WASHINGTON 鈥 The Prince George鈥檚 County Head Start educators accused of using humiliation and corporal punishment with its young attendees will no longer be in front of any child in the school system, the county school system鈥檚 leader announced Thursday.
Last month, detailed what it called 鈥渄eficiencies鈥 by the school system to correct teacher behavior involving Head Start instructors who improperly disciplined children as young as 3. The report resulted in federal officials cutting a $6.4 million grant for Head Start.
Six educators directly involved in the incidents will no longer be in front of any child in the school system, said Kevin Maxwell, Prince George’s County Schools chief executive officer, on Thursday.
鈥淥ur message is clear: We will not tolerate this type of behavior. Our schools will cultivate teaching and learning environments that prioritize students鈥 well-being 鈥 and we will act swiftly to remove individuals who do not uphold these ideals,鈥 Maxwell said in a statement.
Maxwell said he doled out disciplinary actions against certified teachers, classroom aides and an administrative supervisor. He did not specify which disciplinary measures were taken.
The review found in December 2015, a Head Start teacher ordered a 3-year-old to clean up his own urine and another incident in June where teachers ordered children to hold boxes with heavy objects over their heads when they misbehaved.
The behavior 鈥渧iolated our students鈥 rights and dignity and betrayed parents鈥 trust,” Maxwell said.
The county school system is working to prevent future cases like this through a Student Safety Task Force, he said.
Denver-based Community Development Institute has been tasked with until a permanent agency is聽chosen.
An early childhood learning program, Head Start is聽largely funded with federal dollars. More than 930 Prince George鈥檚 County students between the ages of 3 and 5 participate聽in the Head Start program.
