PDA

View Full Version : Indiana school officials refuse to comment on sex-in-class incident...UPDATE - Students Expelled



sws4420
03-08-2007, 01:46 AM
Indianapolis - The Warren Township school district is gaining national attention after a report confirmed young students engaging in sexual activity during class time.

School officials are refusing to comment publicly, prompting concern and outrage among township parents.

Two days after some uncovered hidden facts about two Raymond Park Middle School students engaging in sexual activity during shop class, Warren Township School administrators still aren't talking. The report is raising questions nationwide. Nearly a half million viewers heard about the incident from the Drudge Report online.

Parents in the district are outraged.

"It just upsets me because it sounds like they're trying to make excuses. It doesn't matter to me how long it was, you know, 30 seconds, 30 minutes; it's too long. I want to know where the teacher was and how this was able to happen," said Laura Pliquett, who has a nine-year-old possibly headed to Raymond Park.

Troy Weber has a fifth grader and he's also concerned. "How could it have been kept quiet for that long and still to us kind of being swept under the rug?" he questioned.

Associate School Superintendent Dr. Jeff Swennson confirmed the incident happened almost four months ago in an Industrial Arts lab with the teacher present. He told reporters that another child acted as a "look-out," disputing an insider's claim that as many as ten children may have witnessed the act. More than two parents who called the district say they were told the incident only lasted 30 seconds.

"The 30 seconds, that's not even a consideration - it's the fact that something occurred," said Kevin McDowell, the attorney for the Indiana Department of Education. He says districts often consult him on serious legal matters, but says this is the first he's heard of the Raymond Park incident.

Schools are NOT required to report such incidents to the state. McDowell won't criticize Warren Township, but doesn't agree with the district's approach.

"I can't imagine any administrator worth her salt or his salt that wouldn't address a situation like this because it is a serious matter. I really can't answer for them. I'm sure they have their reasons why. You know, is that the way I would address it? Well, my first blush reaction is, you know, I would have handled it differently," he said.

Jackie Stevens says the issue was particularly bothersome because she has a sixth grade student that attends another Warren Township School. She wonders if there are any other secrets.

"I just want to be very confident that they're not witnessing and they're being protected - they're not witnessing things that are harmful to them emotionally, physically - whatever."

McDowell agrees parents have legitimate issues about classroom supervision - but has a different take concerning students who may have witnessed the activity:


(Here comes the ballsiest statement in this whole article -bill)

"This doesn't pose any danger to the other students even if they did see it," he said.

When asked for claification, McDowell repeated his stance.

"All right, so they may have witnessed this. While this is an activity you certainly don't see in a school and it's something that would be certainly unusual, I don't feel - I don't know where it posed any immediate danger to those children who saw it," McDowell said.

Many of the parents we spoke with are considering whether to send their children to Raymond Park next year or to even remain in the district.

Warren Township School Board member Marlene Tisdale is the only school board member who returned our calls. She repeated the district's statement that two students were involved in inappropriate conduct and that the school corporation investigated and considers the matter closed.

Parents can voice their concerns at the upcoming school board meeting on March 21st. Coming up Thursday at 6:00 pm, we'll tell you why the State Department of Education's hands are also tied in this matter.


http://www.wthr.com/Global/story.asp?S=6194374

MedicCook
03-08-2007, 12:02 PM
Sex in school is nothing new. The question is who did they not tell about this? As long as they dealt with the needed parties of the incident (students who did the act or helped cover it up, the parents of those students, and the teacher(s) in the class room) than what is the big problem. A letter does not need to be going out to every parent in the school everytime something happens, especially if it does not involve their children.

sws4420
03-14-2007, 06:21 PM
Update:

Students expelled over sex act
Superintendent outlines incident, response at forum


Two sixth-grade students who engaged in sexual activity during an industrial technology class have been expelled from Raymond Park Middle School, Warren Township Schools Superintendent Peggy Hinckley said Tuesday.

Hinckley spoke at a Parent-Teacher Association meeting at the school, where several hundred parents gathered to express concern and learn more about the incident.

Answering charges that the school district was slow to react to the incident, Hinckley described the timeline that began Dec. 20, when the students took part in sexual activity while sitting at a workstation with a large partition that hid them from a teacher's view. Two other students acted as lookouts, she said, and at least once interrupted the activity when the teacher approached. The sexual activity "lasted three or four minutes," Hinckley said.

She said the district plans to redesign the Raymond Park workstations to make them more visible to teachers and is evaluating whether to modify workstations throughout the district.

School officials did not learn of the incident until after Christmas break, Hinckley said. One of the students who had acted as a lookout reported the incident to an administrator Jan. 12 while being disciplined in another matter.
School officials then notified Child Protective Services, Hinckley said.

Indianapolis metropolitan police, who also were consulted, determined that no criminal activity had occurred, she said.

Parents who spoke at Tuesday's forum expressed a range of views, from firm support for school officials to outrage that educators had not informed parents about the incident sooner.

Although she was upset about the incident, parent Judy Jackson said sex between sixth-graders was not something the entire community needed to know about.

"This is a private matter," she said. "The media has blown it way out of proportion."

But parent Mike Goddard said school officials should have been more proactive in notifying the district's families.

"If we just would have gotten a note home," Goddard said, "that would have gone a long way toward alleviating some of the concern. As parents, we trust in (school officials), and communication helps build that trust."

Another district resident, Virginia Kelsch, also expressed dismay at learning about the incident from media rather than from school officials.

"You guys stonewalled this, you hid it, you wouldn't talk about it," Kelsch told administrators.

School officials saw no reason to send a note to parents, Hinckley said, drawing a distinction between the sexual activity and incidents that pose a threat to the entire school, such as when students are caught with guns.
Educators exercise discretion when deciding when to notify parents, Hinckley said.

"With 12,000 students (in the township), I guarantee you something probably happens every day."

She decried the media coverage -- which has extended to national television news networks -- the incident has generated.

"Students know . . . there are consequences for their behavior," Hinckley said. "But no one signs up for national public ridicule."

A pediatric and adolescent psychologist spoke Tuesday night about the risks of adolescent sexual activity and urged parents to talk to their children.
Children "want to hear this information from their parents first," said Dr. Steven J. Couvillion. "You have responsibility for your child."

Responsible adults should guard against the sexualization of children, beginning with such steps as demanding modest clothing, Couvillion said, and monitoring the TV shows and movies they watch.

"Do not allow your children to become sexualized," he said. "It is a sacred duty you have."

When children are protected from risky behavior in their youth, he said, they are likelier to be healthier and more secure in their sexuality as adults.


http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070314/LOCAL1803/703140473/1195/LOCAL18

MedicCook
03-14-2007, 07:16 PM
Every parent in the school has no right or need to know of this incident. Only the parents of the parties that were involved needed to be notified.

Donna
03-14-2007, 08:03 PM
Every parent in the school has no right or need to know of this incident. Only the parents of the parties that were involved needed to be notified.

Ohhhhhhhhh dear, we disagree big time on this one......just wait till your kid is old enough to be around that sort of behavior. Every parent DOES have a right and a need to know about whats going on in school. Every taxpayer has a right to know whats being and not being done in the school system. I'd FREAK if some kids were having sex in the same classroom as my kids.....these teachers have a responsibility to uphold order and respectful behavior in the classroom. How do 2 kids have sex in a classroom and the teacher not have a clue? Thats just plain BS...........

sws4420
03-14-2007, 08:08 PM
I have every right to know what happens in my kids' school. Especially shit like this.