Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Saskatchewan Teacher 'Having A Bad Day' Fined For Throwing Marker At Student

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Feb, 2017 11:30 AM
    REGINA — A Saskatchewan teacher has been reprimanded for throwing a white board marker at a student, hitting her above her right eye.
     
    The Saskatchewan Professional Teachers Regulatory Board held a disciplinary hearing last fall for Michel Andre Joseph Levesque after a formal complaint was made.
     
    The decision, posted on the board's website, says Levesque threw the marker to get a disruptive student’s attention in a Grade 9 shop class on Nov. 15, 2015.
     
    Instead, it hit another student above her right eye, causing a cut and swelling.
     
    The discipline committee found Levesque guilty of misconduct and ordered Levesque to pay $10,000, or about 20 per cent, of the cost of the hearing within 30 days or have his teaching licence suspended.
     
    The board would not confirm if Levesque paid the penalty, but the public registry does not show him as a registered teacher.
     
    “After a number of unsuccessful attempts to secure the attention of the inattentive student, and feeling rather stressed, I picked up a white board marker and tossed it in the direction in order to get his attention, not to injure him,” Levesque told the disciplinary hearing.
     
    “Under normal circumstances, I would simply walk over to the student and address the behaviour directly. However, a recent foot injury made walking difficult, and I chose, unwisely, to obtain his attention in a manner which I now deeply regret.”
     
    The decision also acknowledged Levesque was having a bad day after waking up early with an allergic reaction to medication and not getting a good night’s sleep.
     
    The girl said Levesque was “angry” and “whipped” the marker at her. Her mother took her to the police station, and photographs her father took within an hour of the incident showed a red mark on her forehead, with some swelling surrounding the abrasion.
     
    "The incident caused loss of dignity and humiliated Student A," the decision said, adding "throwing an object at a disruptive student is not appropriate classroom management."
     
    The decision does not say what school this happened at.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    UBC Votes For Sustainable Investment Fund To Be Free Of Fossil Fuel Companies

    UBC Votes For Sustainable Investment Fund To Be Free Of Fossil Fuel Companies
    VANCOUVER — The University of British Columbia will exclude fossil fuel companies from its low-carbon investment fund, a move being applauded by a campus group that has been pushing for divestment.

    UBC Votes For Sustainable Investment Fund To Be Free Of Fossil Fuel Companies

    Home Sales In B.C. Return To 'Historic Averages

    Home Sales In B.C. Return To 'Historic Averages
      The association says 4,487 condos, townhomes and detached homes sold in B.C. in January, down 23 per cent compared with the same period last year.

    Home Sales In B.C. Return To 'Historic Averages

    Usha Ram, Burger King Cook, Fired For Taking Food Worth 50 Cents Wins $46,000

    Usha Ram, Burger King Cook, Fired For Taking Food Worth 50 Cents Wins $46,000
    55-year-old woman admitted she took the food without paying, but said she asked the restaurant's general manager and was given permission to do so.

    Usha Ram, Burger King Cook, Fired For Taking Food Worth 50 Cents Wins $46,000

    No Injuries Reported As Rockslide Closes Highway 1 North Of Hope, B.C.

    Rocks fell on to Highway 1, about 25 kilometres north of Hope, B.C., Tuesday evening.

    No Injuries Reported As Rockslide Closes Highway 1 North Of Hope, B.C.

    Inderjit Singh Reyat, Only Person Convicted In Air India Bombing, Released From Halfway House

    Reyat was accused of perjury in 2006 for repeatedly lying during his testimony at a trial into the bombing deaths of more than 300 people.

    Inderjit Singh Reyat, Only Person Convicted In Air India Bombing, Released From Halfway House

    Maninder Singh Braich, 38, Identified As Victim Of Vancouver's Third Homicide Of 2017

    Maninder Singh Braich, 38, Identified As Victim Of Vancouver's Third Homicide Of 2017
    Police have released the identity of a 38-year-old man killed in East Vancouver last week.

    Maninder Singh Braich, 38, Identified As Victim Of Vancouver's Third Homicide Of 2017