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  • 4
    days
    ago

    School officials' Facebook rummaging prompts mom's privacy crusade

    Pam Broviak

    By Bob Sullivan

    A mother who says her middle-school daughter was forced to let school officials browse the 13-year-old girl’s private Facebook page is speaking out against the practice because, she says, "other parents are scared to talk about it."

    Pam Broviak, who lives in the Chicago suburb of Geneva, Ill., says her daughter was traumatized when the principal of Geneva Middle School South forced the child to log in to her Facebook account, then rummaged through the girl's private information.

    "What a violation of my daughter's privacy this whole episode was," Broviak said. The incident took "a huge toll on my daughter, who ended up crying through most of the rest of the day and therefore missed most of her classes. She was embarrassed and very upset."

    There have been several descriptions lately of Facebook prying by schools – and one lawsuit was filed recently by the American Civil Liberties Union on behalf of an anonymous plaintiff against a school district that allegedly demanded a student’s social media passwords. But Broviak may be the first parent to go public with concerns about what she sees as serious violations of student privacy.


    In a conversation with msnbc.com, Broviak said she confronted school officials about the incident involving her daughter soon after it occurred last fall and was told that they routinely investigate student issues by asking kids to log into their social networking pages -- or cellphones -- in the presence of administrators. And she said her daughter and other students told her they are frequently called into the principal’s office and told that they can’t leave until they surrender their passwords or unlock their phones and allow school officials to browse their personal information.

    "(Students) let them see the accounts because otherwise, they are not allowed to leave the room. And that is just wrong," she said.

    Kent Mutchler, superintendent of Geneva schools, said in an interview with msnbc.com that he couldn't comment on Broviak’s daughter because privacy rules prevent him from publicly discussing an individual student’s situation. But he said Broviak's description of district policy is inaccurate.

    "We would never demand someone's password. When you have someone's password, you open yourself up to other issues," Mutchler said. "But if we have a disruptive situation, a school (official) will ask to see the page, and if the student refuses, we call the parents."

    But principals only request access to students' social media pages under extreme circumstances, Mutchler said.

    "There are different levels of concern. If there is a drug trafficking suspicion, we'll get the police involved. If it's something like cyberbullying, we'll say, 'This has been reported to us,' and ask to see the page," he said.

    Often, students volunteer before they are even asked, he said.

    "We ask, 'Is there something you want to show us?' that sort of thing. And they volunteer," he said. 

    Such incidents are very rare among district middle schools, he said, contradicting Broviak's assertion that the inspections are commonplace. 

    "It happens a half-dozen to a dozen times per year," he said.

    Broviak's public complaint comes at a time when schools, employers and lawmakers around the country are wrestling with sticky privacy issues surrounding social networks. The state Legislature in Illinois is considering legislation that would make it illegal for employers to demand access to workers’ or applicants’ private social media information. That law is silent on the issue of schools and social media snooping, but federal legislation introduced last month by Rep. Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., would extend the protections to students, too.

    Submit your questions about social media and privacy, then join our Google+ Hangout Friday at 4 p.m. ET.

    Follow @RedTapeChron

    Broviak said she didn't think school officials should ever look at a child's personal social media page or cellphone without first contacting parents.

    "It's just wrong for them to do this, but parents are afraid to talk about it, because they are worried, 'Are they going to target my kid?'" she said.

    Additionally, she said, looking at a kids' social media page violates an entire family's privacy, even if school officials don’t intend to look at posts involving other family members.

    "The whole family is exposed in this," she said. "Some families communicate through Facebook. What if her aunt was going through a divorce or had an illness? And now there's these anonymous people reading through this information."

    When the first incident occurred in the fall, Broviak said she didn't know what to do -- and initially chose to let it drop for fear that complaining might make things worse for her daughter. But she said reports from her daughter that other kids have been treated the same way and a recent spate of news stories surrounding the issue pushed her to speak up. Three weeks ago she published a detailed accounting of events on her personal blog, and this week agreed to be interviewed by msnbc.com.

    "It's really important for people to talk about this and know what's going on," she said. "And I'm really glad that the state Legislature and Congress are considering laws to deal with this."

    Her daughter, meanwhile, has learned an important but sad lesson through this experience, Broviak said.

    "It's taught her to use better judgment with adults," she said. "Basically, what (they) showed her was you can’t trust anyone. Her trust in and the respect of the adults at her school has been shattered to the point that she is struggling to look beyond this abuse and allow for the education process to occur."

    *Follow Bob Sullivan on Facebook.
    *Follow Bob Sullivan on Twitter. 

