trust is a big factor in that. A teacher is not like everyone else in society of the same age, they play a central role in developing not only the mind but the personality of the person they are overseeing in the classroom. Any teacher who takes advantage of that trust and their role as an authority figure who can be trusted to do the right thing with respect to a student deserves to be charged with a crime.On a side note, I especially hate those female teachers who get off with light sentences because it is perceived that young men are somehow more advanced and not being taken advantage of by the female teacher. There should be no double standards with respect to that, they should treat her the same way they would if the genders were reversed.
2/10/2010 8:48:54 PM
Nobody is arguing that a teacher shouldn't be punished or left of with a slap on the wrist. The point is that the a teacher lets say who is 28 should not be punished and grouped in the same category as pedophiles, rapists, and the peewee hermans off the world (got caught beating it in a movie theatre) for having sexual relations with a student who potentially is old enough to star in a porn.If it is found the teacher was blackmailing the students for sexual relations then this would enter a whole new category of troubles but still should not make one a sexual offender unless the student is < 16 yr old (age of consent). At worst for a 18+ student the punishment should be a misdeamenor. For those at the age of consent 16+ but less than the age of adulthood perhaps a mild felony, without the "sex offender" label added. There is all this concern about "teacher authority and students" but what about college kids??? Many kids come to college are 18 just like many high school seniors.... Are we going to start charging professors as sex offenders who receive a BJ from a freshman in order to get extra credit. No one is arguing that any of this is "ok" and/or should not be punished. The punishment though should match the crime...
2/11/2010 10:44:25 AM
2/11/2010 11:35:10 AM
2/11/2010 11:38:13 AM
^^My reasoning is perfectly sound. You are comparing two situations that are not analagous, for a variety of reasons. First, the student-teacher and employee-employer relationship both involve power differentials, but a student cannot decide for any reason they choose, as an employee can, to remove himself or herself from the environment. A student cannot quit class and leave school whenever they want to and simply find another school the next day. The majority of students are actually required by law to attend. Second, a teacher is expected to provide proper guidance, shaping and developing the mind of a student mentally and emotionally. It is presumed that guidance is non-biased and not intended to manipulate the student for personal ends. In essence, the teacher is there to assist the student. An employer is there to serve the company, not the employee, and this is understood. Although students may be capable in some ways, they are still extremely impressionable and easily shaped by their teachers. That is their purpose in the classroom.Lastly, the situational factor does come into play. I honestly don't think that relationships amongst college students and their professors should be criminalized, because when you enter college you are automatically assumed to be able to maintain yourself as an autonomous entity. The same is not true in high school, where you are presumed to be reliant on adults. When you take a job, you are presumed to be a self reliant individual, the same way you are in college. I personally think that relationships between employer and employee should be treated the same as college professor and student. They should result in internal disciplinary action, but should not be criminalized.
2/11/2010 12:21:03 PM
2/11/2010 12:45:11 PM
quick, informal poll, just to see if there is a correlation...Do you agree with the law as it is currently written regarding teachers having sex with students?Do you have children?Yes and Yes.-----------------------------------------------------Oh, and moron...I don't advertise.[Edited on February 11, 2010 at 1:06 PM. Reason : likes disco music.]
2/11/2010 1:05:17 PM
2/11/2010 1:07:00 PM
(I wasn't aware this thread has been exclusively limited to 16+ year old students...because if it hasn't, then I am correct in saying that the majority of students don't fit into this category...don't talk down to me by acting as if I don't know the age limitations for dropping out of school, or the specific requirements. Dropping out of school and quitting a job are not even remotely similar.)I thought about rebutting each of your points, but the main problem I have is that in several areas, you make faulty syllogisms, which is separate from the fundamental disagreement we have.I never said anything about extorting sexual favors, which should clearly be treated differently. All of my comments were focused on the student-teacher dynamic, and yet you expanded it to apply to the age based competency outside the classroom, which is entirely different. You also don't recognize that actions need not be overt to qualify as manipulation. In fact, the more subversive, frequently the more impactful. If you don't acknowledge that the relationship between a student and teacher is different by its very nature, then there's no point in having the argument. As someone who has interacted with middle and high school students from ages 10-21 for the last 8 years, I think that I am pretty qualified in saying that relationship is not the same as one outside the school.In the end it all seems to come down to a matter of opinion, but based on all of the firsthand evidence I have accumulated, to NOT treat the teacher-student relationship as unique from others and place a more onerous responsibility on teachers to avoid corrupting that is to invite many more situations where teachers violate that trust, and in the end, violate our children.[Edited on February 11, 2010 at 1:19 PM. Reason : m]
2/11/2010 1:13:47 PM
2/11/2010 1:30:29 PM
2/11/2010 1:51:25 PM
I like how you call 16 the age of consent, citing the law in North Carolina to define this when the very same laws define teacher-student sexual relations as illegal.In fact, search all of the NC Statutes for "age of consent". 0 hits.So you're conveniently ignoring the laws regarding teacher-student relationships when you're coming up with this mythical "age of consent". What you should be saying "age of consent, unless the older person is a teacher". "Age of consent" is meaningless in the context of NC Law.
