May 20, 2009
Chesapeake parent says student sent to cluttered timeout room
Courtesy photo
Christy Clark, the parent of a fifth-grade student at Chesapeake Elementary, said her son was kept in a timeout room with equipment and other items.
Advertiser

CHESAPEAKE, W.Va. -- The mother of a Chesapeake Elementary School fifth-grader is upset that her son had been put in timeout for several hours in a room with heavy ladders, computer monitors, carts, cleaning equipment and other stored items.

Christy Clark said her son has mood disorders and struggles to fit in socially, but he should not have been so isolated from other students or kept in timeout for hours on end.

Marianne Annie, the principal at Chesapeake Elementary, said school staff members meet resistance whenever they try to resolve problems with Clark and her son.

"When it didn't work out, it was our fault," Annie said.

One day this school year, Clark said her son had been kept in the room for about four hours. He has been sent to timeout on more than one occasion, and once he was sent to eat lunch by himself in the gymnasium's storage locker, where balls and other gym equipment are kept, Clark said.   

"And they wonder why he's not able to socialize," she said.

Annie said she is not aware of a child being kept in a timeout room for that length of time.

"If he was way out of control, maybe he would have been brought down here for a while," she said.

Clark was told it was because her son had not completed his schoolwork.

Annie said students are always supervised during timeout. If a student acts out, then the aide or teacher might stand in the hallway, next to the door. The door has a small window with a view of the room.

"If he was violent, a lot of it was just attention-seeking," Annie said of the boy.

The timeout room has a bathroom and students are never locked inside, Annie said. Title I teachers have used the room for instruction, and other school specialists have used it for testing, she said.

The room, an old kitchen space, also has a popcorn-making machine. Students have made popcorn and slushies in the room, Annie said.

Clark snapped a few photos of the room earlier this year. Some photos showed computer monitors on a countertop, a couple of ladders only a few feet from a student's chair, boxes with seasonal decorations, toys and other classroom items stacked overhead, rolls of colored paper and other equipment and materials.

On Wednesday, the room looked relatively similar, although some computer monitors and a few other items appear to have been moved.   

The room is safe, Annie said.         

Report a violation or offensive comment.
[X] Close
to report abuse.
Posted By: wvjeanc1 (2:34pm 06-09-2009)
Report Abuse


Unlike some others, we are unable to afford private school. The only reason we were able to afford educational treatment programs is because of doctors' orders and payments (except co-pays) by our insurance.

Posted By: iteach2 (12:29am 06-03-2009)
Report Abuse


Very aware! And NO just because I'm a teacher I can't place my child wherever I want. You have the option of private school. There are several in the area and since you were "forced" to transfer him to Chesapeake and provide the transportation you could have done the same thing if he was placed in a private school setting. If you spent as much as you say for other educational programs I'm sure you could have placed him in private school. It's a blame game all around; you have to blame the school and the system and they in return feel the need to place some of the responsiblity for his actions back on you. Therefore, it's a lose, lose situation. I'm sure he'll be much better off next year in a middle school setting.

Posted By: wvjeanc1 (11:07pm 05-30-2009)
Report Abuse


Are you not aware that if you don't send your child to school that you can go to jail? I did answer your question - we tried to trust the staff and could not prove the abuse. We did not transfer him to another school because the IEP team and principal at Chesapeake told us that if we did, we would lose his IEP. Other schools we tried to transfer him to did not have room for him. We tried numerous ones and placed him in 2 school programs we had to pay for ourselves. We have since learned that it is not true that he would lose his IEP if transferred to a different school. He has been taken out of the school by his doctor because of the health problems he is experiencing from the abuse. Thank God - He is now on home bound. I guess if you are a teacher, you could place your child where ever you want to......we didn't have that privelege..

Posted By: iteach2 (10:35pm 05-30-2009)
Report Abuse


to wvjeanc1: Still doesn't answer the question. If there was more than one instance of abuse why wasn't he removed? If you think your child has been abused, even one time, common sense tells you not to return the child to the situation. If this had been in a different setting, say daycare or private home care, would you continue to place the child there? Surely another school would have accepted him.

Advertisement - Your ad here
Advertisement - Your ad here
MC CORMICK JEWELERS
A name you have know and trusted for over 60 years for honesty, quality and fair prices. The own...
Advertisement - Your ad here