There's an interesting police report out now on a mother that charged her son's teacher with child abuse after she forced him to listen to his class mate's complaints about him and allowed them to vote him out of class for the day.Here's a summary from Slate (complete police report included in the link):
5/30/2008 3:42:37 PM
To be fair to the kid, it was actually Aspergers syndrome, which is a rather high functioning form of autism.
5/30/2008 3:45:36 PM
why cant we just kill everyone thats genetically fucked up...tired of worrying about these less fortunate peopleor at least devote one of the states to just all the messed up people[Edited on May 30, 2008 at 3:48 PM. Reason : think of the money that would be saved]
5/30/2008 3:48:05 PM
Don't you have some form of downs DNL?The teacher fucked up, it's not her place to judge kids in front of the class, especially at such a young age. She should lose her job if she thinks something like that is appropriate for young children.
5/30/2008 3:49:57 PM
You're thinking of Florida.
5/30/2008 3:50:12 PM
why can't we kill this whiny mother for bitching
5/30/2008 3:50:18 PM
5/30/2008 3:59:58 PM
agentilon,A lot of assertions there but not much argument. Why is it a bad approach? I can think of a few things good about it. 1) it makes it clear that Alex's actions were hurting his classmates 2) it narrows down on what specific problems they had with his behavior 3) it connected negative consequences with negative behavior. If you're trying to change a child's behavior, those sound like good hit points. You apparently don't like it because it made the kid feel bad, but I would argue that that's part of the point. He should learn to associate disrupting class with feeling bad. It really isn't that much different from having to stand in the corner (another publicly humiliating forms of punishment). It seems like you would have to argue that the degree of public humiliation in this punishment was so bad that the kid will be somehow "scarred for life". That's going to be a pretty tough case to make. How much public humiliation does it take to create emotional damage? and how do we define and measure that emotional damage? Not easy questions to answer. [Edited on May 30, 2008 at 4:23 PM. Reason : ``]
5/30/2008 4:21:43 PM
The kid has a diagnosed mental problem, punishing him for something he cannot help is counterproductive, especially if it's after those behaviors have occurred.
5/30/2008 4:29:56 PM
5/30/2008 4:31:22 PM
^^^ those arguments are generally beside the point. Maybe this child did need to be dealt with in a way that it was clear to him that he was a disruption and his presence was bringing down the rest of the class. But the teacher's actions were what was out of line. It is not her duty or right to tell a student "I hate you right now" or to actively turn his fellow students against him. If he needs physiological counseling, then get him a psychologist. If he needs disciplinary action, then let the principle or a school officer take care of it. If he needs to be separated from the class, then fine - do it. But a kindergarten teacher does not have carte blanche to humiliate or publicly discipline a 5 year old in whatever "creative fashion" she can come up with.[Edited on May 30, 2008 at 4:33 PM. Reason : .]
5/30/2008 4:33:04 PM
5/30/2008 4:37:13 PM
^ The part alleged stuff about her telling him she "hated him" is where I think she went wrong. She should have kept her cool. But nothing you said really addresses any of the points I raised. You move on from saying the punishment is bad to simply saying it "isn't her right" to punish in this fashion. How do you know? Teachers have the right to keep order in their own class room and there are guidelines for how they can do that. And I really expect that she has a better understanding of those guidelines than you or I. If she violated those guidelines, she will likely be punished, but neither your nor I have any clue.
5/30/2008 4:40:30 PM
my wife is a special education teacher at a Wake County high school. A large portion of her kids are autistic, have Aspergers, brain damaged, or otherwise severely LD. If she did any of those things she would be fired on the spot.
5/30/2008 4:42:41 PM
^^ It's OK because it's within guidelines?[Edited on May 30, 2008 at 4:43 PM. Reason : ]
5/30/2008 4:42:53 PM
agent, apparently things are diff in Fla because she was not fired on the spot (though St. Lucie County Public School District is investigating to determine whether department regulations were vuolated). Tarzan, no...I think it's an effective punishment strategy because of the 3 reasons i listed previously (scroll up).
5/30/2008 4:56:16 PM
Maybe she was so desperate to get him out of her class she did this on purposeMaybe nobody would help her get this kid out of the class so the other 23 could learn
5/30/2008 5:05:37 PM
^^ Just to be clear: you think it acceptable for a teacher to actively encourage 5 year-old kindergarten students to deride a fellow student?You understand we're talking about 5 year olds, right? Five year olds have little understanding of their own emotions and sense of self. I can almost guarantee that Alex Barton is--at best--only dimly aware that his actions can affect others in anything other than a physical manner.If nothing else, Portillo has now tied her classroom authority to the whim of 5 year olds. Great teaching, I tell you what.
