
This story is making waves in Australia at the moment. I have no problem with a school making its teachers wear a hijab on condition of employment. However, if a teacher has been working without a hijab, I think it is unfair to suddenly demand that they do:
SOUTH Australia’s biggest Islamic school has warned teachers, including many non-Muslims, that they will lose their jobs if they do not wear a hijab to school functions and outings.
Up to 20 non-Muslim female teachers, who do not wish to be named, have been told they will be sacked from the Islamic College of South Australia’s West Croydon campus after three warnings if they do not wear a headscarf to cover their hair.
The order, from the school’s governing board and chairman Faruk Kahn, contradicts the policy of the Australian Federation of Islamic Councils.
Mr Kahn yesterday referred The Advertiser to AFIC for comment on the matter. “I have no comment … I think you better go to AFIC, they are the only ones that are to make comment,” Mr Kahn said.
School principal Kadir Emniyet did not return calls.
AFIC assistant secretary Keysar Trad said the policy was at odds with the national federation, but it was powerless to intervene.
“I’m aware there’s a policy at that school with respect to the scarf,” Mr Trad said.
“The AFIC policy is not to require any teacher to observe the hijab. In SA, the board itself has decided they want to operate in their way and we are not allowed to interfere in the matter.
“We maintain that staff should dress modestly but not be required by the nature of policy to wear the hijab.”
Mr Trad said that matters of unfair dismissal resulting from teachers disobeying the school’s hijab policy should be referred to Fair Work Australia.
“It’s confusing for our children to see their teachers wearing the scarf in school and then they take it off when they are out shopping and the children see them there,” he said.
“It is also a respect thing for our staff. If they are not Muslim they should not be forced to dress as Muslim.”
One long-term teacher at the Islamic College of SA said a new school board was now “forcing teachers to put hijabs back on”.
“There’s no discussion … you wear it or you’re fired,” the teacher said. “The teachers have always adhered to the policies and we are respectful of that.
“We are respectful of their religion but they are not going to respect us.”
The college has about 800 students and 40 staff.
Guidelines from the Australian Federation of Islamic Councils to other Islamic schools do not require teachers to wear hijabs.
Glen Seidel, state secretary of the Independent Education Union, said the union was monitoring the policy.
“Essentially it means female staff have to wear a scarf covering most of their hair, and not have legs and arms exposed,” he said.
“In 2012, the requirement was being managed moderately, but with a new principal in 2013 enacting the decisions of a very conservative school board, there is no room for compromise.”
Mr Seidel said the union’s view is staff should be free to decide whether to wear a scarf.
“The ultimate test would be in an unfair dismissal action to see if that requirement would be considered a `reasonable direction’ and the termination therefore being reasonable.
“This is not a matter (in which) religious organisations are exempted from equal opportunity legislation in order to not cause offence to the `adherents of the faith’,” Mr Seidel said.
“Non-Islamic staff are not being discriminated (against) in their employment as it is the same code for all.
“Non-Islamic staff can, however, feel rightly aggrieved that they are being coerced to adopt the dress code of a religion to which they do not belong.”
Click on the link to read The School Food Fight that Lead to 9 Arrests
Some Teachers Just Desperately Want to get Fired
January 23, 2013Yesterday I wrote a post about a teacher unfairly on the brink of losing her job. Today I’m writing about one that probably never deserved to have one in the first place:
As an RE teacher it was her job to enlighten pupils about Christian values and the beliefs of other religions.
Instead, Catherine Reynolds encouraged her class to have lots of sex and ‘sleep around’ before marriage.
In expletive-ridden lessons, she told pupils to ‘stop bloody talking’, ‘sit on your a***’ and warned them: ‘If you don’t want to learn RE, you can p*** off’.
An investigation into her behaviour also found she posted offensive comments on her Facebook page. Following a parents evening she wrote: ‘That was the most f****** horrendous evening of my life’, and branded parents ‘retarded’.
Yesterday Reynolds, 27, was banned from the classroom for five years after Michael Gove decided she was a disgrace to the profession.
Describing her conduct as unacceptable, the Education Secretary declared it fell seriously short of that expected of a teacher and added that a disciplinary panel had struggled to identify any ‘understanding, insight or remorse’.
Reynolds taught RE at Saddleworth School near Oldham, having joined the state-run secondary as a newly-qualified teacher in 2008.
The Manchester University graduate initially showed promise, and was feted by pupils on a ‘rate my teacher’ website.
However, she got into trouble after her Facebook comments of September 2010 came to light, a report by a Teachers Agency panel found.
These included: ‘F****** retarded parents’ followed by: ‘That’s because only eejits pick RE’.
Further complaints followed in January and March 2011, the panel said.
Reynolds made numerous references to ‘sex from a personal perspective’ and told one pupil ‘not to get married because then you can’t sleep around’ and that ‘you should have sex all the time’.
In one lesson, she recounted a visit to Amsterdam in which she saw a sex show involving a horse and a woman and revealed she had been for a naked massage.
She used inappropriate language on a regular basis, the report found, including a string of swear words used to describe various people. One pupil was apparently told to ‘F*** off’.
Reynolds, who is married with a one-year-old daughter, told her class of taking a morning-after pill and of having a relationship with an older man.
She also showed pupils the tattoos on her lower back and her thigh and played them ‘inappropriate videos’.
Question: How on earth did she last this long?
Click on the link to read The Mission to Stop Teachers From Having a Sense of Humour
Click on the link to read School Instructs Students on How to Become Prostitutes
Click on the link to read Proof You Can Be Suspended for Anything
Click on the link to read The Case of a Teacher Suspended for Showing Integrity
Click on the link to read Primary School Introduces Insane No-Touching Policy
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