Tag Archives: teachers

Teachers’ union hints at possible ‘work stoppage’ if CCSD deal is not reached – KTNV 13 Action News Las Vegas

  1. Teachers’ union hints at possible ‘work stoppage’ if CCSD deal is not reached KTNV 13 Action News Las Vegas
  2. Clark County Education Association holds emergency meeting as contract negotiations continue with CCSD Fox 5 Las Vegas
  3. Clark County teachers union sets deadline for new contract, threatens action – The Nevada Independent The Nevada Independent
  4. CCEA looking to strike as teacher contract negotiations continue News3LV
  5. CCEA frustrated CCSD is settling contract with administrators, but not teachers FOX5 Las Vegas
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Gallaudet University holds graduation ceremony for segregated Black deaf students and teachers – CBS News

  1. Gallaudet University holds graduation ceremony for segregated Black deaf students and teachers CBS News
  2. Perspective | At last, a diploma for Black deaf students who set historic precedent The Washington Post
  3. Black deaf students who attended 1950s segregated school will finally get their high school diplomas CNN
  4. Gallaudet holds graduation for 24 Black deaf students and teachers who were denied diplomas CBS Evening News
  5. Black deaf students who attended 1950s segregated school to finally get high school diplomas CBS Miami
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Teachers in Oakland, California, reach agreement with school district on ‘common good’ demands as strike continues – CNN

  1. Teachers in Oakland, California, reach agreement with school district on ‘common good’ demands as strike continues CNN
  2. Striking Oakland teachers, district reach agreement on four common good issues KPIX | CBS NEWS BAY AREA
  3. Oakland teachers, union agree on four items, mark progress in strike San Francisco Chronicle
  4. Oakland Unified School District, teachers break deadlock on ‘Common Good’ proposals but final deal still remains, strike not over KGO-TV
  5. Oakland teachers reach ‘Common Good’ agreement but still on strike KRON4
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Oakland’s striking teachers and school district reach agreement on four ‘common good’ demands – The Mercury News

  1. Oakland’s striking teachers and school district reach agreement on four ‘common good’ demands The Mercury News
  2. Teachers in Oakland, California, reach agreement with school district on ‘common good’ demands as strike continues CNN
  3. Striking Oakland teachers, district reach agreement on four common good issues KPIX | CBS NEWS BAY AREA
  4. Oakland’s striking teachers and school district reach agreement on four ‘common good’ demands SFGATE
  5. Oakland teachers, school district break deadlock on ‘Common Good’ proposals; strike still not over ABC7 News Bay Area
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Meghan Trainor says she’s sorry over ‘careless’ remarks about teachers on podcast – Daily Mail

  1. Meghan Trainor says she’s sorry over ‘careless’ remarks about teachers on podcast Daily Mail
  2. Meghan Trainor Apologizes for Her ‘Careless’ Comments About Teachers: ‘That’s Not How I Feel’ Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Meghan Trainor breaks her silence regarding ‘careless’ remarks about school shootings HELLO!
  4. What was Meghan Trainor’s remark against teachers and why is she apologizing for it? Find out PINKVILLA
  5. Meghan Trainor Issues Apology After Saying ‘F Teachers’ In Recent Interview | Meghan Trainor Just Jared
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‘Saturday Night Live’: Host Quinta Brunson Makes Plea to Pay Teachers More; Trump Offers to ‘Go Quietly to Prison’ in April Fools’ Sketch – Variety

  1. ‘Saturday Night Live’: Host Quinta Brunson Makes Plea to Pay Teachers More; Trump Offers to ‘Go Quietly to Prison’ in April Fools’ Sketch Variety
  2. ‘SNL’ Monologue: Quinta Brunson Takes Swipe At ‘Friends’ & Makes Plea To Pay Teachers “The Money They Deserve” Deadline
  3. ‘SNL’: Quinta Brunson praises teachers, shares Obama message in debut monologue USA TODAY
  4. Quinta Brunson Compares Abbott Elementary, Friends on SNL Vulture
  5. SNL first time host KTSM 9 NEWS
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Matanzas High teacher’s aide: ‘I never took the Nintendo Switch’ – Daytona Beach News-Journal

