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Texas group sues to keep teacher background checks private

Yikes! On June 23, 2008, the Houston Chronicle reported that "A teacher's group filed a lawsuit ... in an effort to prevent the release to the media of personal information gleaned from teacher background checks." The lede is enough to scare the pants off of parents who send their kids to the Texas public school system. The immediate questions that comes to mind are, "What do these teachers have to hide that came out in their background checks? And would I want these teachers instructing or being alone with my children?"  The answers would be I want to know what's in these reports, and I wouldn't want my kids to be alone with those teachers that had shady backgrounds.
 
Thank goodness I live in Pennsylvania. But Pennsylvania parents aren't safe either. Ten years ago, there were reports that teachers, who were fired for misconduct with public school children, were the same teachers moving to another county and getting teaching jobs at a different school districts within the state.
 
So what should parents do? I suggest that parents form groups to fight teachers' unions and other teacher organizations that prohibit their background checks to be made public. As I've said before, public school teachers are paid by the taxpayers of their state, and we deserve to know what they've done that could potentially harm our children because we're ultimately responsible for our children's well-being and safety. If these teachers don't like it, well, I guess they should've thought about that before they did whatever they did in private to harm their reputations. Otherwise, it's time for them to find another vocation that won't harm another child.
 
 
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Sex in Schools: Why Parents Should be Concerned

Doug Giles' newest article called Memphis High School: Reading, Writing And Bumping nad Grinding, was about an isolated incident in Tennesee. Yet, I'm afraid that it might be a new trend for public schools. For example, in Lancaster County, Pa., there was  a incident, possibly sexual in nature (the Ephrata Area School District won't divulge what exactly happened), that happened in a middle school classroom. According to an Ephrata Reviewhttp://ephratareview.com) article dated on Wednesday, May 14, 2008, the Ephrata Area School District's school board is still maintaining its stance of not telling what happened in a middle school classroom in April 2008. The Ephrata Review states, "A nonviolent, consensual incident occurred between students in April in a middle school classroom. The teacher, who was in the classroom the entire time, was unawared at the time that it occurred. The incident was reported to the teacher at the beginning of hte next class period, and the teacher immendiately reported the matter to the Middle School Office."
 
Not a big deal, right? The problem comes in when the school district refuses to disclose what the "incident" actually was, leaving the community to wonder what happened in that classroom. The school board maintains that it wasn't neither drugs nor weapons. So what's the alternative? The school district and its board are hiding under state and federal statutes, like the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, citing that the law prohibits, "the disclosure of certain student educational records and personally identifiable information." Okay, I don't want to know who the kids were, but I do want to know what happened, and why did it happen in the first place.
 
Further on in the article, the author, Gary P. Klinger, noted, "The district acted immediately, beginning its investigation immediately, and the district called the parents in the class immediately. There was no cover up at all, neither by the teacher nor by any member of the administration. Further the school board was fully apprised of the situation, and members were advised by our legal counsel not to discuss the details of the situation with the public."
 
Well, maybe no cover up, per se, but still all parents should be notified as to what happened. We are paying taxes, and some of us, are sending our children to a school in that district. We don't need to know the grisly details. Just what happened; why did the kids feel free enough to do that; and what the heck was the teacher doing that he/she didn't notice what was going on?
 
Granted, I'm making a leap of judgement here, but since it wasn't drug or weapon-related, what else could it be? It burns me up that for parents like me, who want their children to get a descent education, but can't afford private school and don't want to homeschool, have no choice but to send them to these moral educational vacuums that we pay taxes for.
 
First it was kids shooting their classmates into oblivion. Now it's sex in school. What's next? I'm afraid to even contemplate that.
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