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Gay Seminar Teacher Investigated [NC Governor's School: Sexual abuse of minor]
A Carolina Journal Exclusive ^
| February 14, 2006
| Paul Chesser
Posted on 02/14/2006 4:52:08 AM PST by TaxRelief
K-12 Education
Gay Seminar Teacher Investigated
Teacher probed for sexual misconduct with East Forsyth student
By Paul Chesser
February 14, 2006
RALEIGH — A co-teacher of a controversial seminar on homosexuality at last year's taxpayer-funded Governor's School is under investigation in Forsyth County for alleged sexual misconduct with a student.
Susan Wiseman helped lead a lecture based on a book called "The New Gay Teenager," given at the Governor's School West. The six-week Governor’s School is conducted every summer, with 400 students each at two locations: Salem College in Winston-Salem (West) and Meredith College in Raleigh (East).
The residential program draws public high school students who are approaching their senior years, and who are nominated by their high schools’ teachers and administrators. Students are identified as “intellectually gifted,” and the program “integrat(es) academic disciplines, the arts, and unique courses….”
According to a report in the Winston-Salem Journal on Friday, Wiseman is being investigated for allegations of sexual activity with a 17-year-old student. The report was confirmed to Carolina Journal by a source involved in the investigation.
Wiseman, according to the Journal, is a social studies teacher at East Forsyth High School. She is also listed as a youth coordinator for the Parents, Families, and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG)-Winston-Salem.
Wiseman co-led the "New Gay Teenager" seminar with a 19-year-old office assistant at the Governor's School — Wesley Nemenz — who is homosexual, a former Governor's School attendee, and a student at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.
The seminar was heavily criticized by James and Beverly Burrows, whose son attended the school last year and said their son returned home from the school “confused” about homosexuality as a result of the seminar, and that they have had to seek family counseling.
“We feel that this was totally inappropriate for the students who were 15, 16, and 17 years old,” the Burrowses wrote to officials at the State Department of Public Instruction last August. “We feel that our rights as parents have been violated by this program.”
The Burrowses accused the Governor's School of having a "pro-homosexual agenda."
DPI and Governor's School officials defended the seminar, saying it was optional for students to attend, as is the Governor’s School itself.
The state budget fully funds the program, with $1.3 million set aside for it this fiscal year. Students are nominated based on specific areas of academic or performing-arts excellence, and pay nothing to attend, other than the cost to travel to the schools.
At least two other families were also disturbed by the changes in their children after returning from the Governor's School last year, based on students' writings on the MySpace Internet website.
Wiseman has not been charged with any crimes. Vanessa Jeter, a spokeswoman for the Department of Public Instruction, was unaware of the investigation and said she would make sure the agency's attorneys were aware of it.
"We would take that kind of thing very seriously," Jeter said.
Paul Chesser (pchesser@carolinajournal.org) is associate editor of Carolina Journal.
|
TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; US: North Carolina
KEYWORDS: burrows; campus; gayseminar; gifteded; giftedrecruitment; governorsschool; homosexualagenda; paulchesser; perversion; recruiting; schools; susanwiseman; teacher; teachers; teens; wesleynemenz
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Below is a list of optional seminars recently presented at GS-West.
- Strange Little Short Stories
- Aesthetics of Choreography
- Relativity
- This is Not a Pipe: Magritte and How We Interpret Art
- Love Lace
- Discussion of Love Lace
- Ecstasy and the Brain: A Neurological Perspective on Contemporary Drugs
- Deconstructing Scrabble: Synthesizing a Killer Word
- Word Play: Experiments in Poetry
- African-American Film Series
- Yoga
- Reading Circles
- Stephen Hawking's A Brief History of Time
- The Topology of 20th Century Theater: A Hands-on Approach
- The Art & Science of Flying: From Bernoulli to Paragliding
- The Art of Montage: Two Films by Alfred Hitchcock: Psycho & Vertigo
- Suzuki Open Class
- Activism and Protest Culture
- Film: Twilight
- GSW Movie Series Preview: Film's Unique Vocabulary
- General Relativity for Dummies
- The Tropicalization of Latin America: Disney's Three Caballeros
- Word Play: Experiments in Poetry
- Stephen Hawking's A Brief History of Time (repeat)
- Yoga
- Robert Putnam's Bowling Alone: Declining Social Capital in America
- Two Poets and a Guy with a Story
- Roussel, the Oulipo, and the Constraint in Literature
- Mythos and Modernity in Japanese Cinema (Or East Meets West(erns)): Akira Kurasawa's Seven Samurai
- Gazing into the Abyss: An Introduction to Existentialism
- Nuestra Comunidad: Latinos in North Carolina
- Mean Genes and the Biology of Pleasure
- An Introduction to the Poetry of Natasha Trethewey
- Word Play: Experiments in Poetry
- Yoga
- Four Poets
- The Merchants of Cool: How Corporate America is Defining What You Think is Cool
- Ask the TACs Anything (About College)
- The Bioethics of Genetic Testing and Stem Cells
- The Use of Force: An Idea in Art and Science
- This is What Democracy Looks Like – The 1999 Seattle Protest
- Word Play: Experiments in Poetry
- Yoga
- Reading Circles
- African American Film Series: Slam
- Appalachian Documentary: American Hollow
- Life & Debt – Global Economic Policy at Work in Jamaica
- Topology & Order Parameters in Physics
- Discussion of Globalization Films
- Area II Cloning Debate
- How Do Poems Mean?
