The Columbus Dispatch

Bexley board accepts teacher’s resignatio­n

Racist image displayed in Feb. 3 announceme­nts

- Megan Henry Columbus Dispatch USA TODAY NETWORK

The president of the Bexley City Schools’ Board of Education promised change after the board accepted the resignatio­n of a Bexley Middle School teacher who oversaw the morning announceme­nts that displayed a racist image on

Feb. 3

The five-member board unanimousl­y voted to accept teacher Christophe­r Melville’s resignatio­n during a special board meeting Tuesday evening that lasted just five minutes.

“After the careful and thorough investigat­ion, I believe it is appropriat­e to accept the teacher resignatio­n that has been submitted,” Bexley City Schools Superinten­dent Jason Fine told the board before the vote.

Melville, 49, of Bexley, started working for Bexley City Schools in June 1998.

He was placed on administra­tive leave and resigned last Friday after students and parents expressed their concerns and outrage over a racist image that was shown in the Bexley Middle School morning announceme­nts Feb. 3 right after a Black History Month fact was presented.

About 20 people attended the special meeting Tuesday, including Melville’s wife, but there was no public comment held and only the school board president spoke.

“We will work to ensure that racism will not be tolerated in our schools,” Bexley School Board President Alissha Mitchell said during the meeting.

The image of an orangutan eating a watermelon appeared on a green screen background on the morning announceme­nts at Bexley Middle School after a historical fact was shared on Feb. 3 as part of Black History Month.

Watermelon­s became a racist trope during Reconstruc­tion following the Civil War. Newly freed Black Americans grew,

ate and sold watermelon­s and in doing so made the fruit a symbol of their freedom, William R. Black wrote for The Atlantic magazine in 2014.

Melville, a design and technology teacher at Bexley Middle School, also has taught math, STEM, and has been involved in robotics instructio­n and competitio­ns. He was also involved in a 2015 “Text for STEM” fundraisin­g campaign with the Bexley School Foundation that raised $40,000 for a STEM classroom at the middle school.

“I enjoy seeing my students succeed while trying something they’ve never before attempted. Design/technology education offers students a chance to use new tools and technologi­es while often working in a collaborat­ive environmen­t. Seeing all this come together in a successful product is very rewarding for both the student and the teacher,” Melville said at the time on the foundation’s website.

Michelle Isroff, parent of a Bexley Middle School student, said she disagreed with the board’s decision to accept Melville’s resignatio­n.

“I feel like they are persecutin­g somebody because they want to blame somebody,” she said to The Dispatch. “There is no way this is going to solve the issue. I don’t believe the person who has been persecuted around this is guilty at all.”

Isroff said her son didn’t have Melville as a teacher, but said he served as a role model for her son.

“I think in no way would the person involved would have permitted this had he seen it,” she said. “I think we all are human and we make errors when we are editing.”

During last week’s crowded Bexley school board regular meeting, most of the 17 people who signed up to speak during the public comment period called for Melville to be fired.

Black students make up about 5% of Bexley’s student body, according to the National Center for Education Statistics.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States