logo
#

Latest news with #teacher

Ex-preschool teacher pleads guilty to kicking 4-year-old girl, leaving bruise
Ex-preschool teacher pleads guilty to kicking 4-year-old girl, leaving bruise

Independent Singapore

time7 minutes ago

  • Independent Singapore

Ex-preschool teacher pleads guilty to kicking 4-year-old girl, leaving bruise

SINGAPORE: On Tuesday (July 22), a 57-year-old former preschool teacher admitted to one charge of ill-treating a child under the Children and Young Persons Act. She had kicked a four-year-old girl in her class, which resulted in a bruise to the child's shin. Alamelu Paramaguru, who is Singaporean, will return to court for sentencing next month. She is no longer with the preschool where the incident occurred, which has not been named in order to protect the child's identity. What happened The incident occurred on April 2, 2024. Alamelu, known as 'Teacher Meloo' to her pupils, had been in charge of a particular Kindergarten 1 class on that day. The children in the class were scheduled to take a nap at 12:00 pm after they had their morning lessons, lunch, and a bath. Shortly before noon, Alamelu asked seven students, including the victim, to move from the part of the room where they were playing, because she needed to place the cots there, which they would use for sleeping. See also 2 pre-school staff among 11 new positive Covid-19 cases The victim stayed seated on the floor where she was while the six other pupils moved. The former teacher then put a cot down. But when she turned around, she felt that she had almost tripped because of the little girl, although she did not fall. Upset, she shouted at the child to sit properly and kicked her on her right leg. Footage from a CCTV camera shows the child in pain, hugging her leg and burying her face. Alamelu did not comfort or attend to her, but instead continued to reprimand the child. Lianhe Zaobao reported that when the child's father picked her up from school later that day, she mentioned the pain in her leg. Her parents then brought her to KK Women's and Children's Hospital to be examined, and a 1 cm by 1 cm bruise was found on her shin. The child's parents also filed a police report that night. CNA reported that the girl told her mother that the former teacher kicked her for 'not sitting properly'. The child's mum, after seeing the bruise on her shin, told the school about what her daughter said. Since Alamelu had already gone home, the other teachers told the mum they would inform the principal about the incident the next day. When the incident was investigated, Alamelu claimed not to have remembered what happened, but said that her leg could have 'unconsciously' touched the child's leg. In July 2024, CNA reported that Alamelu was suspended and later she resigned, and the Early Childhood Development Agency (ECDA) said she did not go back to work in the preschool sector. The former teacher is now out on $15,000 bail and will be back for sentencing on August 19. She faces a jail sentence of up to eight years, a S$8,000 fine, or both, for the ill-treatment of a child. /TISG Read also: Mum transfers 1-year-old daughter to another preschool after fall that required 12 stitches on her tongue

Teacher faces four charges in Wellington District Court of indecent assault
Teacher faces four charges in Wellington District Court of indecent assault

RNZ News

time3 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Teacher faces four charges in Wellington District Court of indecent assault

The person is due to appear in court again next month. Photo: RNZ / Rebekah Parsons-King Secrecy surrounds the details of a teacher charged with multiple counts of indecent assault. The person appeared in Wellington District Court on Thursday, but all identifying information is suppressed until at least 19 August. They face four charges of indecent assault and one of intentionally impeding normal breathing by applying pressure to the throat. The charges relate to the period between mid December 2024 and late February of this year. The person is due to appear in court again next month. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Teacher faces four charges of indecent assault in Wellington District Court
Teacher faces four charges of indecent assault in Wellington District Court

RNZ News

time3 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Teacher faces four charges of indecent assault in Wellington District Court

The person is due to appear in court again next month. Photo: RNZ / Rebekah Parsons-King Secrecy surrounds the details of a teacher charged with multiple counts of indecent assault. The person appeared in Wellington District Court on Thursday, but all identifying information is suppressed until at least 19 August. They face four charges of indecent assault and one of intentionally impeding normal breathing by applying pressure to the throat. The charges relate to the period between mid December 2024 and late February of this year. The person is due to appear in court again next month. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Teacher banned from the classroom for life after sexual relationship with pupil
Teacher banned from the classroom for life after sexual relationship with pupil

