Monday, February 27, 2012

Teachers need training to spot campus molesters

This is a good article about the need to train teachers to notice certain things in order to try to stop some of the sexual abuse of children by school officials. Apparently training was put together in LA but the part of training on how to pick up on suspicious behavior was left out of most of the trainings. There are those who will complain that teachers will be policing other teachers. That false allegations will be filed. That there will be suspicion when there is no reason. While these are all possible it shouldn't mean that teachers shouldn't be trained on how to notice certain things. In almost all of the stories of teachers sexually abusing students that I have posted to this blog, someone was suspicious of the teachers behavior. One of the big concerns is that not all suspicious behavior is being reported and that there are many cases and they go unreported.

I think safe guards should be put in place. I also think some type of testing that teachers need to take to see if they have tendencies to be a sexual offender. There are good tools out there that help screen sexual offenders every day. Why that couldn't be modified and used actually in all professions where people have access to children, including volunteering. Almost all child predators put themselves in a position to be around children. Some predators even get their education in specific fields because that will put them around children. I have read conversation threads on boychat where there are at least three teachers in training who discuss their vocational choice because it will give them access to children for their whole career. I am glad that this is being talked about and that changes will happen around training but it is sad that we had to have children be harmed before this change occurred. Rosie

By CHRISTINA HOAG Associated Press


LOS ANGELES—Many school teachers across the nation are trained to pick up on clues of child abuse and neglect, but most are not trained to spot the signs of classroom pedophiles, leaving a gray area that could help teacher molesters operate undetected on campuses. Experts say better training of school teachers and administrators in red-flag behavior could aid in catching molesters, pointing to the case of a former Los Angeles third-grade teacher who is charged with feeding some two dozen students semen-laced cookies, and blindfolding and gagging them over a five-year period.
"There are clear and consistent patterns of behavior. If you know what they are, they jump right out at you," said Diane Cranley, founder of Talk About Abuse to Liberate Kids based in Laguna Niguel, Calif. "But there's no awareness."
Only a fraction of the nation's 3 million educators are involved in any sexual misconduct with children. Although no national statistics are kept, a 2007 Associated Press investigation found 2,500 cases nationwide over five years where educators were punished for sexual abuse.
But that number is believed to be only a sliver of all sexual misconduct incidents.
Most abuse never gets reported because children are threatened not to tell, or are too ashamed. Moreover, many reported cases get dismissed because the child is not believed or the allegations can't be proven since last month's arrest of former Los Angeles teacher Mark Berndt at Miramonte Elementary School, six other cases involving improper sexual relations between students and teachers or school employees have cropped up just in the Los Angeles Unified School District, the nation's second largest school system. Police and school officials attribute the rise to increased awareness resulting from that case's notoriety. They've received a flood of reports of possible sexual abuse since Berndt's arrest.


