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Charter school for kids with behavioral problems expelled student on first day
Charter school for kids with behavioral problems expelled student on first day
Lauren Roth
Orlando Sentinel
5:12 PM EDT, September 2, 2011
Kerlin Fedee thought she had found the perfect fit for her daughter — a school dedicated to the needs of young children with behavioral problems.
"They said they would be able to help her and would love to have her," Fedee said.
But Fedee was disillusioned quickly. Aspire Charter Academy in Orlando, which opened this fall, kicked out 6-year-old Natalie Querette on the first day.
Natalie, a first grader, sometimes bites, kicks and spits, especially in a new situation. She has autism and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.
Her mother said the principal told her at the end of the first day that the school couldn't help Natalie because she screamed, bit and hit the teacher.
Aspire is run by Pam Schenkel, who spent 18 years as a behavioral support administrator in Orange County schools.
A week before the school year began, Schenkel said Aspire would fill an unmet need within the county.
The school, for kindergarten through grade 2, would serve many children who had spent months out of school for behavioral reasons, Schenkel said.
"If the school isn't going to educate them, they feel isolated," she said of the families.
District policy calls for schools, including charters, to call together a team of adults to discuss a disabled student's placement when problems arise. This is part of the federally required Individualized Education Program for students with disabilities.
But Schenkel said the charter has its own rules. "We're just following our handbook," she said.
Fedee has been invited to present her case to the school's Board of Directors at its meeting Wednesday night.
She filed a complaint with Orange County Public Schools, although there is little the district can require a charter school to do.
As a preschooler, Natalie was kicked out of Waterbridge Elementary on the first day of school for spitting and biting. Her mother took her to the UCP Downtown Orlando Campus, which she attended through spring. Natalie couldn't continue at UCP because of transportation issues.
Fedee said Natalie, who loves "Finding Nemo," riding her bike and being read to, had no behavioral problems all summer. "I don't know what's going on with her."
After being kicked out of Aspire, Natalie spent the rest of the first week out of school. Fedee enrolled her at Waterbridge, her neighborhood school, the following Monday.
After one day there, staff began evaluating whether to send her to another elementary, Endeavor, which takes students with mental disabilities from seven southwest Orange County elementary schools. Meanwhile, the school has required her mother to pick up Natalie by 11:00 a.m.
"Apparently Aspire Charter Academy does not practice what they preach," Fedee said.
She hoped speaking out would help "so other parents do not go through what I had to."
See a supernova from your back yard this weekend
College professor by day and meth dealer by night
College professor allegedly led motorcycle gang, drug ring [Updated]
A Cal State San Bernardino professor who allegedly led a chapter of the Devils Diciples motorcycle gang was charged Thursday with heading up a methamphetamine drug ring that involved several other dealers.
[Updated at 1 p.m.: The motorcycle gang intentionally misspells "disciples" in its name, as can be seen in the jackets above.]
Stephen Kinzey, a 43-year-old professor of kinesiology, is considered a fugitive and is being aggressively sought by authorities, Sheriff Rod Hoops said at a morning news conference at sheriff’s headquarters in San Bernardino. Nine others involved in the drug ring have been arrested since Friday, he said.
“It’s alarming to me -- I have kids in college -- to have an associate professor who is a member of Devils Diciples dealing methamphetamine,” Hoops said. Authorities are trying to determine if he was involved in any drug dealing on campus.
The six-month investigation culminated with a joint drug task force raiding Kinzey’s home Friday, recovering a pound of methamphetamine as well as a number of rifles, handguns and biker paraphernalia, he said.
Kinzey’s live-in girlfriend, Holly Robinson, 33, a 2005 Cal State San Bernardino graduate, was taken into custody during the raid and faces charges of possession and sale of methamphetamine and numerous firearms violations.
Det. Jason Rosenbaum said that Robinson was Kinzey’s business partner and helped him distribute meth to mid-level dealers in the cities of San Bernardino, Highland, Redlands and the community of Mentone.
[Updated at 1 p.m.: Meanwhile, Cal State San Bernardino President Albert Karnig issued the following statement: “To our knowledge, this is the first notice that anyone on our campus has had regarding this situation. Our university police department and the entire campus community, as relevant, will work as closely as possible with the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department to assist with the investigation to help assure that all the facts are accurate. If the allegations are indeed true, this is beyond disappointing.”
Kinzey, who has taught at Cal State San Bernardino for 10 years, has a doctorate degree from the University of Toledo, a masters from Indiana State University and a bachelors degree from Wayne State University in Michigan.]