- Ways of Knowing and Those @#$% Environmentalists
- Mountaintop Removal Coal Mining – How Cheap is Your Electricity
- Exploring the Golden Ratio: The Story of Phi, the World's Most Astonishing Number
- Phase Shifting: The Early Compositions of Steve Reich
- Writing for Fun and Insight
- Sudden Fiction & Contemporary Lif
- Critics' Choice: Exploring Literary Theories
- The New French Wave: Jean-Luc Godard – Breathless, Le Mepris (Contempt)
- Individuality, Conformity, and Society
- Suburbia and the New American Home
- Song Writing Workshop
- Meet Your Meat, Part I
- Famine Relief for Mauritania
- Industrial Areas Foundation: A Proven Approach to Community Action
- Film Screening: Zoot Suit
- Word Play: Experiments in Poetry
- Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Philosophy
- Funny Dirty Little War: Peronism and Argentina's Dirty War
- Lingua Comica: Comics, Art, and Visual Communication
- Yoga
- The Mathematics of Music or the Music of Mathematics
- Can We Think Our Way to Belief? Philosophical Arguments For/ Against God's Existence
- Holden Thorp's DNA: The Secret of Life
- African-American Film Series: Scankofa
- The Transcendental Cinema of Michelangelo Antonioni: Blow Up & L'Avventura
- Sociology of Capitalism
- Follow Your Bliss
- New Music Improvised and Not
- Capital Punishment: A Lawyer's Perspective
- African American Film Series: Sankofa, Part II
- Presumed Guilty: A Performance of “The Exoneratedâ€Ãƒƒ‚�
- Dead Man Walking
- Are We There Yet? - Women in Science
- Word Play: Experiments in Poetry
- The Real Scoop About College
- Yoga
- Meet Your Meat, Part II
The
secret homosexual seminar took place on the second last day of the sixth week. They are still keeping it secret from this year's potential recruits.
61
posted on
02/14/2006 12:12:35 PM PST
by
TaxRelief
(Wal-Mart: Keeping my family on-budget since 1993.)
To: taxesareforever
It is addressed in an article linked from the posted article. The seminar was sceduled while the school was in session, so it was not disclosed to the parents/students prior to the start of the school.
62
posted on
02/14/2006 12:20:09 PM PST
by
thehumanlynx
(“All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.” -Edmund Burke)
To: Coleus
Each year, each campus of Governor's Indoctrination School invites "distinguished academics and artists" to speak to the student body. These
speakers represent the most current work and debates in their arena of ideas. Governor's School wants to challenge its students and provoke thoughtful conversation within the Governor's School community.
Here are sample speakers from Governor's School East's "Convocations" series in recent years. Several of these speakers have also presented at Governor's School West's Speakers Series.
- Svi Shapiro, Director of the PhD. Program in Curriculum and Teaching, University of North Carolina, Greensboro - "Elitism in Public Education"
Dr. Shapiro challenged the students to rethink the role of public schools. Are public schools really about academic excellence or are they more concerned with promoting ruthless competition, smugness, and conformism?
- Stanley Hauerwas, Professor of Theological Ethics, Duke Divinity School - "A Pacifist Response"
Self-described as a "Christian Contrarian," Dr. Hauerwas generated a great deal of discussion among GSE students concerning the relationship between Christianity, Pacifism and the tragic events of September 11, 2001.
