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Rigoberto Ruelas, LAUSD Teacher Upset Over Low Ranking, Found Dead

CHRISTINA HOAG   09/27/10 07:45 PM ET   AP

Rigoberto Ruelas

SOUTH GATE, Calif. — Rigoberto Ruelas Jr. was considered much more than a fifth-grade teacher at Miramonte Elementary School – he was a mentor to youth tempted to join gangs and a tireless booster that kids could make it to college.

But after a newspaper published a school district report that ranked Ruelas as a "less effective teacher" based on his students' test scores, colleagues saw him grow despondent.

On Sunday, his body was found at the foot of a remote forest bridge in what appears to be a suicide. Authorities are still investigating, but friends and colleagues suggest he was distraught over the teacher rating.

Parents, colleagues and former students gathered on the school lawn Monday around a memorial shrine of flowers and candles, shocked that the 39-year-old teacher had taken his own life and angered that he would be judged solely by test scores.

"It's not his fault the students were low," said Ismael Delgado, a 20-year-old former pupil.

Miramonte is a large school in an impoverished, gang-plagued neighborhood about six miles southeast of downtown Los Angeles. About 60 percent of the students are Spanish-speaking English-language learners.

The school was a big part of Ruelas' life. He lived just blocks away and started working there at age 22 as a teacher's aide. Four years later, he became a teacher. Over his 14-year teaching career, he had nearly perfect attendance, the district said.

"We need more teachers like him," the district said in a statement.

The motive for Ruelas taking his own life is far from clear. But officials with the United Teachers Los Angeles union said he had been upset since August, when the Los Angeles Times published his district ranking as a "less effective" teacher based on his students' standardized English and math test scores.

Ruelas scored "average" in getting his students up to acceptable levels in English, but "less effective" in math, and "less effective" overall. The school itself ranked as "least effective" in raising test scores, and only five of Miramonte's 35 teachers were ranked as average.

The Times' publication of individual rankings for elementary school teachers in the Los Angeles Unified School District sparked widespread outrage among teachers. The district's rankings ranged from least and less effective to average, more effective and most effective.

The UTLA union protested in front of the newspaper's downtown headquarters and called for a boycott of the Times, which published the rankings as part of a push for a better method to evaluate teacher effectiveness.

Although other factors may have been at play in Ruelas' death, Mathew Taylor, chair of UTLA South Area, said Monday he believed the ranking was a contributing factor based on conversations with teachers at the school.

"He was a very well-respected teacher," Taylor said. "He took the pressure being applied to him to heart."

In a brief statement Sunday, the Times extended its condolences to the family and noted the death is under investigation.

Ruelas was last seen Sept. 19 when he dropped off a birthday gift for his sister. He notified the school to get a substitute for his classes Monday and Tuesday, but he did not return to work Wednesday and his family reported him missing.

By all accounts, he was a dedicated teacher who cared deeply about the children at Miramonte. Parents and students said he often stayed after school to tutor struggling kids and offer counseling so they stayed on the straight and narrow.

"He took the worse students and tried to change their lives," said Delgado, the former student. "I had friends who wanted to be gangsters, but he talked them out of it. He treated you like family."

Parents said they were grateful.

"He gave my son good advice. He told him to study and to listen to his parents," said Guadelupe Pina, whose son was in Ruelas' class last year.

Principal Martin Sandoval said many of Ruelas' former students told him they went to college because of his encouragement that they could do it.

"He came out of this community so he was more here than a teacher," Sandoval said. "There's no question he affected many lives."

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08:44 PM on 11/10/2010
We are living in a society where fingers are so often pointed at teachers for all of society's problems when it comes to kids and education. What people don't realize is that it takes a family structure where education is encouraged in order for these kids to be receptive to education and it's value. When that isn't present, there is very little a teacher can do to change that. Parents, principles and everyone involved in the structure & formation of the school system should be, but are rarely held accountable - not to mention the kids themselves. It's society in general. In a classroom there is 1 teacher, and usually an average of 30 kids. If even a small number of those kids are unruly, it's impossible to teach the rest. It's so common for teachers to become discouraged and disillusioned. They don't receive the support or pay they deserve and they often feel that everyone is against them when they are often THE ONLY ONES who really care about those kids. It's sad. I worked as a substitute in several different schools, heard stories of teachers committing suicide and considering the environment they worked in ... it seemed almost inevitable. The stress is overwhelming. Teachers need more support, and parents have to take responsibility for raising their kids to value eduction and respect authority.
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11:59 PM on 10/06/2010
I can see why he may have done this. His credibility is shot as a teacher thanks to the L.A. times and he's publicly humiliated because he is judged as a failure because of his students. No other industry has that kind of standard.

They did to him what McCarthy tried to do to this guy. And to paraphrase a famous quote in this video

"Have you (L.A. Times) no sense of decency?"

http://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/welch-mccarthy.html
06:18 PM on 10/02/2010
A society that disrespects and defames its teachers is a society that has not future.
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dcruz1122
02:57 AM on 10/02/2010
This is such a sad occurence. It shouldn't have happened. My prayers are with his family. I can't help wonder though, that maybe the suicide had something to do with something else and the union is trying to make him into some kind of martyr. The union is trying to score sympathy points for the union because they know that with the superman documentary out, that people are going to start scrutinizing the union, so this is their way of deflecting from the real issue, which is, the union getting in the way of school reform. Some unions are great and necessary, but most will not whatever they need to to keep thier status quo. I think the union is using this poor guy, and the rest of the public is falling for it.
11:36 AM on 09/30/2010
You need to go over to the Fox New reporting of this and read the comments. They are just unbelievable.

