Teacher lodged earlier complaint
TeWinkle Middle School, which will soon be under investigation by the
federal Office for Civil Rights, was the subject of a second
discrimination complaint earlier this year. Enrique Ode, a former
teacher at the school, contacted the office in March saying he had
been denied a job as punishment for being too outspoken.
In March, the Newport-Mesa Unified School District contacted Ode
to inform him that he would not be retained as an employee for the
2005-06 school year.
Ode, a probationary teacher, filed a complaint with the Office for
Civil Rights shortly thereafter, claiming that Principal Dan Diehl
had terminated his employment because Ode disagreed with him about
the district’s English-learner standards.
Last week, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission --
which Ode said had taken over the case from the Office for Civil
Rights -- dismissed Ode’s complaint, saying that it could not find
enough evidence of discrimination.
The ruling noted, however, that the district may have acted
wrongly and that Ode may file a lawsuit within 90 days.
Ode, a part-time continuing education administrator at Santa Ana
College, said he was considering taking further legal action against
the Newport-Mesa district.
“My future is shot,” he stated. “When you go to a new school
district and tell them you’ve been released, that’s a red flag.”
Ode’s handwritten complaint, mailed to the Office for Civil Rights
in March, takes the form of an extended attack on Diehl, whom he
accuses of being “very aggressive with the teachers” and having a
“vindictive nature.”
In January, the principal gave Ode a negative evaluation for
speaking Spanish to his students and deviating from the class
curriculum. According to Ode’s statement, Diehl dismissed him in
retaliation for having disputed the remarks.
Diehl declined comment on the matter, calling it a private
personnel issue.
In the evaluation, which Ode provided to the Daily Pilot, Diehl
gave the probationary teacher unsatisfactory marks on two teaching
performance standards.
The principal’s written comments declare that teachers should
instruct in one language “to prevent students from tuning out English
and waiting for the Spanish translation,” and that Ode, during the
time Diehl visited his classroom, was conducting an exercise not
included in the English-learner textbook.
In a response to Diehl, Ode countered that using Spanish was
necessary to translate directions for beginning students and that his
lesson, while not directly taken from the book, covered the same
material.
While Ode admitted that he did not know the exact reason for his
termination, he wrote in his complaint that it seemed “obvious” that
his rebuttal to Diehl played a part in it.
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission did not return calls
seeking comment.
Ode was not the only probationary teacher that TeWinkle let go
this year.
Richard Salamone, a math teacher in 2004-05 who did not teach
English-learner classes, said he also had a personal conflict with
Diehl and could not say whether the principal had singled out Ode for
treatment.
“It was obvious he had picked favorites, and I wasn’t one of
them,” Salamone said of the principal.
TeWinkle, a program improvement school under the federal No Child
Left Behind Act, has had a troubled year, with two different
complaints -- Ode’s, and another filed by parent Mirna Burciaga with
the Office for Civil Rights -- accusing the school of discrimination.
In April, a group of parents petitioned the district in defense of
Assistant Principal Tony Valenzuela, whose job they believed was in
jeopardy. Valenzuela now works part-time at TeWinkle as a community
liaison.
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