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|    Message 91,588 of 92,004    |
|    DEI Employees to All    |
|    Teacher allegedly called out cheerleader    |
|    17 May 24 06:35:12    |
      XPost: alt.education, soc.culture.african.american, alt.politics.liberalism       XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.guns       From: progressive-liberalism@schools.nyc.gov              She saw something — and said something.              Veteran dance teacher Karen Eubanks was appalled when cheerleaders at the       High School for Environmental Studies in Manhattan bared their bottoms       during a school performance.              Eubanks raised objections when some of the 30 girls, in extremely short       cheerleading skirts, wore panties underneath that were too skimpy or ill-       fitted and showed “some of their genitals,” butts and even pubic hair.              She spotted eight to 10 boys in the gym audience videotaping the show.              Instead of commending Eubanks for promoting modesty and decency, the       Department of Education brought her up on misconduct charges - including       verbal abuse - and tried to fire her.              The investigation and often-absurd eight-day trial that followed cost       taxpayers hundreds of thousands of dollars.              Eubanks, 59, a city teacher for two decades and former educator with the       New York City Ballet, was accused of saying the girls “showed a lot of       vagina or “flashes of vagina,” and using the words “g-string,” “burlesque       moment” and “nasty” within earshot of students, thus embarrassing or       belittling them in violation of chancellor’s rules.              “It’s shocking that I was accused of wrongdoing after advocating for the       dignity of our students,” Eubanks told The Post.              The flap erupted in April 2016 when Eubanks, who was substituting at the       Hell’s Kitchen school, attended an after-hours spring concert, which       included a dance performance by the cheerleaders.              Besides students and staff, the audience included parents.              As part of their routine, the cheerleaders executed a “fan kick.” They sat       on the floor facing the audience, leaned on their left hips and raised       their right legs high in the air, waving them like a fan across their       faces and bodies.              Eubanks testified she saw some girls wore “what looked like panties” that       didn’t stay in place, “riding up” to expose their genitals to the       audience, she said.              Darius Williams, a DOE contractor and former dancer and choreographer with       the Alvin Ailey Dance Company, also attended the concert. He backed       Eubanks’ account, calling the display “vulgar.”              He also saw boys filming it.              But Principal Amber Najmi-Shadid, who brought her 10-year-old chil?d,       testified she “did not see any ‘vaginas’ showing,” and insisted,       “Everything was appropriate.”              Afterwards, Eubanks said she praised the girls for a “wonderful”       performance?, but told a few of them: “You know that fan kick? Did you       guys ever think about turning it upstage, or to the side, or on a       diagonal? . . . I’m a bit concerned because your crotches were facing the       audience.” She denied saying words like “nasty” or “burlesque” to the       girls.              The cheerleading coach, Nicola Brugueras, said Eubanks pulled her aside on       a stairwell the next day to discuss the dance.              Brugueras said Eubanks was “confrontational” and used the words “crotch       shot” and “nasty.”              Brugueras called a meeting with the cheerleaders to address the issue. In       a chat room, one girl angrily mentioned “some f–king dumb ass lady talking       s–t about our choreography, saying its burlesque and how she saw vaginas.”              “Yea. She think she some high and mighty bitch,” another texted.              The DOE held a trial, which also included charges that Eubanks arrived       late for a class at her former school, Gramercy Arts HS, when the hall       bell was broken and filmed students in the mistaken belief the school had       already obtained parent permission.              The proceeding last fall generated a 974-page transcript and a dense 42-       page ruling in January by Doyle Pryor, a hearing officer who gets $1,400 a       day plus expenses to conduct testimony and write rulings.              Termination cases typically cost some $300,000 in investigative efforts,       lawyer fees and other staff time.              Pryor concluded that Eubanks was too harsh and should have used gentler       words like “private parts.” But he found she “acted out of concern” for       both the cheerleaders and their coach.              He ordered that she receive a letter of reprimand.              Eubanks, who makes $93,790 a year, is now teaching at nearby Facing       History HS.              https://nypost.com/2017/10/07/teacher-in-hot-water-for-allegedly-calling-       out-cheerleaders-who-showed-a-lot-of-vagina/              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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