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2010/09/28/newspaper-teachers-suicide/?test=latestnews
12:47 AM on 09/30/2010
Teachers need positive feedback from the people who know about their work. For me, it's my students. The admins at my school gave me a bad rating (unlike the teacher who took his life). Teachers who got bad ratings are going to feel stressed out and they do need some support. I just hope that we don't give up on what the LA Times has started. We have to stick with it, support the teachers who feel overwhelmed by negative ratings, and make this the first step. Our district is very corrupt and backward, and we need the sort of daylight the LA Times has shown on us. Keeping with it is how we keep this man's tragic death from being in vain.
01:39 PM on 09/28/2010
I hope someone sues the LA Times for wrongful death, Defamation.

The money could go to Ruelas' foundation for funding college for his kids.

People should know from this story how having a right wing hack owning your city's biggest newspaper can ruin your community. They're all about corporate profit, fueled by greed; and it matters not who has to die to make them rich. Even Governor Swartzenegger is angry at them because they're part of the oil boosting Prop. 23. Notice they act like it's a good idea?

LA Times should be boycotted by anyone who loves the people of California and wants to breathe, drink clean water, and just live.
01:39 PM on 09/28/2010
And in the LA Times this article is located on page 3 of the second section (AA3), with a headline "Teacher's suicide shocks students, teachers and parents". The first mention of the LA Times is in paragraph 6. Then the Times states that they "analyzed" his performance, and determined he was an ineffective (or "less-effective") math teacher.

So, here is an average guy, taking a thankless job, with no real upside, and the Times dumps on him. The Times sent a couple of reporters out, hired a consultant, and let fly with the shotgun blast of truthiness. This guy was not a celebrity, he did not deserve to be "outed" in a public form by the Times. If there was a problem with this guy, I am not sure me and my proctologist should have all the information. Why doesn't the LA Times go after the effectiveness of politicians? Or go after the effectiveness of bankers in providing services? Or go after USDA food inspectors in terms of "effectiveness? I'll tell you why: that data is not tracked systematically and is therefore unavailable OR the target is a protected interest. "Here is some easy data, lets find a problem" is the LA Times method.

What if the LA Times were only judged by the proportion of the paper were dedicated to advertisements? I think we would see that paper not serving community needs, having falling subscriptions, and ending up in bankruptcy court. Would they be rated "less effective?"
05:44 PM on 09/28/2010
But why do we have to blame the LA Times for his jumping off a bridge? Where does Rigoberto's integrity lie? Why is his life defined by what the LA Times says? Why do you allow the LA Times to define the reasons for his actions?
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12:01 AM on 10/07/2010
Because his integrity as a teacher has just been questioned and compromised. Obviously his job was of high value to him. Not only was he just told he sucks, it was shouted with a megaphone across the planet.

Not exactly like what happened to Tyler Clementi but similar - whatever shred of privacy he had was taken from him by an unthinking entity and he could not handle it emotionally.
12:21 PM on 09/28/2010
Study after study shows that the fastest way to improve student learning is to have lower class sizes.
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Jeanms 247
12:03 PM on 09/28/2010
There's more to teaching than good test results. If I hadn't had teachers that would have gone the extra mile to get me to do my work, I wouldn't have made it to university. I remember them not for what I learned (because I can barely remember it) but for the effort and time they gave me to make me a better person.
11:58 AM on 09/28/2010
Ya this is sad, but what you gonna do, stop media from disclosing information?
05:45 PM on 09/28/2010
We should CENSOR the media!
08:19 PM on 09/28/2010
great idea? Can we start with the web?
10:32 AM on 10/13/2010
Since a performance evaluation - and that's what the Times did to this guy - is generally kept confidential, even for public employees, YES!
ruburnt
Live Free or Die....
11:54 AM on 09/28/2010
Why in the world would the LA Times publish Mr. Rubelas name in the paper?
11:50 AM on 09/28/2010
Condolences to his friends and family.
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The Drip
Sippin' on the syrup
11:41 AM on 09/28/2010
I don't understand why he gotta end his life over a small issue. If he such a great educator, he should stand up and fight for what he think is right and I'm sure
his colleagues and friends will support him. Like the old saying, "What doesn't kill you, makes you stronger." I think the rating is just garbage given by people who are on drugs.
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Craigy6
10:03 AM on 09/28/2010
Another casualty of NCLB. Thank you Mr. Bush.
11:56 AM on 09/28/2010
LOL, you are not serious, you think Bush killed him?
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Craigy6
10:03 AM on 09/29/2010
No, no. he killed himself. I'm just saying that without NCLB, the reason his friends gave for his depression would not have really existed. These problems only started popping up when we began to base everything in education reform off of test results.
05:48 PM on 09/28/2010
Hey, somebody built that bridge for him to jump off of! Blame them too!
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Craigy6
10:04 AM on 09/29/2010
I'm not blaming anyone. It was his own damn doing. Not getting high marks is no reason to kill yourself. You can see my above comment where I rationalize my statement.