- Carol Quinn, Assistant Professor, Center for Professional and Applied Ethics, University of North Carolina, Charlotte - "Race, Class, and Environmental Justice"
Dr. Quinn highlighted issues concerning environmental racism and its impact on the United States of America.
- James Wilson-Quayle, Professor of Political Science, George Washington University
"The American Economy and Liberty"
Professor Wilson-Quayle weaved together an intricate argument that questioned the ability of the United States to continue its impressive economic growth. What will the United States do to maintain its growth, turn to the forces of Globalization? Institute procedures to redistribute wealth? Simplify our lifestyles?
- Tom Regan, Professor Emeritus of Philosophy, North Carolina State University - "A Case for Animal Rights"
Professor Regan posed the question, "Do animals have rights?" From this starting point, he expanded the student's understanding of the issue by logically laying out the possible basis for animal rights.
- Charles Kimball, Department of Religion, Professor and Chair, Wake Forest University - "When Religion Becomes Evil"
Professor Kimball focused the attention of the GSE students on the question of why people commit evil acts in the name of religion. He introduced what he saw as warning signs that a religion was becoming evil and encouraged the students to apply his test to the current state of the world.
- Patrick Dougherty, Installation Artist - "Primitive Ways in an Accelerated World"
Mr. Dougherty explored the relationship between the artist and the public. His presentation challenged students to think about the function of public space.
- Ceasar Alvarez, Performer/Musician - "Hyper-Reality"
Mr. Alvarez offered the GSE student body an alternate view of music and art than that presented by the conventional media outlets. He juxtaposed his visual presentation with live and recorded music to create a true "hyper-reality" experience.
- Paul Anderson, Associate Professor of Physics, Wake Forest University - "Exploring the Cosmos"
Dr. Anderson expanded the GSE students' view of the world by asking them to imagine the entire cosmos. His presentation covered such questions as, How was the universe created? Is the universe expanding? How does it expand?
- Mike Despines, Regional Director for International Rescue Committee - "The American Dream - The World's Nightmare"
Mr. Despines awed the student body with staggering statistics, figures, and questions about the future of our environment and the role humans (especially Americans) in contributing to its decline. He emphasized the impact of exponential growth in population and consumption.
63
posted on
02/14/2006 12:20:25 PM PST
by
TaxRelief
(Wal-Mart: Keeping my family on-budget since 1993.)
To: TaxRelief
May students go home on weekends? No. That tells me all I need to know.
64
posted on
02/14/2006 12:23:16 PM PST
by
Aquinasfan
(Isaiah 22:22, Rev 3:7, Mat 16:19)
To: taxesareforever
This was a
secret seminar. It was
not on the list provided to parents. See list at post
#61
65
posted on
02/14/2006 12:23:17 PM PST
by
TaxRelief
(Wal-Mart: Keeping my family on-budget since 1993.)
To: thehumanlynx
it was not disclosed to the parents/students prior to the start of the school....Nor any time afterwards. Parents were never notified of the change. Permission was not sought.
66
posted on
02/14/2006 12:25:33 PM PST
by
TaxRelief
(Wal-Mart: Keeping my family on-budget since 1993.)
To: TaxRelief
Since the witch hunts of the 1980's, I've always reserved judgement of teachers accused of sexual misconduct with a student until there has been a complete investigation.
People are always jumping the gun, and that needs to stop.
To: TaxRelief
Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Philosophy How about St. Thomas and Philosophy? < /rimshot>
This list reads like the creme de la crappe.
68
posted on
02/14/2006 12:28:19 PM PST
by
Aquinasfan
(Isaiah 22:22, Rev 3:7, Mat 16:19)
To: TaxRelief
Professor Kimball focused the attention of the GSE students on the question of why people commit evil acts in the name of religion. He introduced what he saw as warning signs that a religion was becoming evil and encouraged the students to apply his test to the current state of the world. I wonder which religion's he focused on? What his test was?
For instance: Is a person of power who claims to speak with a higher power that leads us into a war for oil likely involved in an evil religion? (kimball answers his own rhetoric... YES, that mans religion is no doubt evil)
Does a religion seek to deny rights to deserving segments of society like homosexuals? (kimball again: absolutely, Christianity is an antiquated evil religion that seeks to destroy the world in the name of "Jesus". )
Are religions whose practitioners are forced to fight oppression by whatever means necessary evil? (kimball says: No, they are simply surviving, if Israel would stop their oppression of the Palestinians and the US would halt its imperialism on the world then no Muslim would have to attack the US or Israel)
This is all speculation but my guess, after reading a bit about these schools, is that his speech wasn't ideologically far off of my guess.
