Giving ESP Authority To Remove Unruly Students Would Improve School Safety, Committee Told
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Education support professionals "need the same level of respect
and authority as teachers to handle students who violate the school
code of conduct," Tina Koch tells the Senate Education Committee.
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For the safety of children, all school personnel should
have the authority to remove unruly students from potentially violent
situations, a Lafayette County teacher's aide told a legislative committee
Tuesday (November 29, 2005).
Speaking in favor of a bill that would give education
support professionals the authority to remove dangerous, unruly or disruptive
students, Tina Koch said the measure would help "provide a safe
learning environment for all."
"Due to tightening of budgets, support staff
duties have increased to where they are often in independent supervisory
roles both in and out of the classroom. We need the same level of respect
and authority as teachers to handle students who violate the school
code of conduct," said Koch, a teacher's aide who works with both
special needs and regular education students at Black Hawk Middle School
in Gratiot.
Current law gives a teacher the authority
to remove a pupil from the classroom if the pupil violates a locally
developed code of conduct; is dangerous, unruly or disruptive; or exhibits
behavior that interferes with the teacher’s ability to teach effectively.
SB 410 gives education support professionals that same authority. SB
410 is authored by Sen. Glenn Grothman (R-West Bend) who also testified
at the legislative hearing.
"While working with a group of students
independently in a classroom or within another teacher’s room,
when a student becomes disruptive, the learning process is interrupted
for the entire group. If the teacher has to stop the lesson to deal
with this one student, everyone else in the room is cheated of his or
her time to learn," Koch told the Senate Committee on Education.
"Support staff have been assigned
to supervise students in classes, lunchrooms, hallways, on buses and
playgrounds, but they need to be empowered to remove the few disruptive
ones," she said. "Let’s keep our great schools safe
and effective learning institutions while giving all employees the respect
and authority they deserve."
In other testimony submitted to the committee:
- Marge Rivard, a paraeducator at Madison Middle School in Appleton
wrote: "Unfortunately too often what is heard is that I am 'just
an aide,' or he's 'just a custodian,' or she's 'just a kitchen helper.'
I believe we all do difficult and important work for the well-being
and learning of children no matter what our job title may be. We try
to instill in students the philosophy that everyone is valued. It
is time that we show that by empowering the education support staff
of the state and allowing them to remove disruptive students, just
as our professional staff is empowered."
- Barbara Schwartz, a student supervisor in the Port Washington-Saukville
School District, wrote that at a high school basketball game, "we
had a group of students that became very rude to parents, other students
and the opposing team. There was nothing that I could do except call
the Port Washington Police Department and wait for them. Had this
bill been in place, I would have had the legal authority to escort
them out of the building."
- Cheryl Gruse, a paraprofessional at Merrill Elementary School in
Oshkosh, wrote: "There are many times during the day that we
are alone with the students, whether it be lunch or bus duty, recess
or in a class setting; at all times the teacher and/or staff member
is with the students during art, music, and gym. There are times that
the support staff spends more time with the students than the teachers,
and sometimes a child may become frustrated and lose his or her temper.
In a situation like this when the learning of other children is interrupted
by another student’s behavior, that behavior needs to stop."
- Elaine Hoffer, a paraeducator in the Middleton Cross Plains School
District and president of the Middleton Educational Support Association,
wrote: "Sometimes the support staff spends more time with the
students than teachers and can see when a child is reaching his or
her point of no return. Paraeducators need to have the authority to
give the child the opportunity to make the choice that needs to be
made. Making this bill a law can only give the support staff the support
they need to help our schools to be a safer and happier place for
all concerned."
The bill is expected to be voted on in
the Senate Education Committee in the coming weeks. If SB 410 is voted
out of committee, it would then be sent to the full State Senate.
Posted December 1, 2005