Face of Nation : Amy Bennett says her ears are still ringing more than a year after a teacher berated her for more than three minutes in the main hallway of a school on Nova Scotia’s South Shore, as several adults watched and did nothing.
The 13-year-old girl has an auditory processing disorder that makes her sensitive to certain loud noises, and her family fears the traumatic June 4, 2018, incident at Bayview Community School in Mahone Bay, N.S., caused permanent damage.
“I was angry and I was scared … I thought he was going to hurt me,” said Amy, sitting next to her mother at a kitchen table during a recent interview inside their rural home near the school.
“I didn’t know what just happened. I basically just started crying and my ears … just started ringing.”
But while a nine-month investigation concluded there was an “abuse of power” by the teacher and a “lack of appropriate response” by other adults, the Bennett family have been told they have no right to know any of the report’s recommendations or even if the teacher was disciplined.
A May 14 letter to the Bennett family from the school division, the South Shore Regional Centre for Education, said the findings are being kept confidential as it is of “a human resource nature.”
Amy’s mother said that means neither the school nor the teacher can be held accountable.
“What do we have to go by that they’re actually going to do that and that there’s accountability for folks who dropped the ball on so many levels?” said Lisa Bennett, becoming emotional at times during the interview.
“It’s mind boggling and very frustrating. What’s a parent to do when you go through and do all the steps that they tell you that you’re supposed to do and you still don’t have those answers? How can you have closure?”
Emails obtained through access-to-information legislation show that in the months leading up to the incident, Amy was dealing with a fellow student periodically yelling into her hearing aid.
The device is equipped with a transmitter so that while Amy is in class, she’s able to hear what the teacher is saying.
Amy’s parents sent an email on Jan. 4, 2018, to Craig Pottie, the principal of Bayview Community School at the time, asking if the school was taking steps to deal with the situation.
The email noted that yelling into the device can cause permanent damage.
Amy’s family doctor then wrote Pottie detailing her hearing issues and the potential risks associated with it.
“Abnormally loud sounds carry the risk of producing noise-induced hearing loss,” the doctor wrote in the March 1, 2018, letter. “I believe this is a potentially dangerous situation and some type of remedial action will be required before serious harm is done.”
On June 4, 2018, Amy was in gym class and was not feeling well. She said her teacher was busy with another student, so she told the teaching assistant she was going to the washroom.
She was admittedly there for some time, and then the bell rang to change classes, so she did not go back to the gymnasium.
That’s when gym teacher Fred Forsyth confronted her and a few other students in the hallway, accusing her of skipping class.
The then-Grade 7 student said when she tried to explain herself, he told her to “shut up.”
“He was kind of leaning towards us more and more and I just kept on leaning towards him,” said Amy.
“I didn’t want to lean back because I didn’t know what was going to happen, so I just stood my ground basically … There were a lot of teachers watching when it happened and no one actually did anything to stop him.”
The entire incident was captured on the school’s surveillance video.
One email from the human resources director who investigated the incident noted Amy was “berated for more than three minutes in the main hallway of the school,” and that the teacher was “animated” and “loud.”
Lisa Bennett said she was not informed about the episode by the school’s administration. A support worker who was nearby in the hallway called her roughly three hours later and told her what had happened.
She said that went against multiple school code-of-conduct policies, including one that states unacceptable behaviour will be responded to immediately.
The mother eventually watched the video of the incident, which was also witnessed by young children on a recess. She described it as “the hardest thing I’ve ever had to do in my life.”
“That was an eye-opener as a parent, when you have so many people looking on and not stepping in when they’re in a position of trust,” she said, pausing to compose herself.
“They’re paid to be there. They’re paid to educate and protect our kids, and not one person stepped up to intervene, and the school did not call me.”
Forsyth privately apologized to Amy the next day. But the Bennetts wanted a public apology, given the incident played out publicly, and also repeatedly asked for a restorative justice process. Neither have happened.
In an email, Forsyth said he would not comment on private and confidential matters involving students.
The Bennetts believe the incident has caused permanent damage.
Notes taken by Amy’s family doctor show she reported tinnitus — ringing in the ears — during regular checkups between June 15, 2018, and Feb. 7.