     

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: privacy, school, principal, red-tape, facebook, featured, bob-sullivan
  • 5
    days
    ago

    Millions of students chronically absent, study finds

    By Sevil Omer, msnbc.com

    Up to 15 percent of children in the U.S. are chronically absent from school, making them much more likely to fail and eventually drop out, a new national study shows.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    As many as 7.5 million students nationwide miss a month of school each year, with absenteeism highest in kindergarten and in high school, according to Johns Hopkins University researchers.

    An estimated 10 percent to 15 percent of students are "chronically absent" from school and miss enough class time to be considered a "severe risk" of not finishing high school. In urban and rural areas, where students may be poor and come from families with little education, the figures are as high as one-third of students, the study shows.


    In Maryland, chronic absentee rates for poor students were "more than 30 percent, compared to less than 12 percent for students from more affluent families," according to the research.

    "Because we don’t measure or monitor the problem, we generally don’t act on it," Robert Balfanz, director of the Everyone Graduates Center at Johns Hopkins, said in a statement. "Left untreated, the problem will likely worsen achievement gaps between rich districts and poor districts and curtail the positive effects of promising current and future reforms."

    Balfanz is one of the Johns Hopkins researchers who worked on the study. Vaughan Byrnes, a research associate, co-authored the report.

    According to the study, Balfanz says only six states track chronic absenteeism: Georgia, Florida, Maryland, Nebraska, Oregon and Rhode Island. Several states, including California and New York, do not gather individual data needed to calculate chronic absenteeism, the study found.

    The U.S. Department of Education doesn't track the problem; it only requires states to monitor daily attendance, according to the study.

    A student is considered chronically absent if he or she misses at least a month of school in a year, or about 10 percent of school days.

    Because of the limited data, Balfanz said the study was only an "educated guess" about the scope of the problem.

    "Even so, the research shows that we must address the attendance problem if we're going to have the kind of broader school improvement we want and our students deserve," said Marie Groark, executive director of Get Schooled, a nonprofit group that funded the study. "When you think about it, missing one or two days a month doesn't seem like much but it adds up over time. Then, that becomes a problem and that problem has a consequence."

    The Get Schooled Foundation is an educational nonprofit campaign focused on boosting graduation rates. It is partially funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    60 comments

    Many countries actually restrict enlistment in public schools to the most aggressive learners and students who really want to get an education. In America, it's normal for many kids to 'flunk out' because they have no values or incentives. Unfortunately, there's not much that can be done except just …

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    Explore related topics: missing, education, school, high, drop, truancy, absenteeism, outs
  • 6
    days
    ago

    18-year-old becomes New York state's youngest elected official

    NBC New York

    By Ida Siegal, NBCNewYork.com

    An 18-year-old high school senior has won a seat on his Long Island school board, becoming the youngest elected official in New York state in a campaign that took a last-minute twist over accusations of stolen information.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    In a record turnout Tuesday, Josh Lafazan was elected to the Syosset school board, winning by more than 2,000 votes.

    Ahead of the election, the high school senior and class president faced accusations that his father stole sensitive records from the school. 


    Read NBCNewYork.com's story on Lafazan's victory

    A robo-call message to Syosset parents ahead of the election stated: "Jeffrey Lafazan unlawfully removed district records that contained the names and addresses of residents. He removed the records without permission and ran away."

    Josh Lafazan called it "an obvious smear-campaign tactic, a last-minute Hail Mary thrown by the school district administration."

    Still, the controversy appeared to have mobilized young voters to the polls Tuesday, resulting in a record turnout.

    Jeffrey Lafazan, meanwhile, said his wife has returned the documents to the school.

    He maintains he did not know he was not allowed to take the records, which contained the names of voters who requested absentee ballots. 

    There were five candidates on the ballot for three slots on the board.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    4 comments

    He removed the records without permission and ran away. Well the attack ads sound childish definitely

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    Explore related topics: education, school, long, board, island, lafazan
  • 11
    May
    2012
    6:17pm, EDT

    Stop electric shocks on disabled students, ex-teacher's aide says

    NBC New York

    By Sevil Omer, msnbc.com

    A former teacher’s aide who says he used electric shocks on teens with special needs to control behavior is demanding that state officials ban the practice at a Massachusetts school.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    As of Friday afternoon, more than 228,000 people had joined an online campaign condemning the Judge Rotenberg Education Center in Canton, Mass., for administering electric shock treatments to its students with developmental disabilities.

    Greg Miller said he launched the petition drive on Change.org last week after a 2002 video surfaced showing a Rotenberg student being shocked 31 times. 

