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  Case: Poor and Innocent
I made one of the biggest mistakes in my professional life as a teacher about a week ago. I teach middle school English. We collected money for a breast cancer awareness event, and I put the cash and the checks in separate envelopes. After lunch time, I could not locate the envelope with the cash. I looked everywhere, but I could not find it. I asked my students if anyone took the envelope by mistake but nobody came forward. So, the cash was lost. Apparently, someone stole it, I thought. I have a good mix of students in my classroom; different religions, races, cultures, and rich and poor. Steve is the poorest student. Sometimes students make fun of Steve for wearing the same pair of shoes or the same pants all the time. The day after the money had been lost Steve came to school wearing a new jacket. Automatically, everyone, including me, started thinking he stole the cash. I took Steve to the principal's office to have a conference with him about the lost cash and his new jacket. We told him why we were having the meeting and asked him to be truthful. He said he had nothing to do with the lost cash. When we asked him about the new jacket, he said he had worked in his uncle's mechanic shop past weekend and made some money. Then, his father gave him some money to make up the difference for him to buy the jacket. We called his father and he confirmed everything Steve had told us. At that moment I thought I had never been so embarrassed in my life. But the more embarrassing moment came when Steve asked me if I had questioned Greg, a student from a middle class background, because he happened to come to school wearing a new jacket that day also. How can I fix the broken trust between me and Steve? How would you react to this situation—lost money and a poor student wearing a new jacket the next day? What would be the most appropriate way to respond to this situation?
Solution: (Rates are posted for this solution!)
Once students feel that you have a different opinion of them, it becomes very difficult for them to change their opinion about you. We all have to be careful of accusing students unless we have physical evidence. In this situation, we have to acknowledge that we are investigating the situation of not accusing anyone but to get to the bottom of what happened to the envelope. With not knowing how the conversation began, it is possible to just start a general conversation about how you noticed the jacket and was showing interest in the student and then begin to ask about the money. Students are fragile when it comes to accusing them of something; therefore, it have to pick and choose our battles and be confident when we accuse them. Therefore, you may allow the student to understand that you are ask numerous of students questions individually and not in front of others. Therefore, the students do not look at you as pointing fingers at one student.