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Mikaela Gilbert-Lurie

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Why Student-Teacher Relationships Are Never OK

Posted: 04/19/2012 9:30 am

Too often when I see the word, "teacher" in a headline these days, it quickly is followed by the words, "sex scandal." Almost everyone would agree that teachers who become physically involved with their students are clearly in the wrong. Sex crimes are sex crimes, and they're (to quote Law and Order: SVU) particularly heinous against children. Teachers who sexually assault students generally get fired, sued, arrested, or some combination of the three. But more and more frequently I read or hear about teachers and students entering into inappropriate relationships that don't necessarily involve physical contact. What happens in these grey areas? When there is no actual assault, or even overt physical contact, but just flagrant intent? From what I've seen, these teachers get off scot-free, or with a minor slap on the wrist. This is extremely problematic.

As a teenage girl, I know just how often I feel like an adult. I believe that I can and do make many of my own mature decisions about sex and my sexuality. The reality is, however, that teenagers are often emotionally unstable. We are more psychologically akin to children, even though we are sexually developed. This helps explain why young girls are attracted to older men: adults simultaneously provide the promise of security and emotional safety, and the opportunity for a teenager to feel like an adult, sexually. So it should come as no surprise that adolescents develop crushes on their male and female teachers.

It does surprise me, however, that these teachers return the sentiments. I get it. Teenage girls are hot, and we are masters of flirting and teasing. So the logic goes, it would be unreasonable to expect a male teacher not to notice whether or not his students are attractive. But noticing is one thing; acting on their impulses in any way on the spectrum from flirting with a student to touching her is quite another.

There are protocols in place for students to report teachers who have committed crimes. I worry, however, about teachers who cross boundaries, but take advantage of the grey area between a casual student teacher relationship and a romantic one. Teachers who simply flirt with their students present an entirely different kind of threat than do traditional child molesters. Namely, they threaten the emotional and mental stability of teenagers who already have a plethora of stressors in their lives.

The last thing teenagers need to worry about, on top of social pressure, financial pressure, schoolwork, standardized tests, peer friendships and romance, and everything else that comes along with the tumultuous stage of adolescence, is being a source of romantic pleasure for their teachers.

With the advent of technology and online communication, teachers have perhaps never had more opportunities to foster relationships with their students outside of the classroom. Thanks to social networking, teachers can now communicate with their students through emails, texts and instant messages. Oftentimes, behind the safety of a screen, teachers forget their roles as mentors and figures of authority. Instead, they fall into the trap of talking to their students intimately as if they were romantic interests, and thus potential sex objects.
With just a screen and some charming language, in the privacy of their own homes, teachers might forget they are talking to confused, acne-plagued, shy teenagers from their classrooms. Perhaps they enjoy the distraction or attention or compliments they are receiving, becoming too easily seduced. Teachers seem to be finding themselves unable to separate their professions from their personal lives, a risk they should not be able to afford.

Allow me to state this explicitly: teachers who are unable to set boundaries with students have no place in the classroom. I don't care if he or she never touched, or even intended to touch a student. I don't care if she was asking for it. I don't care if he initiated it. The teacher has the responsibility as a figure of authority to end it before it begins, and to never propagate it.

As a country, we need to ensure that our schools have a zero-tolerance policy for sexual harassment of any kind. Of course, there needs to be evidence. A teacher must have his or her, "day in court," so to speak. And most are obviously wonderful, moral and hard-working individuals. But we cannot gamble on our students' educations because we're unwilling to fire teachers who have acted inappropriately, on the bases that it's a "grey area."

 
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iLdoRight
Encouraging The Rightest Rightness
02:31 PM on 04/22/2012
While it is absolutely true there should be no active personal romantic relationship between a teacher and a student it is also true that it can be very difficult to find the most perfect kind of personality in another with which to spend the rest of your life. If I were a High School teacher in my 20s and a junior or senior started expressing a personal interest in me as a person of the opposite sex, I would have a reply ready, something like, "I find you very interesting (if I did), but you are at an age where one can become infatuated very easily and you need to be getting all you can out of your educational opportunities in school now, it would not be appropriate for me to have any sort of personal relationship with you now, but if you do very well in your studies and after you graduate and get accepted to a college, if you still have an interest in me you can write me and we can re-evaluate the possibilities. I have no love interests now, but I cannot say that will not change, no promises, just saying give yourself some time to grow and learn, then reconsider your options, I am not saying No, I am just saying it would not be appropriate right now. Do well in school first, then let me know if you still feel the same."
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09:47 AM on 04/19/2012
This is simply the most sensible, mature post on this topic I have ever read. I am so happy it was written by a young woman, mature enough to know people her age (as well as too many adults) are really not as smart as they think they are.
This post should be required reading for parents, students, teachers and staff in all schools.
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Yvette67
Laugh every day; it nurtures the spirit.
02:15 PM on 04/19/2012
Agree with you - When in high school, I had a very attractive, relatively young male teacher whom all the girls loved. Several times, when I was walking alone, he managed to catch up with me and begin flirting. This almost sent me into a panic, I became tongue-tied - it was one thing to fantasize - it was another thing to be confronted with the fantasy becoming possibly real. Fortunately I had the wherewithall (parents teachings) to rebuff. About five years after I graduated, I was told, he was released (not fired) from school due to inappropriate behavior.
When I knew him, he also had a young wife (20) he was around 32.

The sad thing, this man was also a terrific and challenging teacher and was very employable, so he went on to another school.