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Convicted sex offender – a school principal who identifies as “bisexual” – and the NZ Teacher’s Council register

May 22, 2013 by SPCS Leave a Comment

The Herald on Sunday reported on 1 August 2010. “A convicted offender is still registered on the New Zealand Teachers Council website despite being convicted for molesting boys in two different schools in the early 1990s…. Elvis Dobson Shepherd was suspended  on full pay in November 2007 after being charged with sexually abusing students at both Hato Paora (St Paul) College [at Chelterham in Feilding] and Hato Petera College [in Northcote] Auckland.”

[See: http://archive.teacherscouncil.govt.nz/rt/onlineregister.stm Reg. No. 177105. Mr Shepherd’s teacher registration was eventually cancelled and he was placed under “censure” after he was sentenced to a jail term of eight years and four months in September 2010. Just over two-and-a-half  years later he is now up for a parole hearing -reported two days ago 20/05/2013].

Stuff News reported on 31 July 2010, after a name suppression order for the sex offender was lifted:

“The sexual encounters between Elvis Dobson Shepherd and two teenage boys occurred while he was teaching and living at Hato Petera College, a Maori Catholic boarding school on the North Shore.

“The 49-year-old, [also known as Tihirau Shepherd], who identifies as bisexual, was also a student at the school before returning to teach te reo Maori in an experimental total immersion unit in 1989.”

The Herald on Sunday report stated:

“Elvis Dobson Shepherd was found guilty of four indecent assault charges against two teenagers in the High Court at Palmerston North on Friday [30 July 2010].

“The offences took place while Shepherd was teaching at Hato Petera College, a Maori Catholic boarding school on Auckland’s North Shore.

“Shepherd found employment at Maori boarding school Hato Paora near Palmerston North despite allegations of sexual encounters with boys at his previous post.

“Former Hato Petera trust board member Ashley Balls said Shepherd ‘deserted his post’ before the allegation was properly investigated. He then became deputy principal of Hato Paora in Feilding in 2002.

“Balls said he called Hato Paora to warn them about Shepherd’s past when he found information about the incident in the school files years later.

“But Hato Paora took no action and in 2007 two students came forward with allegations of sexual abuse. The school investigated, but found there was no case to answer.

“However, the Ministry of Education suspended Shepherd in November 2007.

But Balls said it was “odd” that the Teachers Council still had Shepherd listed on full registration. Balls described the situation as “political correctness gone mad”.

” ‘They couldn’t take the complaint to the Teachers Council because they hadn’t got anything provable’.

“Minister of Education Anne Tolley said she had complete confidence in the processes that would be followed by the Teachers Council to ensure Shepherd was never allowed in a classroom again. She said the Government also recently introduced much greater protection by passing data-matching laws which would mean this man would be identified if he ever sought employment at a school.

“In June, the Herald on Sunday revealed that three teachers who were sacked or quit over misconduct were still registered to teach on the official database that was supposed to warn parents and schools. The teachers kept their legal right to work in a classroom despite complaints to the New Zealand Teachers Council.”

Source:

Sex offender still registered on teacher website.

Sunday Star Times. 1 August 2010

Story by Anna Rushworth.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10662768

Fairfax NZ Media

School Principle molested students

Story by Bronwyn Torrie. 31 July 2013

http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/crime/3978623/School-principal-molested-students

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Filed Under: Child Sex Crimes, Crime, Sexual Dysfunction Tagged With: bisexual, Elvis Dobson Shepherd, Hato Paora, Hato Petera College, sex offender, Teachers' Council, Tihirau Shepherd

New Zealand Teachers Council deemed ineffective

May 22, 2013 by SPCS Leave a Comment

The Teachers’ Council faces a shakeup after a review found it was ineffective in setting and enforcing standards for the profession.

The review proposes either creating a new independent body, or improving the present council to one that provides better leadership and support.

Teachers may also be subject to more regular assessments of their teaching competency, and see more emphasis placed on professional training.

The Teachers Council is an autonomous Crown entity that sets the standards for teachers and governs issues such as disciplinary action.

A review was instigated in 2010, taking into account 177 submissions, interviewing individuals and groups from throughout the education sector, considering New Zealand and international research, and looking at similar professional bodies in the health, legal, and engineering sectors.

Education Minister Hekia Parata said the council in its current structure, governance and position “can’t effectively set and enforce standards for entry, progression and professional accountability with the full support of the profession”.

“It lacks a distinctive brand or effective public voice.”

The report makes 24 recommendations within four key themes: a new professional body, the regulatory framework for teachers, the disciplinary framework, and resourcing to support a strong, professional body.

It recommends clearer separation between becoming registered as a teacher and the issuing of practising certificates, which certify the ongoing competence of teachers.

The “authority to practise teaching should be renewed regularly, as with current practising certificates”, and the review also endorses a move to postgraduate entry for school teachers.

The amount of council fees paid by teachers could also change, with its increased responsibilities.

