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Thursday, August 6, 2015

VADIR Stops Principals From Reporting School Violence

When a teacher is brought to 3020-a for misconduct, such as corporal punishment, why, teachers ask, are they accused of harming a student when the fight was between two (or more) students and the teacher had nothing to do with it?

Because no administrator wants their school on the VADIR list at New York State Education Department. Violence by students is overlooked in favor of getting a teacher removed, charged, and/or discontinued.

Any teacher who witnesses a fight or student violence should call 911. File a police report. Tape everyone you speak to and keep records. There will be retaliation, but if you don't report it, you will be convicted of the crime.

Betsy Combier

New York City Underreported School Violence to State, Audit Shows


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A review of violent episodes at 10 public schools in New York City found that the Education Department failed to report nearly a third of the cases to the state, as required, according to an audit the state comptroller released on Wednesday.

The audit, which examined episodes during the 2011-12 and 2012-13 school years, also found that some were inappropriately classified as less serious than they were.

“When incidents don’t get reported or are in effect downgraded, schoolchildren are put potentially in harm’s way,” the comptroller, Thomas P. DiNapoli, said, adding, “The Department of Education can’t risk leaving parents uninformed about what’s going on in their child’s school.”

The more than 400 episodes that went unreported at the 10 schools included 50 assaults resulting in injuries, among them one case at Intermediate School 27 on Staten Island in which a student pushed another student over a desk, knocking him to the floor with the desk landing on top of him; 13 sex offenses; and two instances of confiscated weapons.

The state uses the city’s annual reports of violent episodes to designate certain schools as “persistently dangerous.” Those schools are required to take steps to reduce violence and to notify parents that they are entitled to enroll their children at a less violent place.

Mr. DiNapoli’s office found that one of the schools examined, the Choir Academy of Harlem, possibly should have been designated “persistently dangerous” in 2012-13 but was not because of the department’s underreporting. The school now has the designation. In 2013, the department decided to begin phasing out that school, citing concerns about safety expressed by parents, students and teachers. It will close in 2016.

The city’s Education Department said the incidents that the comptroller said had to be reported to the state did not have to be. In response, the comptroller’s office said that it had confirmed its interpretation of the requirements with the State Education Department.

The schools included two in each borough and were selected to represent a range of degrees of violence. Mr. DiNapoli’s office examined the incidents that were reported by the individual schools to the city department through the city’s own reporting system and determined whether they should have been included in the city’s annual report to the state and whether they were actually included.

Officials at Public School 83 Luis Munoz Rivera, in East Harlem, told the comptroller’s office that they did not even report all violent episodes to the city’s Education Department, keeping a separate paper system for their own purposes and reporting only cases in which the offending student had a pattern of disruptive behavior.

The school, for instance, did not report an instance in which a student punched another student in the face and then threw him into the surrounding desks and onto the floor.

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