
Sarah B, not to be confused with the other eminent commenter here with a similar handle, put together a two-part comment that provides an overview of the growing problem of sexual predator teachers. Ethics Alarms has done a lot on this topic, but not lately, perhaps because there are so many other things wrong with our education system. This may have been the most recent; I should have had a tag for “predator teachers.”
I should shut up now: it’s a long piece, and worth reading, Here is Sarah B’s Comment of the Day on the post, “What Exactly Are California’s “Values”? Can Anybody Explain?”
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As much as I hate to defend California, this is hardly unique. Wyoming has similar policies and we are about as red as they come. A previous principal in my town harassed/seduced teachers and students who reached the age of 18. Because all of his predations were of adults (even if only technically), he remained at his job for nearly a dozen years before enough complaints and the loss of too many teachers forced the school board to finally let him go. Just this last couple of years, a special education teacher was arrested after sexually abusing lots of kids just a few towns over from us. He had been skirting the edges of the law for years, but finally crossed enough lines that he could be arrested and fired, after abusing at least a handful of kids.
The other stories I know of are teachers who abuse students in other ways, not sexually, but I personally do not see much of a difference between a teacher who sexually harasses students and a teacher who beats students up, since children should be safe and unharmed in the school system if it were any good. Therefore, I’m picking on a favorite story of mine involving my cousin, since I know many of the particulars that I might otherwise not know in detail. He worked in one town and was fired for wrestling his students and put a few too many in headlocks. After being fired for this, he was transferred to another town, where he rug-burnt a few handfuls of his students. He got fired again, and was hired as the youth pastor at the local Baptist church. He wrestled a few more kids harshly and is currently not allowed to be the only adult present when the youth group meets.
Frankly, if one looks at the data, 38% of all students in 7th-12th grade receive sexual harassment/abuse in the public school system from adults, according to some studies in 2017. I caution that these studies have broad definitions of sexual abuse/harassment, including things ranging from rape to cat-calling to inappropriate jokes and sexual comments. Of course, the more minor offenses of inappropriate comments and commentary are far more common than the more serious ones. Grooming behavior is reported separately, but is very common. The adults also range from teachers to coaches, bus drivers to lunch ladies to janitors, and everything in between. However, 63% of the behavior nationwide comes from teachers.