Angry that little Johnny flunked, increasing numbers of parents are suing 
teachers.
By Janelle Brown
7/12/02
Excerpted from Salon.com

One of the students in Elizabeth Joice's senior English class at Sunrise 
Mountain High School in Peoria, Ariz., was flirting with failure. In fact, 
it was much more than a dalliance -- she was flunking. The student, whose 
name Joice wishes to keep private, had plagiarized a test, skipped classes, 
failed assignments and even missed a make-up session that might have 
allowed her to raise her grade. Joice had been sending notices to the 
girl's parents since April, warning them about the failing grade; and both 
the girl and her parents had met with assorted district administrators, 
counselors and Joice
herself. But it was all to no avail: It was almost graduation, the girl had 
blown too many tests, and she wasn't going to walk.

Imagine Joice's surprise then, when on May 22, just one day before senior 
graduation, she received a letter from a lawyer representing the girl's 
family. The family felt that the teacher had graded unfairly, the letter 
said; they believed that their daughter hadn't been given enough of a 
chance, and unless Joice took "whatever action is necessary to correct this 
situation" they were going to file a lawsuit.

The girl graduated with her class the next day, igniting a local battle 
that has yet to be settled. Parents and students are furious that the girl 
(whose name has been withheld from the media) was given what they believe 
to be an unfair boost. Teachers are livid at the school district, which 
forced Joice to retest the student at the last minute. The Arizona state 
bar is investigating the ethics of the girl's lawyer. And the Peoria school 
district is defending its decision by claiming that the teacher hadn't 
applied appropriate grading procedures.

Welcome to high school in America, 2002, where grades are a niggling 
annoyance that can be swept aside by a well-placed threat, and where 
teachers and administrators only have authority as long as they don't 
displease parents. Bad grades, discipline problems, shocking attendance 
records: Offenses that in the past warranted school action as strong as 
suspension, dismissal from school or refusal to grant a diploma are easily 
blocked or reversed -- as long as Dad's got a good lawyer.

The struggle for classroom control comes in an increasingly intimidating 
school environment where teachers are commanded -- by parents, 
administrators and the government -- to usher students through a gantlet of 
tests to graduation without displeasing litigious families or failing to 
meet performance standards that bring schools added funding or, at the very 
least, ensure their survival for another year.

Says John Mitchell, deputy director of the American Federation of Teachers, 
"Teachers are under incredible pressure right now from two places: from 
policymakers to raise standards and teach to those higher standards. Then 
on the other side you have parents giving pressure to teachers not to hold 
kids up to the high standards. Teachers are between a rock and a hard place 
... It's an area ripe for lawsuits."

Indeed, the number of threats and lawsuits against teachers and schools -- 
many of which fail to grab the attention of national media -- has risen 
dramatically over the last decade, forcing schools to spend limited funds 
on lawyers and insurance, and teachers to spend more time protecting 
themselves from potential litigation; and, in the process, instituting 
defense strategies that are changing education in the country's public 
schools -- and not for the better. As classroom creativity is curbed by the 
fear of lawsuits, kids lose the benefits of their teachers' inspiration and 
replace it with a different kind of lesson: that anything is possible if 
you have money or a capacity to complain.

Up until the moment when Elizabeth Joice received the letter from lawyer 
Stan Massad, her struggle with the failing senior was fairly typical. The 
warnings, the second chances -- it was standard fare until May 22, the day 
before graduation and the day after a final meeting with the student's parents.

The letter that Massad sent Joice represented the nadir in her long history 
of parent-teacher relations. The girl had been "scarred for life" by the 
flunking grade, the letter claimed. "Since hearing this devastating news, 
the student has been very sick, unable to sleep or eat and she has been 
forced to seek medical attention." The letter went on to threaten Joice with
a lawsuit and its attendant personal discomforts: "Of course, all 
information regarding your background, your employment records, all of your 
class records, past and present, dealings with this and other students 
become relevant, should  litigation be necessary," it said.

After she received the letter, Joice immediately sent it to the Sunshine 
Mountain High School principal and the school district. She also composed 
her own defiant response: "The student would be a very capable student if 
she would apply herself, study and get her assignments in on time," she 
wrote. "Instead of being scarred for life, perhaps she will learn these 
lessons now, rather than when she is in college or in the work force. I 
think your clients would be better off investing their money in summer 
school tuition for the student rather than wasting their money on attorney 
fees, litigating a case with little likelihood of success."

On the morning of May 23, however, Joice was informed by the school 
district that she needed to give the student a second chance. "I was told 
'You better decide what you are going to do, because that girl is going to 
walk tonight,'" Joice recalls. Just hours before graduation, Joice was 
instructed to give the student a second shot at a multiple-choice test she 
had already flunked once. The girl squeaked by, and was allowed to graduate.

Jack Erb, superintendent of the Peoria School District, swears that the 
district's decision had nothing to do with the threat of a lawsuit, and 
claims that he didn't see the lawyer's letter until after they had decided 
to retest the student. "It isn't an issue; people threaten us all the time 
and most the time they don't follow through with it," he says. He posits 
that the decision to retest the student was based on a quirk in Joice's 
curriculum and grading system.

