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Crooked New York Teacher Tampered with Student Tests – Gets Job Back?

<p>It seems like anyone is qualified to teach these days&comma; even teachers who help their students cheat in order to boost state test results&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Elementary teacher Ericka Bolt was fired after helping students choose the right answers on statewide proficiency exams in 2011&period; &ldquo&semi;It&rsquo&semi;s wrong&comma; fix it&comma;&rdquo&semi; she told one student&comma; standing over him until he bubbled in the correct answer&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Another student overheard Ms&period; Bolt telling one student&comma; &ldquo&semi;Go back to that one&comma; it&rsquo&semi;s wrong&period;&rdquo&semi;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Bolt&rsquo&semi;s cheating was discovered the following year&comma; when scores slipped and a few students asked their new teacher for help during exams&period; Bolt was fired in 2014 after an arbitrator decided that &ldquo&semi;her actions demonstrated a lack of integrity and irrevocably compromised her ability to serve as a role model for students&period;&rdquo&semi;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Bolt immediately sued&comma; seeking back pay and reinstatement&period; Four of the five judges involved in the case agreed that the punishment of termination for her behavior was too severe&comma; specifically writing that it &ldquo&semi;shocks our sense of fairness&period;&rdquo&semi;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The panel referred to Bolt&rsquo&semi;s behavior as a &ldquo&semi;lapse in judgment&comma;&rdquo&semi; citing her previously unblemished teaching record&comma; and pointed out that&nbsp&semi;while she told students their answers were wrong&comma; she did not tell them which answers were right&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Bolt&rsquo&semi;s attorney &ndash&semi; Richard J&period; Washington &ndash&semi; insists that she did nothing wrong&period; Bolt is &ldquo&semi;very excited about getting back to work&comma;&rdquo&semi; he said&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Sole dissenting Judge John Sweeny is understandably shocked by his colleagues&rsquo&semi; decision&colon; &ldquo&semi;Although the majority feel a lesser penalty is more appropriate&comma; as students and parents have the right to believe the testing process is fairly administered&comma; it cannot be said that the penalty shocked one&rsquo&semi;s sense of fairness&comma;&rdquo&semi; he said&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>Editor&&num;8217&semi;s note&colon;<&sol;strong> Is this the example we want to set for our children&quest; A teacher who teaches cheating&quest; I have to agree with the abitrators here&comma; but the teacher&&num;8217&semi;s unions are too strong and the courts have caused serious damage to the New York school system&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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