  1. Matanzas High teacher’s aide: ‘I never took the Nintendo Switch’ Daytona Beach News-Journal
  2. Florida student accused of attacking teacher’s aide who took Nintendo Switch to be charged as adult Fox News
  3. Florida teacher says she didn’t confiscate student’s Nintendo Switch before vile beating New York Post
  4. Florida Teen Who Beat His Teacher’s Brains In For Taking His Nintendo Switch Has A Criminal Record, Is Charged As An Adult OutKick
  5. Student charged after ‘knocking teacher unconscious over Nintendo Switch’ The Independent
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School downplayed warnings about 6-year-old before teacher’s shooting, staffers say

The Virginia teacher who was shot by a 6-year-old student repeatedly asked administrators for help with the boy but officials downplayed educators’ warnings about his behavior, including dismissing his threat to light a teacher on fire and watch her die, according to messages from teachers obtained by The Washington Post.

The previously unreported incidents raise fresh questions about how Richneck Elementary School in Newport News handled the troubled student before police say he shot Abigail Zwerner as she taught her first-grade class earlier this month. Authorities have called the shooting “intentional” but are still investigating the motive.

Many parents are already outraged over Richneck officials’ management of events before the shooting. Newport News Superintendent George Parker III has said school officials got a tip the boy had a gun that day and searched his backpack, but that staffers never found the weapon before authorities say the 6-year-old shot Zwerner. Newport News Police Chief Steve Drew said his department was not contacted about the report that the boy had a weapon before the shooting.

Police and school officials have repeatedly declined to answer questions about the boy’s disciplinary issues or worrisome behaviors the 6-year-old may have exhibited and how school officials responded, citing the child’s age and the ongoing law enforcement investigation. The boy’s family said in a statement he has an “acute disability,” but James Ellenson, an attorney for the family, declined to comment on accounts of the boy’s behavior or how it was handled by the school.

School district spokeswoman Michelle Price said in a phone interview late Friday that the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, a federal law protecting students’ privacy, prohibits her from releasing information related to the 6-year-old.

“I cannot share any information in a child’s educational record,” she said. “A lot of what you’re asking is part of the child’s educational record, and it’s also a matter of an ongoing police investigation and an internal school investigation. Unfortunately, some of these details I’m not even privy to.”

6-year-old who allegedly shot Va. teacher used gun legally purchased by mom, police say

Screenshots of a conversation held online between school employees and Parker shortly after the shooting show educators claiming that Zwerner raised alarms about the 6-year-old and sought assistance during the school year.

“she had asked for help,” one staffer wrote in that chat, referring to Zwerner.

“several times,” came another message.

The messages, which were provided to The Post by the spouse of a Richneck Elementary schoolteacher, do not detail what specific assistance Zwerner sought, or to whom she directed her requests. Zwerner and her family have not returned repeated messages from The Washington Post.

A separate message written by a Richneck teacher, and obtained by The Washington Post from the local teachers union, alleges that school administrators waved away grave concerns about the 6-year-old’s conduct and that the school was overall unable to care for him properly.

Authorities explained the timeline of events that took place after a six-year-old child shot his teacher on Jan. 6 in Richneck Elementary School in Virginia. (Video: The Washington Post)

The Post obtained the message on the condition the teacher’s identity not be revealed because the union feared she would face retaliation. The teacher declined interview requests through the union, the Newport News Education Association, citing worries of professional consequences and a directive from Newport News schools not to talk to the media about the shooting.

On one occasion, the boy wrote a note telling a teacher he hated her and wanted to light her on fire and watch her die, according to the teacher’s account. Alarmed, the teacher brought the note to the attention of Richneck administrators and was told to drop the matter, according to the account. The date of the incident was not mentioned.

The principal and vice principal of the school did not respond to requests for comment on the teacher’s account.

A 6-year-old is accused of shooting someone at school. He isn’t the first.

On a second occasion, the boy threw furniture and other items in class, prompting students to hide beneath their desks, according to the account. Another time, the teacher alleges in her account, the boy barricaded the doors to a classroom, preventing a teacher and students from leaving.