    “Support has been immense,” said Jonathan Perri, a senior campaigner at Change.org. “A lot of people from around the world have been signing the petition, watching the video. They can’t believe this is happening in Massachusetts.”

    The Rotenberg center's unorthodox methods have been subject of lawsuits and media scrutiny, including an investigation by NBCNewYork.com, which first reported on the shock treatments in 2006. 


    Rotenberg school officials have said that the electric shock treatments are approved by physicians and that parents are involved in the care of their children.

    A receptionist answering calls at the Rotenberg center said she would refer messages from msnbc.com to a publicist handling media inquires. Separate telephone calls to the media representative went unanswered. 

    Video of shock therapy shows life inside school for disabled kids

    In the video showing him being shocked repeatedly, then-18-year-old Andre McCollins begs for relief. Miller said he worked at the center from 2003 and 2006, and during that time, he administered electric shocks to students with disabilities “so many times, I lost count.”

    Charles Krupa / AP

    Cheryl McCollins holds an umbrella as Greg Miller wheels petitions against shock treatments up the Statehouse steps, to be delivered to lawmakers on Wednesday.

    The student's mother, Cheryl McCollins of New York, sued the school, alleging malpractice. During court proceedings, the judge allowed the video to be played as evidence, according to NBC News. A settlement was announced April 24, but its terms were not disclosed.

    Since then, the video has been prominently displayed on Miller's page on Change.org, a popular website for social activism.

    Miller said he has not met Andre McCollins, but Cheryl McCollins, who now lives in New York, was the first to sign Miller's petition. She wrote:

    My son Andre McCollins was subjected to this torture at JRC. As a parent, I was not prepared for the inhumane manner in which they treated people. I expected logic and some form of reason to be applied to the students in addressing behaviors that were considered inappropriate. Parents are not told "corrective measures" particularly a painful shock is applied without any warning or concern for what triggered the targeted behavior. What was dangerous about keeping his coat on. THIS INSANITY HAS TO STOP.

    'Bee sting'
    In a video on the school's website, Matthew Israel, the school's former executive director, describes the use of the electric shock method, likening the procedure as the equivalent of a bee sting.

    “It's not a bee sting. It is inhumane and it is torture,” Miller told msnbc.com.

    According to Miller, students at the center wear electrodes on their bodies that are attached to a small device carried around in a staff member’s fanny pack. When the student acts out or violates a behavior, a staff member administers a shock, he said. A student could receive up to 30 shocks for a number of offenses, including standing up from a chair without permission, he said.

    “I want to put an end to this practice all together in Massachusetts and help these students,” Miller said. “Not only should the school stop shocking students, Massachusetts legislators should ban the use of shocks altogether.” 

    'Extraordinarily disturbing'
    On Wednesday, Cheryl McCollins and Miller hand-delivered boxes of petitions to Massachusetts lawmakers, including Democratic House Speaker Robert DeLeo. Attempts by msnbc.com to reach McCollins for comment was unsuccessful.

    State Sen. Brian Joyce, a Democrat from Milton, Mass., criticized the state for allowing the practice to continue. “It is extraordinarily disturbing and only strengthens my resolve to stop this barbaric practice that takes place in my district,’’ Joyce said in a statement on his website.

    Charles Krupa / AP

    Cheryl McCollins holds an umbrella as she is embraced by Emily Titon, who is autistic, while petitions against shock treatments are loaded onto a hand cart, to be delivered to lawmakers, outside the Statehouse in Boston.

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    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

    60 comments

    What the hell is wrong with people? No one stops and thinks, "Why are we torturing disabled kids?"

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    Explore related topics: education, school, electric, autism, shocks, change-org, rotenberg, disabilies
  • 11
    May
    2012
    7:14am, EDT

    Tornado hits high school, topples train in Weimar, Texas

    By KPRC, KXAN and msnbc.com staff

    WEIMAR, Texas -- Eight people were hospitalized after a Texas high school was hit by a tornado on Thursday, according to the National Weather Service.

    The tornado briefly touched down at Weimar High School at about 5:25 p.m. local time, NBC station KPRC reported. Weimar is about 88 miles west of downtown Houston.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    School district officials said a fundraiser was going on at the school at the time of the storm. A Papa John's pizza truck that was in the parking lot as part of the event was turned over. Eight people who were inside the truck were taken to the hospital.

    Superintendent Jon Wunderlich told NBC station KXAN that none of the injuries were life-threatening.

    No students were injured, KPRC reported.

    A scoreboard at the high school was damaged, NWS officials told KPRC. School officials said part of the roof was ripped off and the football and softball fields sustained the most damage.

