A primary school teacher who let a student use her personal phone for a call with his dad in prison has been cleared of any professional wrongdoing after the incident was described as a 鈥渕omentary lapse of judgement鈥.
鈥淪*** that might not have been such a good idea,鈥 the teacher, who has name suppression, said in response to a complaint made by the boy鈥檚 mother.
鈥淎t that point I realised that I done [sic] something wrong and stupid.鈥
Her actions, including lying to her principal about attending a union meeting just days after the first complaint was made, have come before the Teachers Disciplinary Tribunal.
In June 2018 the teacher was phoned by a friend, who was in prison, during a morning break.
The friend told the teacher he was in prison with the father of one of her students and asked if the boy would want to speak with his dad over the phone.
He told the teacher the father was 鈥渉anging out to talk with him鈥.
The teacher called the boy over and asked if he wanted to speak with his dad on the phone.
The boy agreed and spoke with his father using the teacher鈥檚 private mobile for around five to seven minutes before the call finished and the boy went outside to play.
Soon after the mother of the student lodged a complaint about the teacher with the school鈥檚 principal and noted she wasn鈥檛 made aware of the call by the teacher.
The recent decision said the mother was concerned the call happened without her knowledge or consent, and her child may have been embarrassed. In her opinion the call was not appropriate during school.
The complaint wasn鈥檛 taken further by the mother, and the principal expressed concerns that the teacher鈥檚 personal life was impacting her ability to teach.
In response to the complaint about the phone call, the teacher acknowledged her actions were unprofessional and said she felt 鈥渆xtremely remorseful鈥 for her lack of 鈥済ood judgement鈥.
Another incident where the teacher鈥檚 professionalism has come under fire by the tribunal happened soon after the phone call was reported to her boss.
The teacher had failed to attend a union meeting which she had paid leave for and was the sole representative from the school.
She instead went home 鈥 but lied to the principal and said she attended the meeting.
She later said she had not attended the meeting because she was 鈥渨as stressed and need some time to herself鈥 but acknowledged her actions had compromised her reputation.
The teacher went on 鈥榰npaid discretionary leave鈥 for a year before resigning early in 2020.
The Complaints Assessment Committee, which brought the charge to the tribunal, submitted the teacher鈥檚 actions risked impacting the boy鈥檚 emotional and psychological wellbeing.
Although there was no evidence of harm to the child, the committee argued there was real risk of harm, and the conduct showed a lack of proper professional judgement, blurring boundaries with the student.
When the teacher lied to the principal about the union meeting, the committee said her actions lacked 鈥減rofessionalism, honesty and integrity鈥.
The teacher accepted she had made an error in judgement, but argued there was no evidence the child had been impacted negatively. She said there was no pressure put on the boy to speak to his dad.
She also said her non-attendance at the union meeting was 鈥渓ow-end dishonesty鈥, and didn鈥檛 tell the principal because she felt like he wouldn鈥檛 have supported her need for personal time.
鈥淲hile we accept it was an error in judgement in allowing the child to have contact in this way, we are not satisfied that there is sufficient evidence of any likelihood of an adverse effect on the child,鈥 the tribunal said.
The tribunal also said allowing the boy to take the call was a momentary lapse of judgement motivated by kindness to the child who appeared to have a close relationship with his father.
It was found 鈥渂y a fine margin鈥 that her actions didn鈥檛 amount to misconduct.
鈥淗er allowing the child to speak to his father was well-intentioned, if misguided,鈥 the tribunal said.
鈥淗er failure to be honest with her principal came at a time when their relationship was strained, and she was personally overwhelmed.鈥
Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you
Get the iHeart App
Get more of the radio, music and podcasts you love with the FREE iHeartRadio app. Scan the QR code to download now.
Download from the app stores
Stream unlimited music, thousands of radio stations and podcasts all in one app. iHeartRadio is easy to use and all FREE