Education
Related: About this forumTeacher Fired For Being Poor Role Model
In another stunning defeat for free speech and privacy, the California Commission on Professional Competence (CPC) has upheld the dismissal of Stacie Halas, finding her unfit to teach 8th-grade science because she had acted in pornographic films in the past, the Los Angeles Times recently reported. (An East Coast appellate court just ruled that a school could fire a teacher for a Facebook posting)
The CPC argued that her pornographic past prevented her from being a good role model in the present. Even though she made the films from 2005-2006, before she was employed as a teacher, the continued availability of the films will hamper her ability to be an effective teacher, according to Judge Julie Cabos-Owen. The commission also took offense at her dishonesty and her failure to convince them of her redemption.
This ruling (along with the recent ruling against Jennifer OBrian, for her Facebook posting) is chilling to all teachers and anyone who hopes to enter the teaching profession. While there is a broad public consensus that teachers should be good role models for their students, there is no consensus about what this actually means. A teacher can be accused of being a poor role model for any number of protected actions, including having tattoos, being an atheist, belonging to the wrong political organization, or for questioning the authority of her principal, superintendent or Arne Duncan. Any of these could become a distraction in the classroom (if the teacher lacks the skill or experience to prevent it), but none of them (including a past experience in pornography) necessarily prevents a teacher from doing a good job.
Another disturbing aspect to her firing is that it was in response to a past behavior that occurred well before she entered the teaching profession, that had no direct relevance to her ability to teach, and that she shows no sign of doing again. Considering how easy it now is to dredge up a persons history on the internet, one can imagine all sorts of other distracting past behaviors that could ruin a teachers career (e.g., high school or college photos of drunkenness or nudity, arrests for civil disobedience, addiction).
Madonna?
The ruling is indicative of the Madonna/whore schizophrenia society has around teaching. Despite the fact that teachers can now stay on the job when pregnant and usually even when gay or living in sin, they are still expected to live lives of moral perfection, even when outside of school and in the privacy of their own homes. They should not drink or do drugs, perform in or watch pornography, fight, swear, scream or get angry. In short, teachers are not permitted the luxury of being human.
Or Whore?
The ruling is moralistica product of adults discomfort with sexuality, not Halas competence in the classroom. It should be remembered that her students are not old enough to legally access her videos and are unlikely to actually see their teacher nude (though their parent might be scouring the internet this very moment). It is precisely peoples moralism that has made it a distraction by turning an insignificant part of her past into a maelstrom and portraying her behavior as something terribly shameful.
Even her lawyer has been complicit in this moralism, portraying her as a person who made a mistake (i.e., choosing a lucrative but despicable job) out of financial desperation, but who then went on to do something glorious (i.e., become a teacher). According to her attorney, had her district allowed her back on the job, the message to children would have been that one can make a mistake and redeem herself; whereas the ruling against her sends the message that you better not make any mistakes.
However, it is inaccurate to call her past behavior a mistake. She made a rational choice to act in pornographic films. It happened to be one of the quickest ways to help her family out of their financial mess. It is perfectly legal, pays really well, and theoretically harms nobody. Calling it a mistake implies that porn acting is deplorable or unacceptable and that it is preferable to accept low paid, tedious and backbreaking work instead. The message to children (and to teachers) is that ones material security and wellbeing are subordinate to the need to shelter children from all turpitude, both real and imaginary.
The dishonesty charges stem primarily from her failure to come clean before being hired. Yet had she included her acting career on the job application it is virtually guaranteed that she would never have been hired in the first place, even with a valiant public appeal for redemption. Thus, she was faced with a choice of never becoming a teacher (something she apparently felt was more desirable than porn acting) or being deceitful. Ironically, had she been a prostitute, which is illegal, they likely never would have found out and she would still be teaching today.
Modern School
http://modeducation.blogspot.com/2013/01/teacher-fired-for-being-poor-role-model.html
MichiganVote
(21,086 posts)Modern School
(794 posts)duffyduff
(3,251 posts)Her stupidity and poor judgment are reasons enough for her to be rendered unfit to teach.
silverweb
(16,402 posts)[font color="navy" face="Verdana"]Rules for Teachers
msongs
(70,185 posts)duffyduff
(3,251 posts)With all of the lawsuits and concern over the rare sexual predator in schools, people with dodgy pasts have no business teaching. It doesn't matter how "competent" they might appear to be in a classroom. They are too risky a hire, and, as subsequent events have shown in this case, these people can have a harmful effect on the school environment. How the hell COULD she teach anymore when it came out she had this pornographic career? It was simply impossible for her to perform her job anymore.
It has nothing to do with double standards or prudery. She has displayed rotten judgment; don't tell me she didn't have other occupational choices available before she went into teaching like virtually everybody else does. Nobody told her she had to exploit herself for money. Too bad, so sad she wasted thousands of dollars pursuing a career for which she had to know she was unfit to perform.
I don't have a whole lot of sympathy for somebody who refused to disclose her "past" with the school district. Lying on a teaching application can get your teaching license suspended. People have had their careers destroyed for a whole lot less and can't get back into teaching. Of course she wouldn't be hired anywhere involving teaching; anybody who has done anything remotely similar to what she has done wouldn't be hired. Not only wouldn't be hired, but there is a good chance she might never have gotten her license in the first place. Some states are very strict about that.
I hope her license is revoked.
condoleeza
(814 posts)I agree completely.
AdHocSolver
(2,561 posts)So many whores in Congress. Our government doesn't serve as a role model for children.
Throw into that mix most Republican governors and legislators, bankers, corporate CEO's, pharmaceutical companies, health insurance companies, car dealers, certain priests, and others, and the former porn star doesn't seem like such a bad role model at all.
P.S. Your self-righteousness is showing.