    About two-thirds of the people in Weimar were without power Thursday night.

    NWS officials said a train was also knocked off its tracks in Weimar. 

    According to the Fayette County Sheriff's Office, a tornado peeled back the roof of Colorado-Fayette Medical Center. No injuries were reported there.

    NBC stations KPRC, KXAN and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

    60 comments

    I was standing there when it came down and hit land, I am just now getting back home from beaumont texas, what a hell of a ride! Whew, no more of that for me! I seen Dorthy and the dog on the way back here!

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    Explore related topics: texas, weather, school, tornado, featured, national-weather-service, kprc, weimar, kxan
  • 10
    May
    2012
    9:48am, EDT

    Teacher who changed grades now charged with forgery

    NBC Chicago

    Sara M. Glashagel, 27, of Elk Grove Village, Ill., was charged with 24 counts of forgery.

    By NBCChicago.com

    A woman on probation for changing the grades of football players at Antioch High School in Illinois -- where she was a teacher and her husband head coach -- is now facing multiple counts of forgery for allegedly scamming her new employer.

    Sara M. Glashagel, 27, of Elk Grove Village, has been arrested on a forgery warrant and charged with 24 counts of forgery, DeKalb police Lt. Gary Spangler said.

    Glashagel was working in the Roselle area as a sales representative for DeKalb-based American Marketing & Publishing, Spangler said. She allegedly sold advertising to fictitious companies or real companies she did not visit and submitted the bogus contracts to collect commission payments.

    For more, visit NBCChicago.com

    Police said she submitted some real contracts too, but the scam was uncovered in early March when a company complained that it had not purchased ads, Spangler said.

    Glashagel made headlines in 2011 when she was accused of changing the grades of several Antioch High School students, most of whom were athletes. She is the wife of head football coach Brian Glashagel.

    The former special education teacher was placed on administrative leave after her December arrest and resigned a short time later. Investigators found she gained unauthorized access to the school’s computer database and changed the grades of 64 students -- including 41 football players.

    She pleaded guilty to misdemeanor computer tampering in February and was sentenced to a year’s probation and 80 hours of community service. She also was banned form having contact with the school, but is allowed to attend football games.

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    41 comments

    To the editors of MSNBC: You need to start reviewing your headlines to avoid misleading your readers. The headline here implies the woman was charged with forgery for changing high school students' grades, when in fact, the forgery charges stem from a completely unrelated incident. In this age where …

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    Explore related topics: school, chicago, grades, forgery
  • 9
    May
    2012
    9:53am, EDT

    'F' is for 'fail': Texas school misspells its own name

    A Texas elementary school is correcting a spelling mistake made when it changed its name nearly nine years ago. KXAS-TV's Andrew Tanielian reports.

    By Andrew Tanielian, NBCDFW.com

    A Texas elementary school is correcting a spelling mistake made when it changed its name nearly nine years ago.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Sunrise Elementary School in Fort Worth added "McMillan" to its name in the 2003-2004 school year -- but also added an extra "i."

    The school changed its name to honor its first teacher, Mrs. Mary McMillan, who eventually became principal. A relative recently reached out to the Fort Worth Independent School District to say it had bought an extra vowel.

    For more, visit NBCDFW.com

    Everything had the incorrect spelling of "Sunrise-McMillian" instead of "Sunrise-McMillan," including the lettering on the building, printed signs, vinyl congratulatory signs, logos and Facebook.

    The lettering on the building was changed Monday.

    "Oh, I was kind of shocked," said Ernie Johnson, who waters the grass on school grounds and never knew the spelling was wrong. "I hadn't paid it any mind."

    Ever since hearing from McMillan's relative, the school has been correcting the error. But the name is in many places people easily forget, such as business cards, visitor's passes, certificates and digital signatures embedded in email.

    The school is taking the corrections with the right balance of seriousness and humor. Principal Marion Mouton and his staff keep finding misspellings to correct.

    "Our day-to-day things that we just take for granted now and, as we're coming up with it, we're seeing 'OK, that's something else we need to fix,'" he said.

    The student body as a whole hasn't been told, though some may know. Once more misspellings are corrected, the school hopes to turn the mix-up into a teachable moment on how to take responsibility, correct an error and move on.

    When visiting her class, teacher Jouet Dotson came up with a quick brainstorm on how to teach the new, correct spelling.

    "You know how we say there's no 'i' in team?" teacher Jouet Dotson brainstormed. "We could say, 'Well, [at] Sunrise-McMillan, we're a team, so there is no 'i' in the last part of McMillan.'"