The teacher banged on the classroom door until another teacher from across the hall forced it open from the outside, according to the teacher’s account. It was not clear whether the teacher asked for any specific action from administrators after that incident.

The teacher also described strained resources at the school. The lead special education teacher was frustrated because she has a high caseload, according to the account. Some aides regularly missed work, including for as long as a week at a time.

The teacher further alleged in her account that the boy was not receiving the educational services he needed, that it was difficult to get help with him during outbursts and that he was sometimes seen wandering the school unsupervised.

The boy’s family said in a statement Thursday, the first public remarks his relatives have given about the shooting, that the 6-year-old was “under a care plan” that “included his mother or father attending school with him and accompanying him to class every day.” That stopped the week of the shooting, the statement said.

“We will regret our absence on this day for the rest of our lives,” the statement read.

The teacher’s account dovetails with descriptions of the student’s behavior shared by the spouse of a Richneck teacher and a mother whose child is enrolled in a class located across the hallway from Zwerner’s. Both the spouse and the mother, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to protect their families’ privacy, said the student was known campuswide for disruptive and violent behavior, and that school employees struggled to manage him in class.

The Post reached out to dozens of other Richneck teaching staff, administrators and parents to try to corroborate the teachers’ allegations, but most have not responded or declined interviews, citing the ongoing police investigation or fear of reprisals.

Drew, the police chief, has said detectives will look into allegations of the student’s troubling conduct before the incident, though he has not confirmed any specific incidents.

James Graves, president of the Newport News Education Association, said the union is investigating safety concerns raised by teachers in the wake of the shooting.

“We want to know what happened so we can protect our members,” Graves said. “They believe and they know the administration should take their concerns more seriously than they did. This could have been prevented.”

Thomas Britton, whose son was taught by Zwerner, said school officials never formally notified parents in the class about issues with the boy who fired the shot.

He said administrators mishandled the shooting, asserting they should have pulled the boy out of class until they had definitively determined whether he possessed a gun, and conducted a more thorough search.

“That was a shocking revelation that not only did he bring the weapon, but somebody gave a tip he had the weapon,” Britton said. “It seems to me it would be completely avoidable at that point.”

Valerie McCandless, a 52-year-old resident of Newport News who sent six kids to Richneck, said her children had a wonderful experience at the school, but she is troubled that the school’s administrators, some of whom she said are relatively new, failed to take preemptive action.

“I don’t think the teachers there are getting support, they’re not getting compassion, they’re not getting answers, they’re not getting listened to,” she said, adding of the shooting, “this was, I believe, God’s way of saying somebody needs to listen to them.”

Similar concerns emerged this week at a packed Newport News school board meeting, during which dozens of parents recounted their disappointment, anger and frustration with security measures at Richneck and other schools in the district. There have been three shootings on school grounds in Newport News since late 2021.

Several teachers said they received no support when they faced violence in the classroom or attacks from students. Some speakers claimed the district is more interested in keeping discipline statistics low than in taking meaningful action to address students’ problems.

A parent of a child in Zwerner’s class said her daughter had been bullied by classmates. She said she struggled to make the school take her concerns seriously and that the Richneck principal once failed to show for a conference about the bullying, although other officials did come.

She said Zwerner defended her daughter.

“Listen to your teachers when they have concerns,” the woman said raising her voice. “Please!”

Parker, the superintendent, said at a meeting with Richneck students that the district is purchasing 90 metal detectors to install at all Newport News schools and acquiring clear backpacks to hand out to students. He has assigned a new administrator to Richneck and also said officials were taking note of teachers’ concerns.

“We listened and we continue to work to improve current systems and processes to help better manage extreme behaviors that adversely affect the culture and climate in schools,” Parker wrote in a note to staff this week.

Celeste Holliday, a substitute teacher who covered Zwerner’s first-grade class at Richneck Elementary School on one occasion, said Zwerner had difficulty maintaining order in the class of 25 to 30 kids, but Holliday thought she was a conscientious teacher.

