But I am not saying not to blow the whistle on corruption and fraud, just have your bow and arrows ready for whatever comes next.
Update on Retaliation Against All Whistleblowers is The Name of the Illegal Game In New York City
Very Desperate Teacher Needs Help After Speaking Out About Special Education (2004)
Education Policy Becomes a Matter of National Security
New York City Teacher Theodore "Teddy" Smith and the Perfect Storm of Injustice
Alyce Barr, Principal From Hell At Brooklyn School For Collaborative Studies In Brooklyn, NY, Suspends Student After Parent Files A Complaint
Booker T. Washington Middle School 54, Grievance Brings Retaliation (2003)
Betsy Combier
I-Team:
Special Ed Teacher Says District Retaliated After Whistleblowing
An award-winning special education teacher has sued her Long
Island school district, saying officials there retaliated against her after she
spoke up for students who were not getting the help they are promised under
law.
Akosua
Agyeman (pictured above) had been teaching in the Roosevelt School District for more than a
decade when she became concerned that some of her students were not getting the
extra services mandated by state law. This ranged from students whom she said
were not being taught by trained special education teachers, to students who
were not being given special test accommodations, like extra time of having
instructions read aloud.
Agyeman brought her concerns to the state and the state
vindicated her, finding that the district was violating policy and requiring
them to change.
But Agyeman
says the district retaliated against her for raising those concerns - bringing
a false claim against her and making her work life so uncomfortable that she
left and did not return.
“I don’t think that anybody would ever understand the extent of
trying to do the right thing and becoming a target as the result,” Agyeman told
the I-Team.
Officials at the Roosevelt Union Free School District said in a statement they cannot comment on the
specifics of pending litigation. The district is confident that the allegations
will be dismissed once the facts are presented in the appropriate forum, they
said.
Stephen Kohn, the executive director of the National Whistleblowers Center in Washington, DC, said New York is rated one of the worst states in the nation for protecting whistleblowers. He said there is no uniform federal law protecting them.
“Textbook retaliation,” he said of Agyeman’s case. “They removed
her when the investigators were coming in. Agyeman said she started out trying to go through protocols,
raising her concerns with her direct supervisor. But when her concerns weren’t
heeded, she didn’t feel she could let the issue drop. For one thing, extra help
can mean the difference between a special education student’s success and
failure.
For another, if a student is not receiving the help they are
required to on a state exam, reporting the problem is required by law.
“It can totally totally change the students scores, how they
fare in class, how they do academically, how they do socially. It’s completely
against all of the laws and it totally goes against their rights,” Agyeman
said.
Clara Gillens Eromosele, whose daughter was in Agyeman’s class
for several years, said what Agyeman was fighting for matters. She said while
she was very involved in her daughter’s education, many parents work full time, and depend on teachers like Agyeman to make sure their
children are treated well.
The day after the state announced it would investigate Agyeman’s
complaint, the special education teacher was reassigned to her home without
pay.A certified letter from school
officials indicated
she was being investigated for files that went missing from her computer.
One week after her reassignment, a letter from the school
cleared Agyeman to go back to work, but also reprimanded her for failing to
comply with the school’s grading policy.
But Agyeman said she has not returned to the classroom. She
feels the conflict has made her work environment too toxic for her to each
effectively.
“I left on a Thursday," she said. "All my personal
things are still in the classroom, and I never went back.”
Published at 5:31 PM EDT
on Mar 20, 2015
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