    The Fort Worth ISD isn't saying how much it will cost to fix all the mistakes but did say it's exhausting all resources to try and keep costs down.

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    324 comments

    It would be a Texas school.

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  • 8
    May
    2012
    5:49pm, EDT

    Principal: Errors get Nevada high school ranked 13th in US

    By Sevil Omer, msnbc.com

    A Nevada principal has a lesson for U.S. News and World Report, which ranked his high school 13th best in the nation: It’s wrong.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Principal Jeff Horn says the magazine used incorrect data to place Green Valley High School of Henderson, Nev., just outside Las Vegas, above nearly 22,000 other public schools, elite prep and technical academies nationwide. The publication released its "Best High Schools" rankings on Tuesday.

    "This is a great school and there are a lot of amazing things happening around here,” Horn told msnbc.com on Tuesday. "But the information it was based on is incorrect."


    According to the Las Vegas Sun, the rankings published online showed Green Valley with 477 students and 111 teachers, a 4 to 1 ratio. Horn said Green Valley has 2,850 students and a student-teacher ratio closer to 24 to 1. The school also has a 64 percent pass rate on the Advanced Placement exams, not 100 percent as reported in the rankings, Horn said.

    “My son first pulled up the report online and was reading it when he said, ‘Did you know you had 477 students?’" Horn said, adding “That's when I started reading it and saw the inaccuracies. Not only were there inaccuracies, but other things were skewed as well.”

    Robert Morse, director of data research with U.S. News and World Report, told The Associated Press that the publication was aware of the discrepancy.

    "We're looking into it," he told the AP.

    According to the AP, Morse said the publication gathers enrollment numbers from the National Center for Education Statistics' Common Core of Data database. The federal statistics center, run through the U.S. Department of Education, collects and analyzes school data from state and local officials, the AP reported.

    Watch the Top Videos on msnbc.com

    Officials with the Education Department didn't immediately return messages seeking comment from msnbc.com.

    It's unclear where along the process mistakes were made. Horn said he wasn’t aware of any school official providing data to the publication, and he said he told the local newspaper that he also noticed what appeared to be skewed enrollment figures for other high schools in southern Nevada.

    The Las Vegas Sun reported that U.S. News was correct in reporting 17 school districts in Nevada, but made an error when it reported 5,864 full-time teachers and 123,697 students. The Clark County School District has nearly 18,000 teachers and more than 308,000 students, the Las Vegas Sun reported.

    Said Horn: “We’ve been getting calls from our local news stations congratulating us and I have had to correct them."

    Watch the Top Videos on msnbc.com

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    25 comments

    At least they did the right thing and set the record straight.

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    Explore related topics: news, us, and, world, best, school, green, high, report, vegas, las, valley
  • 8
    May
    2012
    12:52pm, EDT

    Gay student: Catholic school should relent on Matthew Shepard scholarship

    www.eychanerfoundation.org

    Keaton Fuller, a senior at Prince of Peace High School in Clinton, Iowa.

    By Sevil Omer, msnbc.com

    An openly gay student in Iowa says he hopes a Catholic bishop will reconsider and let a gay rights advocacy group present a $40,000 scholarship to him during his graduation ceremony.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    “Everybody at the school has always been very accepting and extremely encouraging toward me,” Keaton Fuller, a senior at Prince of Peace Catholic School in Clinton, Iowa, told msnbc.com. “That’s why the latest turn of events has been such a surprise -- I feel invalidated and unaccepted.”

    Bishop Martin Amos in Davenport, Iowa, overruled school officials last week, saying he would not allow the Des Moines-based Eychaner Foundation to present its Matthew Shepard Scholarship to Fuller because the group’s support of gay rights conflicts with church doctrine. Instead, a school staff member will present the scholarship at the assembly.


    Fuller, 18, said he was stunned: The bishop's decision comes after a Prince of Peace school official confirmed the award could be presented by an Eychaner scholarship committee member during the school's graduation ceremony on May 20. The Matthew Shepard Scholarship is given to students who are openly gay, lesbian, bisexual, or transgender.

    Attempts by msnbc.com to contact Amos or officials with the Diocese of Davenport were unsuccessful on Tuesday. A school official referred calls to Edward O'Neill, president of Prince of Peace's school board, who could not be reached for comment.

    “At some point, we hope they realize and agree for us to present the award because it is the right thing to do,” said Mike Bowser, a spokesman with the Eychaner Foundation.

    Iowa businessman and gay rights activist Rich Eychaner founded the activism group and has awarded more than 130 Matthew Shepard scholarships to graduating high school seniors who are gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender since 2000. It is named for the gay Wyoming college student killed in 1998.

