05-06-2004, 01:25 PM
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#1 (permalink)
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hovering in the distance
Location: the land of milk and honey
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Hoops coach punished for 'Crybaby Award'
what an ass, I would have been pissed if it were my child
link
Quote:
Associated Press
PLEASANTVILLE, N.J. -- A basketball coach who gave a 13-year-old player a "Crybaby Award" will be banned from coaching, sent to sensitivity training and ordered to make a public apology.
Schools superintendent Edwin Coyle revealed the punishments Wednesday. Whether the coach loses his job remains to be seen.
James Guillen, 24, a third-year special education teacher at the Pleasantville Middle School, had a trophy made up showing an infant atop a pedestal, with a plaque bearing the inscription of player Terrence Philo Jr. and the words "Crybaby Award.''
Terrence was spelled "Terrance."
After summoning the boy to attend the April 24 season-ending banquet, Guillen gave him the trophy, humiliating him in front of about 25 teammates and parents.
On Tuesday, the nine-member Pleasantville Board of Education voted to fire Guillen, rejecting Coyle's recommendation for lighter sanctions.
But state law mandates that hiring and firing recommendations come from the superintendent, not board members.
As a result, the vote to dismiss Guillen wasn't valid, according to Frank Belluscio, a spokesman for the New Jersey School Boards Association.
"It's not binding. It's not proper procedure," Belluscio said.
Coyle, who said dismissal would be too severe a punishment, said he would ban Guillen from ever coaching in Pleasantville schools and order the sensitivity training and public apology.
In addition, Guillen will be ordered to hold the banquet again and give Philo the trophy other players received. A veteran teacher also will be assigned to mentor Guillen.
Coyle said he would ask the board a second time to authorize a five-day suspension without pay and the forfeiture of a $3,000 pay raise due to Guillen.
The boy's father, Terrence Philo, said he would leave the penalty to school officials.
"I just want what's right. I want my son to have a trophy and certificate like everyone else got. No less, no more," he said.
Guillen, who has yet to speak publicly about the incident, remains on the job as a special education teacher at the school.
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