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Photo: AP
Eerie similarities.’ Bush
Photo: AP

U.S.: Teacher reinstated after Bush-Hitler comparison

High school teacher placed on leave after comparing U.S. president’s State of the Union address to speeches by Adolf Hitler returns to class

DENVER, Colorado - A high school teacher who was placed on leave after comparing President George W. Bush's State of the Union address to speeches by Adolf Hitler has been reinstated, his attorney and school officials said Friday.

 

Officials declined to say whether social studies instructor Jay Bennish faced disciplinary action. His attorney, David Lane, said Bennish would be back in the classroom Monday "with full pay."

 

Bennish had been on paid leave from Overland High School in suburban Aurora since March 1 while Cherry Creek School District determined whether he violated a district rule that teachers present balancing viewpoints in the classroom.

 

Superintendent Monte Moses declined to offer specifics of the investigation or its findings but said administrators and Bennish now "have a good understanding."

 

During a February 1 lecture in a geography class, recorded by one of his students, Bennish told the students that some of Bush's speech "sounds a lot like the things that Adolf Hitler used to say. We're the only ones who are right, everyone else is backwards and our job is to conquer the world and make sure that they all live just like we want them to."

 

‘I am excited to continue to teach’

 

Later in the recording, Bennish said he was not claiming Bush and Hitler were the same, "but there are some eerie similarities to the tones that they use."

 

Bennish later said the lecture was intended to stimulate his students to think critically. He also said he presents balancing viewpoints in class, but not always at the same time. Lane acknowledged that was a mistake.

 

"Jay's teaching style will perhaps be, as some would say, a little more fair and balanced on a minute-to-minute basis," Lane said. "When you put out one side, put out the other then and there."

 

Bennish said he would continue to try to improve as a teacher and to encourage students to think critically.

 

"I will be back in the classroom on Monday, and I am excited to continue to teach," he said.

 

The state Senate on Friday rejected a proposal authorizing schools to fire teachers who routinely present one-sided views in the classroom and instead agreed to a measure saying teachers who violate school policies can be dismissed.

 


פרסום ראשון: 03.11.06, 09:55
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