    "The $40,000 scholarship to the University of Iowa was awarded to Keaton for his scholastic achievement and work reducing homophobia in his school and community as an openly gay student," Bowser said.

    Fuller said he is among 70 seniors graduating from Prince of Peace this spring. He plans to attend University of Iowa in the fall. He wants to study film. 

    For Fuller, being the lone openly gay student in a small Catholic high school has had its hardships. Yet, he said, he found solace among staff and students during those difficult times when he questioned his sexual orientation. He said teachers have always supported him, making sure he believed in himself.

    "The whole thing has put the teachers and staff in an awkward position," Fuller said.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on msnbc.com

    O'Neill, the school board president, said he was disappointed with the bishop's decision, according to local media reports. "We preach tolerance and acceptance but then we turn around and we don't practice what we preach," The Associated Press quoted O'Neill as saying. "If the bishop says we're not going to do it, I can voice my objection to it, but there's not a whole lot I can do."

    Fuller said he has been encouraged by his peers and community and will press on.

    "It is difficult to understand how, after I have spent 13 years at this school and worked hard during all of them, I would be made to feel that my accomplishments are less than everybody else’s," Fuller told msnbc.com Monday evening.

    "This whole ordeal has been incredibly hurtful, and I am even sadder that this will be one of my last experiences to remember my high school years by."

    Fuller released an open letter Monday calling on church officials to reverse its decision. An online petition drive launched on Change.org also had garnered 4,007 supporters as of Tuesday morning.

    In his letter, Fuller wrote: "This is a teachable moment for Prince of Peace to stand up against rejecting and invalidating the accomplishments of any student. Please help me by respectfully requesting that this decision be reversed. Share your thoughts about why all students deserve to be treated with respect and dignity at Prince of Peace."

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    Fuller's mother, Patricia Fuller, said the last few weeks have been tough, but she was encouraged by her son's spirit and optimism.

    “He was saddened initially and felt invalidated,” Patricia Fuller told msnbc.com Monday evening. “But he is an incredibly courageous person. He is pushing this issue because he knows -- and we know -- there are other gay students out there in other schools who are suffering in silence and that matters to him.”

    “If he can have the courage to do this, then we can have the courage to support him. We support the respect and dignity of all people and we want to move that idea forward.”

    Have story ideas, send Sevil an email at sevil.omer@msnbc.com

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    182 comments

    Did he ever think to chose not to go to a catholic school so there would not be these issues. The administrators should have not approved this without first checking with the church. Not that I agree or disagree with them. Just saying.....

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    Explore related topics: of, featured, gay, school, peace, student, high, prince, matthew, shepard, fuller, keaton
  • 7
    May
    2012
    6:08pm, EDT

    92-year-old woman who sold suicide kits gets probation for tax offense

    By NBC News and news services

    SAN DIEGO – A 92-year-old retired teacher who gained national attention for selling suicide kits for $40 was placed on five years of supervised probation on Monday for failing to file federal tax returns on her mail-order business.

    © Daniel Wallis1 / Reuters / REUTERS

    Sharlotte Hydorn at her home in El Cajon, California May 26, 2011.

    Sharlotte Hydorn, a great-grandmother, pleaded guilty in December to a misdemeanor charge of failing to file federal income tax returns from 2007 through 2010, a period during which investigators said at least seven customers used her kits to kill themselves.

    Prosecutors said Hydorn sold about 1,300 of the do-it-yourself asphyxiation hoods during those years but agreed to stop making or selling the kits as part of her plea deal. She was sentenced by a federal judge in San Diego. She was also ordered to pay a fine of $1,000.



    Follow @msnbc_us

    Hydorn was prosecuted under the U.S. tax code because "the sale of suicide kits is not a violation of federal law," assistant U.S. Attorney Peter Mazza said after the sentencing.

    Read NBCSanDiego.com's report on sentencing of suicide-kit maker

    Hydorn said after sentencing that all she wanted to do was allow people to die at home, surrounded by family and friends.

    'Agonizing pain'
    A Spokane, Wash., native, Hydorn began assisting physicians with patient suicides after her husband, Rex, died of colon cancer in 1977, said Charles Goldberg, her lawyer. Her husband had been in "agonizing pain" and did not want to die "filled with tubes in a hospital," she said.

    Hydorn felt she could design a helium hood that would be more comfortable for patients than the ones she saw doctors using. She received "thousands" of orders for her hoods and began charging for her time and materials. Hydorn's kits included tubing, material for the hood and a user diagram. A helium source was not included.