2/11/2010 2:45:02 PM
I hate the quote box game. It makes Soap Box so tedious.Sorry if I am being stubborn and seem closed minded, but nothing you have said IRSeriousCat has done anything to change my position on the issue, and given your rationale, I don't anticipate that happening. Based on the way SB works, I don't see you changing your mind either, so I'm going to say this last bit and then let you have the last word on the subject if you'd like.I think that your idea about manipulation and mine are somewhat different. You seem to think that only when it is clear that someone is being manipulated is it egregious enough to warrant criminal charges. I am saying that by the very nature of the position a teacher has, they have significant sway over a student. When I was a senior in high school at 16 and worked at a restaurant, my boss didn't have the same type of impact that my teachers did. A good salesman can convince you that you want to buy a product even when you don't, and the same is true of these types of relationships. And how exactly do you prove in a court of law the subtle comments, reinforcement mechanisms, and seemingly benign behaviors which lead to a student bonding with that adult to the point where the adult takes advantage of the situation?Also, it is violating our children when a teacher takes advantage of that position to pursue a sexual relationship. I don't deny that it has more of an emotional connotation when I use the term children, but that is what they are. We have legislated in this country that certain acts can take place based on an age limit, others based on an age limit and proving you have a certain degree of competency, and then others, like the ones being discussed, that are prohibited under penalty of law from taking place based on the relationship one has to the other individual.[Edited on February 11, 2010 at 4:47 PM. Reason : d]
2/11/2010 4:44:20 PM
My point from the beginning has been that as long as they are of the legal age of consent, be it 16 or 18, the encounter does not happen at school, and the school personnel does not have any influence on them (such as one of their teachers, administrators, guidance counselor, etc.) then it should only be punished by the employer and not as a sex offender.To punish a teacher or school personnel from one Wake County school that has an otherwise legal relationship with somebody of age that they don't know from work, such as the guy who got with a girl from another school in the district that wasn't his, and throw him on a sex offender list is ridiculous. Much like the 16 year old who got with a chick that was 13 but told him she was 15. He screwed up, but I doubt he was the highest level of sex offender. Or the kids who are arrested for child porn when their girlfriend sends them a sexy picture. In general I think the sex offender lists are totally oversaturated, and the true perverts who take advantage of children get hidden by the ridiculous things that are being required to register on the offender list.
2/11/2010 6:29:17 PM
I can take bribes. Politicians go to jail when they take bribes.I think we can agree that this is fair. There are different standards for public officials.As a teacher, I strongly believe that teacher/student relationships are sexual offenses, and the teachers who perpetrate them are in fact "true perverts."[Edited on February 11, 2010 at 6:47 PM. Reason : ]
2/11/2010 6:46:47 PM
2/11/2010 7:35:02 PM
^Obviously doesn't work in schools. Some of them look way older and then some still look like they should, meaning like kids, not sluts. Hell some of the chicks in early HS late MS already have tramp stamps and nipple piercings. We've had to send some home or tell them to take them out or cover them up.We had one guy last year that got in trouble for fingering a chick. He was 16 and she was 12! So yea, that shit does happen, and he got arrested when her parents found out, though they decided to drop the charges later.
2/11/2010 8:31:19 PM
The double standard continues!http://www.wral.com/news/news_briefs/story/7066439/
2/18/2010 9:48:28 AM