“She was great. She was doing the best she could,” Holliday said of Zwerner. “She mentally prepared me. She told me, ‘They’re rambunctious 6-year-olds. It’s going to be a hard day. Do the best you can.’”

Zwerner’s warning proved prescient.

Holliday said the class was rowdier than many others for which she has substituted. Holliday said that, on the day she worked at Richneck, one boy shoved another during recess and the boy scraped his knee. The injured boy had to go to the nurse’s office for treatment.

Afterward, the principal came to the classroom and told the boys to calm down because they were shouting, Holliday said. The principal filed a report about the shoving incident. Holliday said that, after the experience, she decided she would not substitute at Richneck Elementary School again.

Drew said in his online chat that detectives have wrapped up interviews with most students but are still seeking school disciplinary records and other materials related to the boy.

When the probe is complete, Drew said the findings will be sent to the Newport News commonwealth’s attorney to decide whether anyone should be charged. Legal experts say it is unlikely the boy will be charged since children under 7 are presumed unable to form the intent to carry out an illegal act under Virginia law. But Drew has said it is possible someone could be charged for failing to secure the gun used in the shooting.

Ellenson, the attorney for the boy’s family, said in an interview that the gun was secured with a trigger lock and kept on the top shelf of the mother’s bedroom closet. Ellenson said it is unclear how the boy got hold of the gun.

Newport News police declined to comment on the family’s characterization that the weapon was stored securely.

The Jan. 6 shooting occurred as school was winding down for the week. Police said the boy pulled out the gun as Zwerner was teaching and shot her.

Zwerner was rushed to the hospital with critical injuries; Drew said she is continuing to recover. Police said the boy brought the gun from home in a backpack.

The boy’s family said in their statement he is in a hospital receiving treatment and expressed sorrow for the shooting.

“We continue to pray for his teacher’s full recovery, and for her loved ones who are undoubtedly upset and concerned,” the statement read. “At the same time, we love our son and are asking that you please include him and our family in your prayers.”

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Eliza Fletcher: Suspect in Memphis teacher’s abduction and death to be arraigned on murder charges today

Abston, arrested over the weekend on the kidnapping allegations, faces new charges including first-degree murder after authorities announced that a body found near a vacant Memphis duplex Monday was Fletcher’s.

“To lose someone so young and so vital is a tragedy in and of itself, but to have it happen in this way, with a senseless act of violence, it’s unimaginable,” Shelby County District Attorney Steve Mulroy said Tuesday.

The teacher’s death, which authorities say was violent, still is surrounded by questions about where and how she was killed, and why.

Still, investigators “have no reason to think this was anything other than an isolated attack by a stranger,” Mulroy told reporters Tuesday.

As the investigation unfolds, Fletcher’s community is mourning the junior kindergarten teacher and mother of two.

She was “a joy to everyone who knew her,” her family said in a statement obtained by CNN affiliate WHBQ.

“We are heartbroken and devastated by this senseless loss. Liza was a such a joy to so many — her family, friends, colleagues, students, parents, members of her Second Presbyterian Church congregation, and everyone who knew her,” the statement reads.

“Now it’s time to remember and celebrate how special she was and to support those who cared so much for her. We appreciate all the expressions of love and concern we have received. We are grateful beyond measure to local, state and federal law enforcement for their tireless efforts to find Liza and to bring justice to the person responsible for this horrible crime,” Fletcher’s family said.

At St. Mary’s Episcopal School, the faculty and staff started the day in chapel and lit candles in Fletcher’s memory, the school said Tuesday in a Facebook post.

“We are heartbroken at the loss of our beloved teacher, colleague, and friend Liza Fletcher,” the St. Mary’s Episcopal School said.

Fletcher was the granddaughter of hardware magnate Joseph Orgill III, who died in 2018 at the age of 80. Tennessee-based Orgill has annual sales of $3 billion, according to the company.

Abston, 38, was arraigned Tuesday on his initial charges: Especially aggravated kidnapping and tampering with evidence. He was being held in a county jail on those charges with bond set at $510,000.

A judge Tuesday appointed a public defender to represent him after he told the court he didn’t have an attorney or the money to post bond.