But after outraged parents and teachers from across the state sent furious 
letters to the local papers, complaining that the student shouldn't have 
been granted special privileges, the district finally offered a general 
apology for its "lack of clear and appropriately enforced internal 
guidelines regarding grading and curriculum standards." It said nothing 
about the legal threats, however. (The lawyer, in turn, is now being 
investigated by the state board of Arizona as to whether his veiled threats 
to Joice were ethical.)

Regardless of whether the district ultimately caved because it feared a 
lawsuit, the entire affair draws into relief the conflict currently taking 
place in classrooms across the country. Higher standards linked to higher 
stakes for schools have caused educators to be more rigorous. Concerned 
parents, facing tougher college entrance requirements for their kids, panic 
when their children falter, often blaming the teachers and schools for 
their children's failures. The result, of late, is lawsuits, or, most 
often, threats of lawsuits.

An astounding 25 percent of all secondary schools were involved with 
lawsuits of all sorts -- from accidental injuries to discipline squabbles 
-- between 1997 and 1999, according to a 1999 survey by the American Tort 
Reform Association -- a huge increase over the decade before. While some of 
these lawsuits were no doubt justifiable, there is no shortage of egregious 
litigation: Legal expert Walter Olson's site Overlawyered.com, which 
chronicles legal ugliness in schools in order to point out the frivolous 
nature of American litigiousness, lists dozens of overzealous-parent 
lawsuits similar to threats in Peoria.

There was the lawsuit, for example, filed by 15-year-old Elizabeth Smith in 
Bath Township, Ohio, who sued her school district and 11 teachers in 2000 
for $6 million, claiming that her grades were unfair. The school had 
lowered her grades because of frequent absences and tardiness, which the 
Smith family blamed on "chronic tonsillitis" and the fact that she stayed 
home to put her siblings on the school bus. Meanwhile, in Riverside, 
Calif., a football player sued his former high school teachers at Murrieta 
Valley High School for giving him grades that were too high: He claimed 
that his education suffered because they cut him too much slack so that he 
could play football.

School discipline is another area where teachers and parents struggle for 
the upper hand. Lacey Renfro, a high school student in Tennessee, sued the 
cheerleading coach after she was suspended from a game for disciplinary 
reasons; Justin Swindler in Pennsylvania sued because he was expelled for 
soliciting a hit man via his Web site to kill his English teacher; and a 
father in Tennessee sued two teachers after they confiscated his son's 
yo-yo on a school trip where toys had been expressly forbidden.

Olson, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, explains that, in the 
past, most schoolyard litigation grew out of incidents in which kids were 
barred from sports teams, or fell on the playground, or felt that they were 
discriminated against under the Individuals with Disabilities Education 
Act.  It is rare that a simple grading squabble, such as the one in Peoria, 
will make it all the way to a court case -- in part because of a 1978 
Supreme Court ruling that held that courts shouldn't second-guess a school 
on academic decisions (those grading squabbles that do make it all the way 
to lawsuits are usually under the purview of the Disabilities Act -- i.e.: 
"My kid was disabled and deserved special treatment.")

Even in districts that haven't bowed to pressure with standardized grading, 
the fear of lawsuits and parental retribution has undermined school 
programs and teachers' daily routines. Twenty percent of the respondents to 
the American Tort Reform Association survey, for example, reported spending 
five to 10 hours a week in meetings or documenting every little action they 
took with a student, in case of future litigation.

"Lawsuits have become a great cost for school districts," says Julie 
Underwood, general counsel for the National School Boards Association. "The 
entire sub-specialty of education law didn't exist 25 years ago, and now 
it's a big, recognized sub-specialty. You can't keep track of the number of 
times that someone comes in to a principal's office and says, 'If you don't
do this, I'll sue you.' It's just so commonplace." In fact, she says, all 
principals now have to undergo education-law classes before they can 
receive certification.

Finally, the students risk both the quality of their education and their 
faith in the system. Kids with lackluster achievement records who 
nevertheless head off to college with satisfactory grades thanks to Mom's 
strong-arm tactics are probably not going to make it far in higher 
education. Their classmates, who actually worked hard for their grades, 
will probably be demoralized too.

"It undermines the hard work of other kids in the classroom, when they see 
standards change for one student. It erodes the standards, when we really 
want students to know that standards are meaningful. And for students 
involved, it really cheats them of a meaningful experience," says Mitchell. 
"Sometimes failure is the best teacher a student could have."

[Note: The article "L is for Lawsuit," published on July 12, 2002, 
contained several factual errors that have been corrected. The school 
referred to in the story's opening sentence is Sunrise Mountain High 
School, not Sunshine Mountain High School. An incorrect reference to the 
Illinois bar should have been to the Arizona bar. Walter Olson's name was 
incorrectly spelled. Salon regrets the errors.]

<<http://www.salon.com/mwt/feature/2002/07/12/parents_rule/print.html>>



--Ronn! :)

In one respect at least the Martians are a happy people; they have no lawyers.
         -- "A Princess of Mars," by Edgar Rice Burroughs


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