Award-Winning Teacher Fired for Reading an Allen Ginsberg Poem [View all]
http://readersupportednews.org/news-section2/318-66/30424-award-winning-teacher-fired-for-reading-an-allen-ginsberg-poem
he poem the student discovered and brought in was Please Master, an extremely graphic account of a homosexual encounter published by Allen Ginsberg in 1968 that begins: Please master can I touch your cheek / please master can I kneel at your feet / please master can I loosen your blue pants.
Clearly, I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud, this wasnt. But the students were 17- and 18-year-olds, some of whom were taking the course in conjunction with the University of Connecticut and receiving college credit.
One day after the class, Olio was placed on indefinite, unpaid leave by the district. Seventy-two hours later, the district began termination proceedings against him. Three weeks after that, he agreed to resign.
Reading the poem in class, the district found, showed egregiously poor professional judgment, Olios termination letter stated. By so doing, you violated the trust placed by the Board of Education in you as a teacher, you brought discredit upon the South Windsor Public Schools, you undermined public confidence and parent trust in you as a teacher, and you put the emotional health of some students at risk.
The unceremonious dismissal of a beloved teacher has thrown the town of South Windsor, population 25,000, halfway between Hartford, Conn., and Springfield, Mass., into tumult. The local newspaper denounced him in editorials. Alumni, town residents, and Olios current students crammed into Board of Education hearings to testify on his behalf.
One alumna said she was embarrassed to say she was a graduate of the high school. Olios church minister testified that every time David talks about teaching you can see his face brighten, his hands start to move, and the energy emerge
This is my preacher talk now, but I believe this is what God has created David Olio to be and to do. The student who brought in the poem testified how Olio inspired him to become an English educator. Parents lamented that a single, tragic mistake could end an otherwise sterling career.