The prevalence of abuse reports underscores the need for better awareness training for school employees, said Victor Vieth, executive director of the National Child Protection Training Center in Minnesota. Most school districts around the country require teachers and other employees to undergo training in spotting signs of child abuse and neglect. School staffers, as well as other professionals including police, physicians and social workers, are "mandated reporters," who are required by state laws to report suspected child abuse to law enforcement. If they fail to do so, they can be prosecuted.
But many training courses focus on how to detect signs that a child is being abused outside the school, such as drawings a child may make, behavioral changes, and suspect bruises. They do not generally include instruction on spotting suspicious behavior by a perpetrator, least of all by a colleague.
"We need to teach teachers that sex offenders don't wear trench coats, how to observe patterns, have that gut feeling and articulate it," said Vieth, whose organization has developed a college curriculum to help student teachers be more alert to protecting children.
Los Angeles Unified stepped up child abuse prevention training following a 2008 case of an assistant principal who was convicted of molesting a student. Part of the course involves showing employees how to respond to 40 different abuse scenarios, including that of a colleague molesting students, but not all school employees may have been given that particular scenario, said district spokeswoman Lydia Ramos.
In response to the Miramonte case, principals were mandated earlier this week to show staff the specific scenario involving signs of a campus pedophile, she said.
The problem is that the red flags of a child predator can be construed as innocent and easily dismissed.
Former students and parents at Miramonte Elementary School thought Berndt was kindly and warm, if a little quirky. Parents chuckled at the gym shorts and black tights he wore as part of a Halloween mouse costume.
He gave out cookies to kids and loved taking photos of them. He took them on field trips, sent them birthday cards and gifts, attended parties at their homes. He kept exotic insects in terrariums in his classroom and played funny music. He seemed to genuinely liked children and had a knack for building rapport with them.
But prosecutors say he also had a darker penchant—putting his semen on cookies, taking photos as children ate them, blindfolding them and taping their mouths. He played what he told kids were "tasting games," sometimes pulling them out of an after-school program to come to his classroom alone.
Berndt has pleaded not guilty to 23 counts of lewdness on a child.
Overly childish behavior, over involvement with children and their parents, bestowing gifts and favors, singling out children as special, taking photos, being alone with a child and selecting children are classic signs of a predator "grooming" kids to go along with what he wants them to do, experts say.
Colleagues, however, may view those habits as not quite ordinary, but not sinister.
Informing on a colleague's idiosyncrasies is a difficult spot to put teachers in, said Frank Wells, spokesman for the California Teachers Association. "It's tough to go in and say so-and-so is weird," he said.
The state Department of Social Services' free training program for mandated reporters of child abuse covers different types of abuse in different settings, including sexual abuse, but it does not include awareness of pedophile behavior.
That may be an area where the program could be expanded, but it is a different training topic, said Jennifer Davis, assistant medical director of San Diego's Chadwick Center for Children & Families at Rady Children's Hospital, which has developed the course under a $600,000, three-year state grant.
"It is a slippery slope as to what is suspicious behavior," she said.
Child protection advocates say schools could simply do a lot more to minimize opportunities for pedophiles to operate. That includes enacting rules such as not allowing teachers to be alone with children, lock classroom doors or pull kids out of a class for an unauthorized reason.
That might have helped in a case in the Clovis, Calif., Unified School District last month where an elementary gym teacher faces various charges for allegedly pulling a second-grader out of physical education class and taking her to an empty classroom at least four times to play the "lollipop game"—blindfolding her and having her give him oral sex which he photographed.
The case was discovered when the child's mother observed the class outdoors and noticed neither the teacher nor her daughter was there.
Establishing boundaries for interacting with children, such as forbidding home visits, giving gifts, informal field trips, or photographs, makes it easier to spot violators and report them, experts say.
"If you lay it out in black and white, it's very clear," said Cindy McElhinney, director of programs at Darkness to Light, a South Carolina-based nonprofit that conducts sex abuse awareness training and has conducted parent workshops at LAUSD. "Teachers get a lot of comfort in that."
Such rules have become de rigueur in recent years at organizations that serve young people such as Big Brothers Big Sisters of America and Boy Scouts of America, which have been hit with sexual abuse allegations and lawsuits.
Charles Wilson, senior director of the Chadwick Center, which has strict policies governing employee-child interaction, noted that awareness is the key: "It's about turning that culture of silence into a culture of vigilance."
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Contact the reporter at http://twitter.com/ChristinaHoag.

http://www.times-standard.com/statenews/ci_20049628

2 comments:

  1. Rosie, thank you so much for blogging about this important topic and for your courage to share your story with the world. As you have experienced, talking about it is important for our healing but it's even more important for us to talk about it as a means of prevention.

    Our silence enables child molesters!

    But together with the right education and the courage to break the silence, we can protect kids. I'm the Founder of TAALK and we just released a new program that specifically teaches people how to protect kids in youth serving organizations. There's a component for the staff members and for parents and I hope all of your readers will visit our website to learn how they can play a part in protecting kids (www.taalk.org).

    We are stronger together and I appreciate all that you do to spread the word!!! - Diane

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hi Diane,

    You are most welcome. It is very healing sharing my story. I am glad that this sharing is helping others as well. I went to your site. The work you are doing is wonderful. I would love to go through the training. I am not an organization though. Can I put a link to your page on my page? Education is the best way to empower our children. CSA is preventable with the right training/education. I also am following you on twitter. I will make sure to re-tweet some of your tweets. I am hoping that I can get out there and share my story publicly at some point. For now I am quite content to share my voice via my blog, twitter and rosieforchange on youtube. thanks for commenting. Come back and post again. Rosie

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