5/30/2008 5:14:21 PM
Without meeting the kid, you can garuntee the kid is "dimly aware" of what goes on around him? Great. Hey all those folks are like that guy on Rain Man, right? Let's get this straight. Based on the police report, this doesn't sound like a free-form "pick on Alex" forum. She asked the class a specific question: to describe what they didn't like about the things he did. Even 5 year olds are smart enough to answer a question like that. And if you read her comments in the police report she sounds very concerned about the well-being of those kids, including Alex.And let's be clear that he did do things to disrupt class. The incident that got him sent to the principal to begin with was that he was getting under desks and lifting them with his feet so that the papers and materials feel all over the floor. Not exactly conducive for learning is it? Now, if Alex really doesn't understand what he's doing that would be one thing. But there are degrees to autism. The fact that Alex has been allowed into a regular kindergarden class makes me think that he isn't rocking-back-and-forth-card-counting-out-of-his-mind-crazy.[Edited on May 30, 2008 at 5:36 PM. Reason : ``]
5/30/2008 5:33:08 PM
I didn't say that he was dimly aware 'of what goes on around him'. Five year olds act out for selfish reasons--I said Alex is likely only dimly aware that his behavior negatively impacts others. I can say this because he's 5 years old. It's unlikely that he or any other 5 year old has the emotional maturity to fully understand the emotional needs and states of others.And let's be clear: I'm not saying that Alex should be in that classroom. However, the teacher handled the situation incorrectly. Now, this may be a response to other circumstances, e.g. school administration doesn't support the teachers properly, or Alex's parents inappropriately insist on mainstreaming. If such is the case, this situation needs to be adressed on a larger scale than an individual teacher.
5/30/2008 5:53:32 PM
Good Lord, the kid is five years-old. As long as they aren't playing with themselves or pooping their pants in class, they get an A+ in behavior from me.Democracy, is great and all, but voting him out of the class is one of the dumbest things I've ever heard.As far as the list of bad qualities goes, that's not a horrible thing to do. But there's a right way to do it. Step one is also having a list of good qualities.All in all, this teacher doesn't sound too bad though. Scale of one to ten, this Alex kid's humiliation probably comes in at a 6. It might affect him in the future, but kids are pretty resilient. More than anything, this sounds like a funny story: "And they fucking voted me out--14 to 2!!!" AHAHAHA
5/30/2008 6:11:50 PM
Since when do a bunch of 5 year old kids' opinions matter on an issue like this? Let's say Alex was just the classroom dork that didn't say anything and kept to himself. I'd be willing to bet if you let a bunch of 5 year olds vote on that they'd kick him out because he is "stupid". All of a sudden it's ok to kick a student out of class because he's unpopular?
5/30/2008 6:33:37 PM
Yes the teacher fucked up and should be punished. Nonetheless this does NOT warrant a child abuse charge. No more then the drunk driver getting charged with 2nd degree murder for someone he killed while driving impaired. Yes he should go to jail and will face the shit but he did not murder someone. Reckless operation of a vehicle and voluntary manslaughter yes.[Edited on May 30, 2008 at 6:57 PM. Reason : l]
5/30/2008 6:56:56 PM
^ did you really just compare those two?
5/30/2008 7:20:31 PM
seriously? 5-year olds? Moral development at that age consists of one thing: if i am bad, I am punished. That is pretty much the way all 5-year olds see it. PSY101, people. Putting the kid in front of the class to "show him others felt" would accomplish nothing, because 5-year olds don't care what others feel!The only real thing that happened here is that the teacher made the kid feel bad, which sort of works as a punishment, but there are far better methods available, and certainly ones that aren't as degrading. An authority-figure telling a kindergartner that "she hates him" is practically the worst thing you can do. Jeez!The teacher should be fired on the spot. Child-abuse? Please, that's bullshit. But the teacher should be fired.
5/30/2008 7:46:23 PM
I don't think she should be fired. Teachers are human too, and in all likelihood what we have here is a rabid demon child (std disclaimer: figuratively speaking, tongue-in-cheek, have a sense of humor). I'm not sure the autism thing gives me much more sympathy -- kids act out for lots of reasons. Many have ridiculously bad home lives due to factors beyond their control. All bets are off.Such is the perfect storm of public education -- teachers in a politically-correct pressure cooker, basically untrained to deal with kids that often have insane disciplinary and personal problems. But each one is a special little snowflake. I really don't understand how or why people do it for a living ...
