Schools
Rockwood Seeks Clarity on Electronic Communications Law
A new state law designed to prevent sexual misconduct between teachers and students has prompted a group of select Rockwood School District members to gather in an effort to meet the law's mandates.

A new law that prevents teachers from directly contacting students through media like Facebook prompted a special committee to reconvene to figure out how to interpret and enforce the lawβs many facets.
The law, which was approved by Gov. Jay Nixon last month, forbids teachers from using any βnonwork-related Internet siteβ to privately communicate with a current or former student. It also forbids them from using any βwork-related Internet siteβ unless the school district and parental guardian can access it.
Sen. Jane Cunningham, a Republican from Chesterfield who sponsored the legislation, said the law's requirements for sharing information between school districts regarding teachers being investigated or disciplined for sexual misconduct is another effective safeguard against abuses.
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βWith the passage of my bill, our children will have solid protection from these predators,β Cunningham said in a written statement.
Additionally, the law outlines new requirements for becoming a school board member, conducting background checks, licensing teachers and reporting incidents of abuse, among other additions.
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βSo itβs really a huge, all-encompassing law,β said Kelvin McMillin, the assistant superintendent for Rockwoodβs human resources department. βThe one piece that everyone is focusing on now, though, is the Facebook-electronic communications portion of it.β
Suzanne Dotta is Rockwoodβs representative for the National Education Association, the largest public school teachers union in the country. She said the NEA doesnβt have an official stance on the law, which takes effect Aug. 28, primarily because of unanswered questions, she said.
βReally, I think we just want a little clarity as to what exactly this does.β
Rockwood school board president Steve Smith agreed that any state-level mandate regarding teachers' use of social media like Facebook merited close examination.
βBecause thatβs how kids communicate,β Smith said before Thursdayβs school board meeting at Crestview Middle School in Ballwin.
In response to the state law approved last month, Rockwood will reassemble a committee that formed guidelines last year regarding acceptable school uses of social media websites. The revised committee will include the districtβs information technology officer, human resources director, NEA President Suzanne Dotta and multiple teachers and technology specialists.
As of Thursday, McMillin said a meeting date for the district's committee had not yet been set. The law requires school districts to establish a policy addressing electronic βemployee-student communicationβ before Jan. 1, 2012.
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