It also recommends that, in addition to the current Limited Authority to Teach, a broader Authority to Educate be introduced to allow individuals with proven expertise to complement the teaching workforce.

A Ministerial Advisory Group has been appointed to lead consultation with the sector and the public on the proposals over the next two months.

The Teachers Council welcomed the opportunity to “constructively engage” on the possibility of becoming an independent professional body. It would be discussed at its council meeting at the end of this month.

Chairwoman Alison McAlpine said it would support qualified and registered teachers through greater professional learning opportunities.

“The 177 submissions received from the teaching profession and education sector strongly endorse a move for the Teachers Council to become an independent statutory body.”

New Zealand Educational Institute president Judith Nowotarski said the council needed strengthening and the union had been “keen on [an independent body] for some time”.

It was important the body “should be run by teachers, for teachers”, in the same way the medical council was run, she said.

Post Primary Teachers’ Association president Angela Roberts said there were contradictions in the review, such as the fact it called for a more professional body, despite wanting to create a new category of unqualified teacher.

“There are some really simple hypocrisies. I absolutely believe that they need to become independent of the Government.”

Source: The Dominion Post. Tuesday, 21 May 2013. p. A2.

Story by Jody O’Callaghan

On-line story

http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/education/8695818/Teachers-Council-deemed-ineffective-review

Fairfax NZ Media

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Filed Under: Enforcement Tagged With: Hekia Parata, practising certificates, registered teachers, Teachers' Council, The Teachers Council

Predator teacher ‘flagged’ in 1999 but gets OK from New Zealand Teachers’ Council

August 24, 2012 by SPCS Leave a Comment

A Northland deputy principal who has admitted sexually abusing pupils was flagged as a potential predator in 1999 as a student teacher but signed off as suitable anyway.

Despite a further warning in 2009 – that time by police – he was allowed to continue as a teacher for 11 years until his arrest last month.

Concerns about James Parker were first lodged with the Teachers’ Council when he was a provisional teacher, having newly started in the profession.

Parker pleaded guilty in Kaitaia District Court this week to 49 charges of indecent assault, performing an indecent act and of unlawful sexual connection.

The attacks, on boys aged under 16, occurred over nearly eight years at Pamapuria School.

Teachers’ Council director Peter Lind said concerns surrounding Parker’s ability to work around children began when he was teaching on a provisional licence at another school.

Concerns were lodged with the Teachers Registration Board, now known as the Teachers’ Council.

“We had contact in 1999 from the school and there were concerns raised about his professional boundaries,” he said.

“But the school did not want those concerns taken any further and his application to move from a provisional registration to a full registration was made by that school some months later.”

A decade later police received a complaint from a child via a parent and investigated Parker.

They could not gather enough evidence at the time to prosecute Parker and instead wrote to the school to alert the board of trustees about concerns.

However, the board did not act on the letter, did not advise the Education Review Office and did not advise the Teachers’ Council.

Mr Lind said because of the original 1999 contact, if concerns were raised again an alert status would have been activated on Parker.

“But the council itself received no further concerns about professional performance about this particular teacher.”

Pamapuria School principal Stephen Hovell has been stood down during the investigation and could not be contacted.

The Pamapuria board of trustees has resigned and a commissioner has been put in to run the school.

Detective Inspector Karyn Malthus said yesterday that children were interviewed in 2009 and the matter could not be substantiated.

“Police reject any suggestion that we were responsible for any inaction. We took all steps possible within the law to make the appropriate notifications,” she said.

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“Police did interview Parker and notified the school of their remaining concerns.

“We could not sustain any allegations and were therefore limited in what we could do.”

Ms Malthus said charges were laid when further evidence came to light recently.

That investigation continues despite Parker’s guilty plea on Wednesday.

Police were continuing to work with Child, Youth and Family and the Education Ministry in supporting the victims and their families, Ms Malthus said.

Parker’s fall from grace has come in the same week former ombudsman Mel Smith released a report into how sex offender Te Rito Henry Miki managed to evade detection and work as a teacher at six schools.

Mr Smith said what happened with Parker matched what he uncovered with Miki – there were several organisations and individuals that should have acted but who dropped the ball.

Mr Smith said the Government had accepted or partially accepted 36 of his 39 recommendations but had yet to put them into practice.

Even with his recommendations implemented, offences could still occur, he said. But the process would be sufficiently “tight” to ensure it was more likely that offending teachers would be detected early.

“You’ve got to remember that there are more than 70,000 registered teachers . . . and then there are all the other people involved in school, from caretakers through to contractors.”

Source: The Dominion Post, Friday, August 24, 2012, p. A4.

http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/crime/7538086/Predator-teacher-flagged-in-1999

Fairfax NZ News story.

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Filed Under: Crime, Sexual Dysfunction Tagged With: Peter Lind, provisional licence, provisional teacher, Teachers Registration Board, Teachers' Council

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