As we know, even if a teacher IS "tenured" or "post-probationary," districts can screw teachers over just as I was.
Link to suit
More:
Former Spanish teacher Luis Aguilera is suing the Chicago public school district, claiming administrators fired him in 2009 after a parent took issue with his memoir, entitled "Gabriel's Fire," which recounts his own relationship with a teacher in his youth.
The parent had broached what the suit dismisses as a baseless concern about a relationship between her daughter and Luis Aguilera. It says the mother's anxiety appeared directly linked to the content of the book.
Aguilera's memoir is about his coming of age on Chicago's South Side, where at 13, he "began an affair with one of the teachers at the local elementary school," according to a description of the book on website of the publisher, The University of Chicago Press.
What a dumbass:
Aguilera adds: "At the 'investigatory conference,' no evidence was taken, the complaining witness was not present and subject to questioning or cross-examination, there was no impartial hearing officer, and plaintiff was never provided with any specific charges against him. Plaintiff was never told what was his alleged 'misconduct,' was not permitted to counter any charges of alleged misconduct, and was never informed as to why his principal was not satisfied with his performance."
link
You don't have a right to a hearing, stupid. You aren't tenured. Talk about a frivolous lawsuit.
If the teacher had more than shit for brains, he would have never written the book in the first place bragging about his teen exploits. What a doofus.
No sympathy here.
No comments:
Post a Comment