Originally Posted by :
A 28-year-old Lake Charles-area woman faces a bevy of charges after Louisiana police said she repeatedly had sex with a 13-year-old boy who she met at the Bible camp where she was a teacher/aide.
According to the Sulphur Daily News, Heather Daughdrill initiated the relationship in June and it continued until a complaint was filed in October. After her arrest on November 29, police told the paper that Daughdrill would pick her victim up from school without his parents' knowledge and subject him to sexual encounters. Louisiana cops also reportedly found sexually explicit texts between Daughdrill and her victim.
Originally Posted by Cochise:
I thought that African-Americans and Hispanics were pretty much even these days at 10% of the population. If AA are 20% of serial killers they'd be overrepresented in that group, not underrepresented.
Originally Posted by gblowfish:
It's because the pay sucks, and districts try to bounce teachers before they start to move up the pay scale. Lots of teachers burn out after five or ten years.
School costs so much now that you can barely pay back student loans and have a life as a young teacher. So instead of going into education, students go into other fields that pay much better than education.
I'm married to a teacher, so I know.
Same here....
It totally changes your view on the struggles of "education" once you watch it from our side. [Reply]
My mom got her teaching degree in the 60's. Married my dad, was a stay at home mom who helped 4 kids through school. Fuck you if you think she or we didn't get anything out of it. By the way, she went back to substitute teaching and finally full time after we all left home. I don't think she robbed anyone of their "chance" and I don't feel she wasted her efforts in college. [Reply]
Originally Posted by 'Hamas' Jenkins:
Well of course you wouldn't learn anything at KU.
You can learn for the sake of learning on your own. You can also do it at colleges with open admissions. But if you're going to a semi-competitive school with limited spots and your full intention is to work in that field for as long as it takes you to get impregnated, you're not really intending to use your degree as anything more than a rung on the social ladder, or a quasi-dowry.
Those seeking out Mrs degrees also **** over other young women, because there is an implicit assumption of risk among their employers that they made need to train a replacement within two years because they never really had any intention of pursing a career, just a placeholder job. That makes the women who actually want to put in the work appear less valuable to prospective employers.
Jesus kid, ease back. That is some insulting shit. You want some women to surrender their college experience/desire to enter the work place because they may not stay forever to make way for those you deem more dedicated to life long careers? You'll laugh at yourself for that one day. You're too smart not to... [Reply]
Originally Posted by vailpass:
Jesus kid, ease back. That is some insulting shit. You want some women to surrender their college experience/desire to enter the work place because they may not stay forever to make way for those you deem more dedicated to life long careers? You'll laugh at yourself for that one day. You're too smart not to...
The entire premise of that opinion is so absurd *referring to the op comment, not yours* [Reply]
Originally Posted by 'Hamas' Jenkins:
For all the bitching about supposedly underqualified applicants that get into colleges, nothing is more maddening to me than women who work for two or three years after going to college, then become stay-at-home moms.
That's truly not even possible in most parts of the country, at least in the population centers.
From my understanding, it's becoming more difficult in the KC area as well. [Reply]
Originally Posted by vailpass:
Jesus kid, ease back. That is some insulting shit. You want some women to surrender their college experience/desire to enter the work place because they may not stay forever to make way for those you deem more dedicated to life long careers? You'll laugh at yourself for that one day. You're too smart not to...
I have to disagree.
It's been a while since I've been in the corporate world but even 10 or so years ago, we weighted people's long term goals. If someone couldn't quickly and adequately answer the "Where do you see yourself in five years", that person was no longer considered.
If I'm hiring someone, training them, offering a competitive salary and benefits, I want to know that it isn't wasted time, money and effort. [Reply]
Originally Posted by InChiefsHell:
My mom got her teaching degree in the 60's. Married my dad, was a stay at home mom who helped 4 kids through school. **** you if you think she or we didn't get anything out of it. By the way, she went back to substitute teaching and finally full time after we all left home. I don't think she robbed anyone of their "chance" and I don't feel she wasted her efforts in college.
This. Raising and nurturing children is the most important job there is. [Reply]
Originally Posted by DaneMcCloud:
That's truly not even possible in most parts of the country, at least in the population centers.
From my understanding, it's becoming more difficult in the KC area as well.
Your absolutely right, its less and less common. My wife does it and its because with my profession we can afford it, but from everyone I know we are definitely an exception. [Reply]
Originally Posted by phisherman:
I'm not really sure if she would've been all that hip on your sleeveless denim shirt you were rocking at the time. :-)
Hey!!!!
I had a bright orange one, as well!!! With a hood!!!
Jesus. That's not even the worst thing I wore back then. [Reply]
Originally Posted by :
They had the hots for...the lunch lady?
A cafeteria worker at a suburban Chicago high school appeared in court Thursday on charges of having sex with an underage male student right after she started her job.
She also allegedly had sex with that student’s older brother, who is a student at the same school, but she is not facing charges for that because he was 18 at the time, ABC Chicago reported.
Joi Taylor, 32, allegedly had a tryst with a 16-year-old she met in March, the same month she started working as a lunchroom monitor in Proviso West High School in Hillside.
After meeting the student, the two exchanged phone numbers, and they would make video calls to each other in which Taylor masturbated as they talked, prosecutors said.
Later in the month, Taylor called the student before the school day and asked him to meet for sex, prosecutors said. She then allegedly met him the school’s parking lot, drove to the parking lot of a nearby church, had sex with him and then dropped him off at school.
Police learned about the illegal lunch lady love affair on Tuesday after the school’s police liaison got a tip about it from another student.
It's unclear when her alleged sexual relationship with the older brother happened.
The 16-year-old's attorney said Taylor threatened him and his older brother, both of whom are involved in athletics, by telling them they’d be “ineligible or unable” to continue those activities if they exposed the relationships.
Taylor is being held on $25,000 and is scheduled to appear in court again June 5, the Chicago Sun-Times reported.
She has been placed on leave by the school, officials said.