View Full Version : Teacher who wouldn’t raise grades gets reward


Donna
03-30-2007, 08:51 PM
Teacher who wouldn’t raise grades gets reward
School district must pay $1.4 million after it suspended, demoted her

Updated: 11:50 a.m. PT March 30, 2007
BATON ROUGE, La. - A Louisiana school system must pay more than $1.4 million to an English teacher who was suspended and demoted after refusing to change the D’s and F’s she gave to 70 percent of her students, a federal jury has found.

The jury of four men and five women deliberated almost four hours before finding that the school board, superintendent and the principal at West Feliciana High School had harassed Paula Payne, violated her First Amendment rights and retaliated against her.

Payne said, "I'm just so thankful the truth is known."

Jurors awarded her $1.2 million for mental anguish and $200,000 in punitive damages.

The lawsuit filed two years ago said the teacher, who had worked for 16 years, was suspended and demoted because she refused to change the low grades and told her story to a television station.

School system administrators said they never asked her to change any grades. Superintendent Lloyd Lindsey said she was suspended for five days in November 2004 because she refused to meet with administrators unless a Louisiana Education Association representative was there.

Until she resigned in 2005, Payne taught English at the school in St. Francisville, where students called her class the "House of Payne" because of her high expectations.

In the first six weeks of the fall 2004 semester, court documents show, she gave 70 percent of the school's 180 sophomores a “D” or an “F” in English II. The low scores conflicted with those same students' grades in other subjects as well as English grades for freshmen, juniors and seniors.

Payne's lawsuit said principal Michael Thornhill told her that if she would not change the grades, she would be assigned to teach in the behavior modification clinic for troubled students. Louisiana law bars any principal, superintendent or school board member from influencing or altering a student's grade.

In January 2005, the West Feliciana School Board suspended her for 45 days for willful neglect of duty. When she returned to the high school, she was assigned to be a library monitor and given tutoring classes with no students. She taught only two English classes.

Payne now teaches English to inmates at Dixon Correctional Center.

Asked whether she would consider returning to teach in Louisiana public schools, Payne said she would not.

Good for her!!!

harrisonsdream
03-30-2007, 08:56 PM
good for her. normally i'm against excessive awards in lawsuits but good for her

EmeraldEyes
03-30-2007, 09:15 PM
Good for her!!!

VinnysGirl
03-30-2007, 09:15 PM
I'm glad she was holding the kids accountable because the school system in Louisiana is far from par. It's about time!!! Good for her for standing her ground!!!

Donna
03-30-2007, 09:17 PM
I'm glad she was holding the kids accountable because the school system in Louisiana is far from par. It's about time!!! Good for her for standing her ground!!!

LOL I was thinking the same thing as I read this. LA is definately known for how much their schools lack!

VinnysGirl
03-30-2007, 09:19 PM
LOL I was thinking the same thing as I read this. LA is definately known for how much their schools lack!

Yup!! Precisely why I am SOOOO beyond thankful my parents moved us from LA to TX when I was going into 8th grade! My education is MUUUUUCH better in Texas and I had SOOOO many more opportunities that way!!

define
03-31-2007, 04:58 AM
Good for her!

sdshorty
03-31-2007, 10:28 AM
I'm torn on this story, because I feel I don't know the whole story. 70% of all the students is a bit excessive, I understand that it is possible for that many students to get those low grades, but if the rest of their grades don't reflect that I would want more details. WHY exactly did they get these grades, what type of curriculum or tests was she using, what is her teaching style? It is very possible that she is not a good teacher causing her students to get those grades. Sadly, most of the time grades reflect the teacher, and just because she's been working for 16 years doesn't mean she's a good teacher. Anyway, I'm always for teachers standing their ground, but I'm not 100% for this one.
ALSO, 1.2 million? Are you freaking kidding me? THAT to me is WAY excessive, where do they think this money is going to come from? THE SCHOOL SYSTEM! This money is being taken away from those same students who Obviously very much need this money, so that this teacher can get paid for 'mental anguish'?? Give me a break. I can see the $200,000 for punitive damages, but I think her asking for over 1 million dollars of funds that would otherwise go to help those schools is ridiculous! to me that makes HER negligent as a teacher who is SUPPOSED to be looking out for the best interest of the students.

Caimbrie
03-31-2007, 10:52 AM
I'm torn on this story, because I feel I don't know the whole story. 70% of all the students is a bit excessive, I understand that it is possible for that many students to get those low grades, but if the rest of their grades don't reflect that I would want more details. WHY exactly did they get these grades, what type of curriculum or tests was she using, what is her teaching style? It is very possible that she is not a good teacher causing her students to get those grades. Sadly, most of the time grades reflect the teacher, and just because she's been working for 16 years doesn't mean she's a good teacher. Anyway, I'm always for teachers standing their ground, but I'm not 100% for this one.
ALSO, 1.2 million? Are you freaking kidding me? THAT to me is WAY excessive, where do they think this money is going to come from? THE SCHOOL SYSTEM! This money is being taken away from those same students who Obviously very much need this money, so that this teacher can get paid for 'mental anguish'?? Give me a break. I can see the $200,000 for punitive damages, but I think her asking for over 1 million dollars of funds that would otherwise go to help those schools is ridiculous! to me that makes HER negligent as a teacher who is SUPPOSED to be looking out for the best interest of the students.


I gotta go with you on this one.

Donna
03-31-2007, 11:47 AM
I guess you just have to know just how bad LA schools are. They are ALWAYS at the bottom of the list. Who is to say that other teachers arent letting these kids skate by, by giving higher grades than what they deserve. Honestly, with the test scores that LA has, that wouldnt surprise me at all.

Kat
03-31-2007, 12:09 PM
I guess you just have to know just how bad LA schools are. They are ALWAYS at the bottom of the list. Who is to say that other teachers arent letting these kids skate by, by giving higher grades than what they deserve. Honestly, with the test scores that LA has, that wouldnt surprise me at all.

LA isnt the only school system that is terrible. CA is pretty damn bad its self ;)

I agree mostly with what Renee said. I can see if it were a more reasonable amount of kids, and like the article said, it didnt match most of their other grades, nor that of the freshmen, jrs, or srs. I dont think the WHOLE school is skating by. LA isnt full of dumbasses. I know there are probably quite a few, but not everyone is below standards are they?