    Agents who raided her home in suburban San Diego last year found checks that were not cashed and thousands of dollars in cash from buyers, Goldberg said.

    Prosecutors said she took no steps to verify the physical condition, age, identity or mental state of her customers and therefore had no idea whether her kits were being bought by people suffering from depression or by minors acting without the consent of an adult. Court documents say she sold more than 1,300 kits to people across the United States and abroad. Most of them contacted her by mail or phone.

    Hydorn had pleaded guilty to the tax charge dating back to 2007 and acknowledged she made more than $150,000 in income from various sources during that period, including from the sale of helium kits.

    Hydorn said she sold the kits under the name "GLADD Group." In court, she admitted she made $66,717 in 2010 and paid no taxes on that.

    NBCSanDiego.com, The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    119 comments

    She should have paid the tax. The last resort of a government that wants to get you without a legal reason is income tax evasion.

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  • 4
    May
    2012
    9:38am, EDT

    Two students in custody after prank explosions

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Two 18-year-old students are in custody after two chemical-filled bottles exploded at a Memphis high school.

    Just before noon on Thursday, Craigmont High School was evacuated after two bottles filled with household cleaning products exploded on separate floors of the school. Police said a bomb threat had been called in to the school shortly before the explosion.

    The teens were charged with aggravated assault, felony reckless endangerment and possession of a prohibited weapon. School officials say the blasts appear to be a prank.


    Officials say an assistant principal with asthma was taken to the hospital in non-critical condition after inhaling smoke produced by the explosion.

    Following the evacuation, students were sent to the football field while police and fire investigators cleared the scene. No students were injured and there was no damage to school property, the Jackson Sun reported.

    The Associated Press reported.

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    34 comments

    Jack ass kids. Making loud bomb as a prank is no laughing matter. Especially with all the past school shootings and horrible terror that has happened. I hope these kids get a stiff kick in the john brown by their folks and are grounded for a long while!

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    Explore related topics: school, explosion, memphis, bottle, craigmont-high-school
  • 27
    Apr
    2012
    9:23am, EDT

    Lawyer: Autistic boy's teacher didn't call him 'bastard'

    Stuart Chaifetz, the father of the autistic boy who was allegedly bullied by educators, tells msnbc's Thomas Roberts that he wants the head teacher fired.

    By Ian Johnston, msnbc.com

    The former teacher of an autistic boy allegedly mistreated by staff at a New Jersey school did not call him "a bastard" or make other harsh comments that were secretly recorded by the child's father, her lawyer said in a statement.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The statement also accused the boy's father, Stuart Chaifetz, of putting the teacher, Kelly Altenburg, and her family "in harms way," and said she wasn't even in the room for part of the day.

    Chaifetz, 44, put a recording device on his son Akian, 10, and captured audio of staff in his class at Horace Mann Elementary School in Cherry Hill calling him names and laughing at him. Chaifetz said he was trying to get to the bottom of why teaching staff said his son was acting out in class. He later posted the audio on YouTube after what he described as inaction by the school board.


    After the recording emerged, Cherry Hill schools put out a statement saying that "individuals who are heard on the recording raising their voices and inappropriately addressing children no longer work in the district and have not since shortly after we received the copy of the recording.”

    At least one classroom aide reportedly lost her job, but the state's largest teachers union said that because Altenburg had been transferred to another school, and not fired, she had been exonerated of making the remarks. Cherry Hill Superintendent Maureen Reusche, however, said "the investigation remains ongoing."

    Chaifetz, an investigator with an animal protection group, Showing Animals Respect and Kindness, or SHARK, has said he believes Altenburg was one of those making offensive comments in the classroom, and that as the teacher in charge, she should be held responsible for what he considers "bullying" behavior by other staff.

    He decided to put a wire on Akian after getting repeated complaints that the child was hitting teaching staff and throwing chairs. He could not understand why his son would act in this way and decided to try to find out what was going on in the classroom. Akian's autism made it difficult for him to explain what was happening.

    Chaifetz, speaking in a YouTubevideo that contained clips from the February recording, said the tape revealed that staff at the school were "literally making my son's life a living hell" by calling him a "bastard," telling him to "shut up," and apparently mocking his desire to see his dad. 

    When Stuart Chaifetz, a father in Cherry Hill, N.J., was told his autistic son was acting uncharacteristically violent at school, he sent him to class wearing a hidden recording device that caught a teacher on tape bullying students. NBC's Jeff Rossen reports.