5/30/2008 8:12:14 PM
Ummm. I have taken no courses in teaching. And yet even I know that having a group of 5 year olds critique a peer is pointless. Moreover, I also know that telling a 5 year old that you hate him is a bad plan. Surely someone who has achieved a degree in education and is certified as an educator should know better. The bitch should be fired
5/30/2008 9:56:35 PM
5/31/2008 12:03:17 AM
He'll grow up, shoot up a high school, and then we'll all talk about how senseless it was, what an evil person he was, and wonder why it happened...
5/31/2008 12:22:05 AM
5/31/2008 1:32:12 AM
To the above posters ...Smoker4:
5/31/2008 6:59:15 AM
So it's 100% confirmed that he's autistic?I read that he was being tested for autism-- which doesn't mean a whole lot at that age. When many parents realize that their kids are socially inept and unable to behave, they begin scrambling for a medical/psychological diagnosis for what is actually simply bad parenting.
5/31/2008 8:03:52 AM
5/31/2008 8:59:32 PM
This is pretty messed up. It sounds like the kid doesn't belong in a regular class, but if he's autistic and can't help the way he acts, he shouldn't be ridiculed for it.
5/31/2008 10:37:43 PM
if he doesn't belong in a regular class, then the district should employ standard assessment practices as used by education professionals, and provide him with the resources he needs.if he's high-functioning, or whatever, and falls within boundaries of "normal", then the teacher should in concert with the adminstration, establish clear boundaries of acceptable behavior as well a consequences for non-compliance.what a teacher should NOT do, is set up some sort of 5-year-old Department of Justice, a la Lord of the Flies, and declare to the child in front of the class that "I hate you" and all this other shit that allegedly happened.jesusfuckinchristalready.. 5-year-olds can not be given the responsibility of punishing their peers.
6/1/2008 1:52:36 AM
6/1/2008 9:24:40 AM
I was thinking more people would be supportive of the teacher. I mean, she has apparently had similar problems with Alex like this in the past, she sent him to the principal, the principal sends him back, she didn't think she or her class was ready so she sent him to the nurse. The only thing anyone has disagreed with is that she allowed her fellow students to explain their discomfort with Alex's behavior and to voice their opinion of whether they wanted him back for this time period as well. And I'm hearing a lot of conflicting reasons for why allowing the kids to voice their complaints was bad. Sometimes in the same post! Here is aaron.
6/1/2008 12:21:30 PM
Umm...I think you need to read the thread again.
6/1/2008 1:10:30 PM
6/1/2008 1:21:40 PM
A Tan, 1) I also said that her alleged remark was wrong (it is only mentioned in the police report as comming from Alex's mother, who was not there). If that's your only beef with what she might have done then we are in agreement. If it isn't, I'm still waiting for someone to come up with a consistant rationale for why her punishment was wrong (beyond "it sounds like it would hurt his feelings and all children with hurt feelings grow up to shoot people from bell towers!!"). 2) yes, they are different from adults. I did not call them "little adults" so don't put words in my mouth. I only meant that they are in a transformative period and one of the tasks of education is to teach children how to operate in the "grown up" world. Aaron's characterization of 5-year children as being totally oblivious to the feelings of others (essentially making them sociopathic robots) is simply just dead wrong (not to mention contradictory to his other remarks). Yet it's characterization of children that seems popular on this board. You've also made the same case:
6/1/2008 3:29:12 PM
6/1/2008 3:58:13 PM
6/1/2008 4:29:02 PM
^ are you kidding me? Five year olds know good and well that calling people names is hurtful
6/1/2008 5:06:46 PM
okay, Boone, i didn't realize you were an educator. obviously you have more of a clue about these issues than the average person. sorry.but for you to say,
6/1/2008 5:21:37 PM
Let me quote myself, this time with emphasis.
6/1/2008 5:36:15 PM
6/1/2008 6:06:54 PM
ug.[Edited on June 1, 2008 at 6:36 PM. Reason : ``]
6/1/2008 6:36:17 PM
ug?[Edited on June 1, 2008 at 7:37 PM. Reason : pad]
6/1/2008 7:36:51 PM
6/2/2008 10:05:08 AM
disruptive kids need to be removed from class and/or punished. Teachers and kids who are there to learn shouldn't have to put up with it.If the kid is retarded, then put him in with the rest of the retards so he can get specific help. Putting them in the normal population isn't helping anyone. If the kid is just being a dick, then punish him and hope he eventually learns how to behave.
6/2/2008 10:25:36 AM