I can only hope I am dead wrong.
69
posted on
02/14/2006 12:34:42 PM PST
by
thehumanlynx
(“All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.” -Edmund Burke)
To: Zeroisanumber
"Since the witch hunts of the 1980's, I've always reserved judgement of teachers accused of sexual misconduct with a student until there has been a complete investigation."Very much agreed and for the same reason.
To: thehumanlynx
From Publisher's Weekly:
"[Kimball] contends that there are five warning signs that we can recognize when religion moves toward [evil]. Whenever a religion emphasizes that it holds the absolute truth-the one path to God or the only correct way of reading a sacred text-to the exclusion of the truth claims of all other religions and cultures, that religion is becoming evil. Other warning signs include blind obedience to religious leaders, apocalyptic belief that the end time will occur through a particular religion, the use of malevolent ends to achieve religious goals (e.g., the Crusades) and the declaration of holy war."
( Kimball, BTW, served as the director of the Middle East office of the National Council of Churches)
71
posted on
02/14/2006 1:13:26 PM PST
by
TaxRelief
(Wal-Mart: Keeping my family on-budget since 1993.)
To: WayneS
Human rights, yes...certainly.
72
posted on
02/14/2006 1:55:31 PM PST
by
Adder
(Can we bring back stoning again? Please?)
To: TaxRelief
I'll have to say, since I am a concerned parent, just looking at that list of courses I would not allow my child to attend.
73
posted on
02/14/2006 2:38:04 PM PST
by
taxesareforever
(Government is running amuck)
To: TaxRelief; Amelia
Ameila - please read this whole thread.
To: NCLaw441
Hmmm... Maybe NC just followed the curriculum that Clinton instituted...???
75
posted on
02/14/2006 3:20:15 PM PST
by
TheBattman
(Islam (and liberalism)- the cult of Satan and a Cancer on Society)
To: GBoettner
GBoettner,
I am so sorry to hear about your son. I am sorry I didn't understand part of your post. Did you pull him out of school or only the Governor's school?
To: Aquinasfan
Testimony of parent whose son committed suicide after attending the Ark. Gov.'s School
8
This mother's testimony is very sad.
To: spinestein; scripter; DirtyHarryY2K; DBeers; 2ndMostConservativeBrdMember; afraidfortherepublic; ...
So you're saying that there is a widespread pattern of homosexual activists in high schools "coercing" teenagers to go to meetings where they are subject to "attempted molestation"? >>>>
YES!
78
posted on
02/14/2006 6:03:39 PM PST
by
Coleus
(IMHO, The IVF procedure is immoral & kills many embryos/children and should be outlawed)
To: Aquinasfan
I attended one of these in Georgia in the 1960's. It was indeed patterned after the NC program, and most of the staff and faculty were of the "JFK" mold of liberals that one could encounter before the Viet Nam / LBJ debacle.
We read good books, talked about "big ideas", and watched foreign films - with subtitles!! One of the English teachers from New Jersey was more knowledgeable than any of my "Kudzu League" profs that I encountered later at college. Heavy stuff for a kid from the middle of nowhere. It was at that program that I discovered the charms of smart girls and late-night cigars. No, not like Billy Clinton (I know what you're thinking).
Fortunately for me, I was raised by two parents who encouraged intelligent thought and open discussion - and who expected you to back up your statements with facts, not feeeelings. I'm sure that a lot of my fellow attendees are the sort of baby boomers who set my teeth on edge now when I meet them.
The type of liberal arts people from those days, even though a few were openly disdainful of middle-class values, would have no place among the wild-eyed left wing nuts that came on the scene after the summer of "peace and love". So, I would not encourage my grandchildren to attend any of these programs. Sad, really.
To: TaxRelief
Crusades: evil -- I agree that killing people in the name of conversion is terrible.
Jihad: (to him) not worth talking about -- I would contend that it is worth mentioning in the realm of evil.
What is the point of believing in a religion if you don't consider it to be the true path to God? I see no point.
80
posted on
02/14/2006 7:39:12 PM PST
by
thehumanlynx
(“All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.” -Edmund Burke)
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