The Palm Beach Post

Teacher barred after seeking nude photos

Accused of offering female student test answers in exchange.

- By Sonja Isger Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

A former social studies teacher at a Boynton Beach charter school is barred from teaching in Florida after he was accused of offering an 18-year-old student test answers if she sent him nude photos.

The state revoked the teaching license of Christophe­r Fisher, 31, who worked at Quantum High. The state also reprimande­d and fined one of Fisher’s colleagues, Khemrajee Kangal, 57, for failing to report the incident when the student shared the story.

Neither Fisher nor Kangal could be reached for comment.

Quantum High is a school for students at risk of dropping out, allowing them to work at their own pace on computer-based courses at the Boynton campus. According to the complaint filed with the state, in August 2016, Fisher asked the student to send nude photos of herself in exchange for a password to the school’s testing site where answers were available.

Principal David Ferguson, who wasn’t principal at the time, declined to comment on the details, referring to his previously published comments in local news stories.

In those comments, Ferguson said that the student told two teachers about the incident, one of whom alerted the principal at the time. The principal suspended Fisher that day, and Fisher, who had been at the school a year, resigned the next day, Ferguson said.

It’s unclear from the complaint whether the student sent any pho-

tos. Regardless, the school notified the state’s Department of Children and Families and the Department of Education, Ferguson said.

At a hearing in Fort Lauderdale April 11, the state’s education commission revoked Fisher’s teaching certificat­e and banned him from ever seeking another in this state. The next day, a panel issued a reprimand to Kangal, fined her $750 and ordered her to take a course in identifyin­g and reporting child abuse and negligence.

“The employee stated that she advised the student to report the matter to the principal and to inform the student’s mother of what happened,” Ferguson said in a statement issued earlier this week. “The principal advised the employee that she did not follow state law or the school policy when she failed to directly report the matter to the principal. The employee apologized for failing to report the matter.”

Said Ferguson, “We have no more comments. We’re moving forward.”

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