Teacher asks school kids 'if they are HIV positive'
An outraged mum has spoken out after children at a school in New Jersey were allegedly asked if they were HIV positive before a trip. The alleged incident happened at Hackensack Middle School, when sixth-graders were asked the question before a four-day camping trip, reports ABC 7.
A teacher had mentioned in the classroom, where if you had HIV positive, you are not allowed to come on the trip, which is a sixth-grade camp trip, parent Janete Mendes told ABC 7.
I felt defensive about it, and he didnt know what was HIV, she added. Where he asked me, What is HIV? How do you catch HIV.'
Mendes said that parents were left alarmed by the claim, calling for the teacher involved to be sacked. She said: I spoke to other parents, and they were shocked as well. They say that he should be fired for that, which I agree. Thats something that you dont expose.
If somebody in there has that, you really arent supposed to say anything about it, because thats confidential.
However, the school released a statement to ABC 7 claiming that the incident was a misunderstanding. According to the school, the children were asked by the teacher about HIB, an acronym for Harassment, Intimidation, and Bullying. But the family stands by the story, insisting that the children were asked if they were HIV positive, and that this use of language could not be mistaken for HIB instead.
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