Abston is set to be arraigned Wednesday on charges of first-degree murder, premeditated murder and murder in the course of the perpetration of a kidnapping, Mulroy said.

How the four-day search for the victim unfolded

Fletcher had been jogging in a neighborhood near the University of Memphis around 4 a.m. Friday. Her husband told police Friday morning that she’d not returned, authorities said in an affidavit, which initially was filed Sunday and amended Tuesday.

Someone found her phone in a street that morning, and it was given to one of Fletcher’s relatives, who gave it to investigators, the affidavit reads.

Police then found surveillance video of that area, which shows a black GMC Terrain pass by her, according to the affidavit. A man is seen in the footage getting out of the SUV and “aggressively” running toward her before forcing her into the vehicle’s passenger seat, according to the affidavit.

The SUV remained in a parking lot for about four minutes after both people were inside and then drove away, the affidavit states.

Police also analyzed a pair of sandals that were found at the abduction site, near the victim’s phone. DNA found on the shoes matched Abston’s DNA, the affidavit reads.

Investigators interviewed Abston’s employer, who said he drove a GMC Terrain and verified his phone number. Investigators checked Abston’s cell phone records, which showed he was near the abduction scene during the time of Fletcher’s kidnapping, according to the affidavit.

Members of a US Marshals task force found a GMC Terrain near Abston’s home on Saturday morning — and it had the same distinguishable damage seen in the surveillance footage, and the license plate matched the partial plate information gleaned from the video, the affidavit reads.

The task force detained Abston near his home Saturday, the court document said.

Police gathered details from two witnesses — including Abston’s brother — who say they saw him acting strangely at the brother’s Memphis house after the abduction, according to the affidavit.

Both said Abston cleaned the interior of the GMC Terrain with floor cleaner, and that he washed his clothes in the sink of the home, according to the affidavit.

Body found near vacant home; clothing found discarded nearby

On Monday, searchers, acting on information from an FBI team that analyzes cell phone data, found Fletcher’s body just after 5 p.m., according to the affidavit.

The searchers, using the cell phone data, had focused on an area near an intersection less than a mile from the brother’s home. The team smelled an odor of decay coming from an area near a vacant home, saw vehicle tracks in the grass near the driveway and eventually found a body on the property, according to the affidavit.

“The scene investigation revealed that the female fit the description of missing person, Eliza Fletcher,” the affidavit states.

That property was in the 1600 block of Victor Street, authorities said. That’s about a half-mile drive from the address that authorities gave for his brother’s home, a 7.5-mile drive from the alleged abduction site and about a 15.5-mile drive from Abston’s home.

A little more than an hour after the body was found and about three tenths of a mile away, a detective found a trash bag with purple running shorts — consistent with the ones Fletcher was wearing when she was abducted, the affidavit reads.

Suspect also faces charges not related to Fletcher

Abston is also facing charges unrelated to Fletcher’s case, including identity theft, theft of property $1,000 or less and fraudulent use/illegal possession of a credit or debit card $1,000 or less, Shelby County jail records show.

Those charges are connected to a theft report filed last week by a woman who reported someone was using her Cash App card and Wisely Card at gas stations without her knowledge.

CNN has reached out to the Shelby County district attorney and Memphis police regarding the theft charges.

CNN’s Melissa Alonso, Anne Clifford, Jamiel Lynch, Chuck Johnston, Tina Burnside, Hannah Sarisohn and Jennifer Feldman contributed to this report.

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Uvalde children return to school after 21 students and teachers were slaughtered. But some kids refuse to go back to classrooms

“I went and talked to my son and I told him, ‘They’re gonna have more cops. They’re gonna have higher fencing. And he wasn’t having it,” said Zayon’s father, Adam Martinez.

“He said, ‘It doesn’t matter. They’re not gonna protect us.'”

Zayon’s fear is not unfounded. Since the tragic end to the last school year, the grief enveloping Uvalde, Texas, has been compounded by outrage.
Families learned law enforcement officers waited more than 70 minutes before entering the two classrooms where 19 students and two teachers lay mortally wounded.
And authorities repeatedly changed their stories about what happened as damning new evidence emerged.

