New York Post

SCHOOL OF HARD KNOCKS

- By ISABEL KEANE

Former teachers at a North Carolina high school where a student slapped his teacher multiple times in a viral, profanityl­aced classroom attack say they were not surprised because violence has long run rampant in the school.

“I did see it coming,” Kisha Wall-Freeman told WFMY News 2 TV of the shocking assault Tuesday in her former place of work, Parkland HS in Winston-Salem.

“That’s the way things have been progressin­g for quite some time now.”

An unidentifi­ed minor was charged Tuesday over the attack in which a teacher was slapped multiple times and cursed out in front of the class, with other pupils laughing.

Kayleigh Connell told WFMY it was a painful reminder of an attack she suffered at another local school, Triad Elementary, the final straw forcing her to switch career paths after 11 years as a teacher.

“I ended up in urgent care with a concussion because a student got upset and lashed out,” Connell said. “At the worst point for me. I would say 80% of my day, on average, was spent trying to manage behaviors.”

Wall-Freeman said that when she first started working at Parkland in 2012, she didn’t fear her students, but that changed during her seven-year career in teaching.

That rising fear coincided with a change in how students were discipline­d, she said, allowing more behavioral problems to slip through the cracks.

“They hear the cussing and the bad language from their parents as well,” she told the local outlet.

Remote-learning link

Connell told the TV news station she felt poor behaviors were exacerbate­d by kids forced to learn remotely during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“We noticed a lot of kids didn’t necessaril­y have the tools to problem-solve when there was an issue between their friends or when they disagreed with a teacher,” Connell said.

She said parents should teach their children their educator is “not the enemy.”

“They love your kids as much as you do. We see your kids all day long. When we call and they want to discuss behaviors with you or let you know there’s an issue, it is not them trying to tell you it’s a reflection on your parenting, it is not them trying to belittle your child, trying to get them in trouble, or not trying to support them. They’re doing it because they care,” she said.

The school district condemned the student seen in the viral clip for the violent act.

“This behavior will not be tolerated. At no time is it acceptable for students to put their hands on a teacher in WinstonSal­em/Forsyth County Schools,” Schools Superinten­dent Tricia McManus said in a statement.

“My focus now is on making sure that our teacher is taken care of and has the support needed to navigate through the lasting effects of this incident.”

On Tuesday, a secure-custody order was issued for three misdemeano­r charges against the student for assault on a government official.

He was charged with one count of communicat­ing threats and two counts of misdemeano­r assault, the Forsyth Sheriff’s Office announced.

 ?? ?? ENRAGING SCENE: In a frame from a video that went viral, a student slaps his teacher at Parkland HS in Winston-Salem, NC.
ENRAGING SCENE: In a frame from a video that went viral, a student slaps his teacher at Parkland HS in Winston-Salem, NC.

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