    Shortly after Chaifetz posted the video, it went viral, and had garnered more than 3.4 million views as of Friday morning. An online petition to "pass legislation so that teachers who bully children are immediately fired" had 128,000 signatures.

    Dad wires up autistic son, 10, to expose 'bullying' by teaching staff

    The statement from Altenburg's lawyer said the accusations had "hurt her deeply" and she wanted to "set the record straight."

    "Mr. Chaifetz ... has been disingenuous in his assertions and has failed to advise the public accurately, including the fact that for at least approximately one hour in the beginning of the day at issue, Mrs. Altenburg was not even in the classroom with Mr. Chaifetz's son," the lawyer, Matthew B. Wieliczko, wrote in the emailed statement. He said she was at a "Professional Learning Community Meeting" that morning.

    The statement said she had not made the comments Chaifetz attributed to her. In fact, Wieliczko said, the comments were "not even made in her presence."

    He said there was "no basis, either legal or truthful" for Altenburg to be held accountable for the words and actions of others "which occurred outside of her presence and without her knowledge." 

    "We request that parents, students, the public in general, as well as Mr. Chaifetz and the news media outlets respect the basic right not to pre-judge this matter or jump to unwarranted and inaccurate conclusion," Wieliczko said.

    But on Friday, Chaifetz dismissed the importance of Altenburg's assertion that she wasn't in the classroom for the first hour, saying that "the bullying and inappropriate comments happened throughout the day."

    "And there are times when you can specifically hear her. She talks about me at the beginning of the day, she talks about other parents," he told msnbc's Thomas Roberts. " … pretend the first hour didn't happen. everything else adds up to that teacher should not be in that classroom in my opinion. It was just wrong. The entirety of that day was just wrong."

    Pat Gesualdo, president of the nonprofit group Drums and Disabilities, said Friday that he had filed a complaint with the Department of Justice alleging that Akian’s civil rights as a disabled person had been violated by the school system, including his teacher and the school.

    He said it was filed for two reasons: to push for the removal or resignation of Altenburg and to hold all of the players involved accountable. Chaifetz was not involved in the complaint, said Gesualdo, whose group helps special needs individuals through drum therapy.

    Speaking to msnbc.com Thursday, Steve Wollmer, communications director for the New Jersey Education Association, the state's largest teachers union, said Altenburg was “very serious about her work, really sees it as her life’s calling and is very good at it.”

    In an earlier interview, he said that "before people accuse people of things, they want to know if they're accusing them fairly or accurately."

    Autistic boy's father: Why hasn't teacher been fired?

    "What if she were not present at the time? There were teacher aides involved in this. What if she were not in that immediate part of the room? If you don't witness something, how can you stop it?" Wollmer said.

    Chaifetz has said he intends to campaign until Altenburg is no longer allowed to teach children.

    "Even if she said nothing, she should be fired because that room was her responsibility," he added.

    "I'm not letting this go. I will take this to the department of education and get her license revoked so she cannot work anywhere else," Chaifetz said.

    "I think there need to be offenses that teachers get fired for, regardless of tenure or not," he added. "When you can prove bullying by a teacher, tenure should be meaningless."

    Child 'doing much better'
    Akian has now left Horace Mann, and Chaifetz said he was "doing much better now he's away from there."

    "He doesn't have any of the behaviors he had then. It only happened when he was with the teacher, Kelly Altenburg, and the aide," he said. "But I think he's got some scars from this. How could he not?"

    Chaifetz said the public reponse to his efforts has had been "overwhelming."

    "There are so many wonderful people, people with stories of them being bullied, they are coming in every hour, hundreds of emails," he said. "This is really pervasive. There's a lot of bullying, there's a lot of bullying of special needs kids. It's like an epidemic."

    He said his son's case had "opened up a big window into what's going on."

    "People feel like they're alone," he said. "One positive thing that has come out of this: They saw a parent standing up and it's helping them stand up too."

    The Associated Press has found at least nine similar cases across the U.S. since 2003. It said parents of special needs students had secretly recorded teachers using insults like "bastard," "tard," "damn dumb" and "a hippo in a ballerina suit." A bus driver threatened to slap one child, while a bus monitor told another, "Shut up, you little dog."

    Chaifetz said he had given advice to "a couple" of other parents on how to put a wire on their child after they contacted him about it, but cautioned people to check to the laws in their state.

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    1251 comments

    I think she is lying through her teeth. Let's assume for a moment that she is not: Then who did you allow in your classroom to say all those things? THAT is your responsibility to...to protect the child. Either way lady, you failed...but I still think you are a liar.

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    Explore related topics: school, autism, cherry-hill
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