Now, families who already lost one child in the massacre worry about sending another child back to school. And months of preparation by parents and school administrators will be put to the test.

Robb Elementary School will not reopen

No students or staff will return to the site of the deadliest school massacre in almost a decade.

“We’re not going back to that campus,” Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District Superintendent Hal Harrell said in June.

Instead, children who were first graders at Robb Elementary last year will start second grade at Dalton Elementary.

Second and third graders at Robb last year will go to the new Uvalde Elementary, located at an existing educational complex in town. Many Robb Elementary teachers have relocated to Uvalde Elementary.

And some students have left the school district entirely.

Enrollment at Sacred Heart Catholic School in Uvalde began its new school year with double the enrollment of elementary-age students compared to last fall, its principal said. The new students include 30 from Robb Elementary who received scholarships to go to the private school.

All students remaining in the Uvalde public school district could sign up for remote learning and use tablets provided by the school district.

Martinez said both his children opted for remote learning. “I talked to my son and daughter, and they said that they were afraid that if it happened again, they weren’t going to be protected,” he said.

“There’s no fencing at the junior high where my daughter would be going. There’s no way that I’m gonna convince her to go when there’s no fencing.”

But remote learning isn’t possible for some families in which both parents work outside the home.

And changing the scenery won’t erase the horror tormenting victims’ families — especially those debating whether to send their other children back to school.

‘I don’t feel like my kids are safe’

Uziyah Garcia should be starting the fifth grade today. But he was gunned down in his classroom at age 10, leaving his family crippled with grief.

“This is something that terrorizes you daily and nightly,” said Uziyah’s uncle Brett Cross, who was raising Uziyah like his own son.

“I close my eyes. All I see is my son. I hear the gunshots. It is something that doesn’t ever go away.”

But Cross has four other children in the school district. He’s struggled to decide whether to send them back to school in person.

“You want your kids to be able to go and have that education and everything, but at the same time, you’re fearful that they’re not gonna make it out by the end of the day,” he said.

Cross spent much of this summer demanding accountability from the school district and lambasting the law enforcement response.

“We’ve already seen that they didn’t do their job. So how are we supposed to trust that?” he said last week. “I don’t feel like my kids are safe.”

Cross has two 15-year-old daughters who have decided to return to school in person. He said they’re old enough to make their own decisions, with their parents’ guidance.

“But my little ones (ages 7 and 10) … we’re not certain yet,” he said. “I don’t feel like everything has been done to protect our children.”

Cross said he appreciated some changes made by the school district. After the district announced 33 Texas Department of Public Safety officers would work at Uvalde schools this year, Cross said he was assured those DPS officers would not be among the dozens who responded the day of the massacre.

But he wants to see more active monitoring of schools. “We’ve had several requests about somebody … watching the surveillance and everything like that, a dedicated person,” he said. “That would make me feel a lot safer.”

What the school district is doing

After months of public outcry, the Uvalde school district fired its police chief, Pedro “Pete” Arredondo. State investigators and law enforcement analysts say Arredondo was the de facto incident commander the day of the massacre.

The Uvalde school district also announced new safety measures planned for this school year. They include hiring 10 more school police officers; installing 500 new security cameras; the assignment of 33 Texas DPS officers to the Uvalde school district; and searching for a new interim police chief.

The school district said it has also increased emotional support for students, including comfort dogs on every campus for the first few weeks of school, additional school counselors and trauma-informed care training for all staff members.

But Cross said he’s not done demanding more safety measures — not just for his surviving children, but for all children in hopes no other family has to endure the agony he’s suffering.

“I’m fighting the system that let him (Uziyah) down. I’m at every city council meeting. I’m at every school board meeting,” he said.

Cross has also questioned why 18-year-olds in Texas can buy assault-style rifles like the one used to kill Uziyah.

“You have to be 21 to buy cigarettes and alcohol — things that can kill yourself. But you only have to be 18 to buy something that can kill multiple people,” he said.

“I’m channeling my grief into the fight right now because this fight is a fight that everybody should be a part of — but nobody is until it’s them. And it’s a lot harder on this side with this hole in your heart to do this fight.”

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