The Independent

time16 hours ago

  • The Independent

Teacher banned from the classroom for life after sexual relationship with pupil

A veteran teacher once described as 'very popular' has been banned from the classroom after having a sexual relationship with a pupil. Andrew Brook, 61, a longstanding teacher at Queen Elizabeth High School in Northumberland, developed an 'inappropriate relationship' with a pupil between March 2019 and August 2020, and subsequently for six months after she left the school. The teenager described feeling like she could not say no to the then-56-year-old father as he frequently drove her to a remote car park to have sex in the back of his van, while she was in sixth form. Despite the girl's attempts to end the relationship, Brook convinced her to carry on the relationship into her first term at university, where he visited her despite the country being in a national lockdown during the coronavirus pandemic. She said the burden of having to lie about the relationship, an order by Brook, left her feeling estranged from her family and friends for over a year. 'Looking back at the relationship, I believe there was a lot of manipulation by Mr Brook,' she told the investigating panel. 'He was older and in a position of authority. I felt as though I could not say no to him in the relationship because of the position her was in. He had a lot of influence over me – he could have probably told me to do anything and I would have done it.' The panel issued an indefinite prohibition order against Brook after they found the teacher showed 'complete lack of insight and remorse' for his behaviour, as well as downplaying the impact his actions had on the girl. In a written response to the panel in February 2024, Brook accused the investigation of engaging in 'moral policing' outside of its remit, claiming the girl was not manipulated but 'knew what she wanted'. The Teaching Regulation Agency (TRA) found his lack of remorse, as well as his 'attempt to minimise the impact of his behaviour of Pupil A', as 'evidence of a real risk of repetition'. The relationship began in early 2019 after Brook asked Pupil A to sit on his lap during a coach trip. A few weeks later, he sent a message wishing her luck for her A-Level exam. By the summer, the pair were messaging frequently. Pupil A said the messages were friendly in nature. But by December, the pair were meeting up at least once a week. They would meet just outside town after school. She said the meetings became 'quite intimate'. The following month, Brook picked the pupil up from work in his van, drove them down country roads into a remote car park and told her he had strong feelings for her. She said she knew the comments were 'weird' but she felt 'flattered'. A few weeks later, he took her to a car park again and kissed her multiple times. Pupil A said she initially felt 'conflicted and shocked' by Brook's advances. From March, they started having sex in the back of his van. Pupil A said they would 'park up, put the back seats down, pull the curtains round, then he would tell me to lie down and take my clothes off and we would have sex'. He then began to tell her he loved her, as well as buying her cans of alcohol. After Pupil A left for university, Brook began visiting her. During these visits, which were during a national lockdown, he would buy her alcohol, they would drink together and allegedly smoke marijuana, and they would sleep together. Pupil A described the relationship at that point as 'sexual' in nature. The pair would discuss politics, human rights and his longtime passion for Tibetan sovereignty. Pupil A said that by that point, she 'felt like a large part of the relationship was about sex for him'. It eventually ended between February and April 2021. The prohibition order stops Brook teaching in any classroom in England.

Families urge Maryland school not to bring back teacher acquitted of sex abuse
Families urge Maryland school not to bring back teacher acquitted of sex abuse

CBS News

time16 hours ago

  • CBS News

Families urge Maryland school not to bring back teacher acquitted of sex abuse

Several families launched a petition to urge a Maryland school district not to bring back Matthew Schlegal, a teacher who was acquitted of sex abuse in June. Schlegal was found not guilty on 18 counts of sex offenses, and three other charges were dismissed after a five-week trial. He was accused of sexually abusing eight of his students between 2022 and 2024 when he was a third-grade teacher at an Anne Arundel County elementary school. The parents of some of the alleged victims and child sex abuse advocates have continued to express their outrage after the trial, claiming Schlegal was wrongly acquitted. The petition, launched by the families through attorney Thiru Vignarajah, urges the school district to keep Schlegal out of the classroom. "Teaching is not a right—it is a responsibility and a privilege. We believe student safety must come first," the petition reads. After Schlegal was acquitted in June, the school district said it would work to finalize a review of his job status, as they are obligated to do under state law. According to Vignarajah, the school district said this week that it's still evaluating the employment decision. "The group is initiating a petition drive to ensure the public's voice is heard loud and clear: Individuals who betray our trust and exploit our children should never again teach in Anne Arundel County," Vignarajah said in a statement. Schlegel was released from custody shortly after the verdict, but is prohibited from contacting the alleged victims or their families, and cannot be unsupervised around minors. His attorneys said he suffered and would be in shock for some time.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store