Friday, May 21, 2010

Cell Phone Camera Captures Teacher Beating A Student

Houston Teacher Beats Student And Gets Caught On Tape

When a teacher beats a student, it's not a joke – but that's what students first thought they were seeing in Houston. The teacher beating a student was caught on tape with a student’s cell phone, and it has caused outrage as well as school district and police department investigations. Because she has been fired, the teacher will have to useshort term loans to pay for her defense. Either way, the “teacher beats student” question is raising blood pressures across the nation.

Cell phone video of teacher beating student

The so-called “teacher beating” caught on tape by a cell phone shows an event where a teacher beats a student. The teacher beating caught on camera shows a young man backed into a corner, then dragged out and kicked, hit, and slapped by an adult woman. The teacher is allegedly Sherri Davis, a science teacher at a Houston charter school. The entire teacher beating caught on tape started, evidently, as the 13-year old boy had teased another student. While students in the classroom admit that Isaiah Johnson was misbehaving, there is no justification for a teacher beating up a student.

Charges to be filed within the teacher beating student event

When the school district was informed of the teacher beating student incident, they placed teacher Sherri Davis on administrative leave. Now the beating has been captured on video and posted to the internet, Sherri Davis has been fired. There were multiple other students and school employees within the room at the time of this teacher beating, but none ever intervened. Numerous teachers in this country are both overworked and underpaid, though not nearly as many "just snap" as one might expect. The incident has caused an investigation to be launched in both the sheriff's department and school district. The treatment of Isaiah Johnson may lead to Sherri Davis being charged with assault, among other possible crimes. In Texas, the fine for aggravated assault can run up to $ 10k, about a full quarter of the average yearly teachers' salary.

Resources

CBS News

http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-504083_162-20004788-504083.html

L.A. Times

http://www.latimes.com/kiah-charter-school-student-beaten-story,0,6024071.story

UK Telegraph

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/7717790/US-teacher-sacked-after-being-filmed-beating-student.html



No comments: