19 Tex. Admin. Code § 249.5 - Purpose; Policy Governing Disciplinary Proceedings
(a) Purpose. The purpose of this chapter is:
(1) to protect the safety and welfare of
Texas schoolchildren and school personnel;
(2) to ensure educators and applicants are
morally fit and worthy to instruct or to supervise the youth of the
state;
(3) to regulate and to
enforce the standards of conduct of educators and applicants;
(4) to provide for disciplinary proceedings
in conformity with the Texas Government Code, Chapter 2001, and the rules of
practice and procedure of the State Office of Administrative
Hearings;
(5) to enforce an
educators' code of ethics;
(6) to
fairly and efficiently resolve disciplinary proceedings at the least expense
possible to the parties and the state;
(7) to promote the development of legal
precedents through State Board for Educator Certification (SBEC) decisions to
the end that disciplinary proceedings may be justly resolved; and
(8) to provide for regulation and general
administration pursuant to the SBEC's enabling statutes.
(b) Policy governing disciplinary
proceedings.
(1) A certified educator holds a
unique position of public trust with almost unparalleled access to the hearts
and minds of impressionable students. The conduct of an educator must be held
to the highest standard. Because SBEC sanctions are imposed for reasons of
public policy, and are not penal in nature, criminal procedural and punishment
standards are not appropriate to educator disciplinary proceedings.
(2) The following general principles shall
apply.
(A) Because the SBEC's primary duty is
to safeguard the interests of Texas students, educator certification must be
considered a privilege and not a right.
(B) The SBEC may pursue disciplinary
proceedings and sanctions based on convictions of felonies and misdemeanors as
provided by the Texas Education Code (TEC), §21.060; the Texas Occupations
Code, Chapter 53; and this chapter.
(C) The SBEC may also pursue disciplinary
proceedings and sanctions based on educator conduct that is proved by a
preponderance of the evidence, and such proceedings and sanctions do not
require a criminal conviction, deferred adjudication, community supervision, an
indictment, or an arrest.
(D) An
educator's good moral character, as defined in §
249.3 of this title (relating to
Definitions), constitutes the essence of the role model that the educator
represents to students both inside and outside the classroom. Chapter 247 of
this title (relating to Educators' Code of Ethics) and this chapter provide for
educator disciplinary proceedings and provide a minimum standard for educator
conduct. Conduct or conditions that may demonstrate that an educator or
applicant lacks good moral character, is a negative role model to students, and
does not possess the moral fitness necessary to be a certified educator
include, but are not limited to:
(i) active
community supervision or criminal probation;
(ii) conduct that indicates dishonesty or
untruthfulness;
(iii) habitual
impairment through drugs or alcohol;
(iv) abuse or neglect of students and minors,
including the educator's own children; and
(v) reckless endangerment of the safety of
others.
(E) "Unworthy to
instruct or to supervise the youth of this state," defined in §
249.3 of this title, which serves
as a basis for sanctions under §
249.15(b)(2) of
this title (relating to Disciplinary Action by State Board for Educator
Certification), is a broad concept that is not limited to the specific criminal
convictions that are described in the TEC, §
21.058 and §
21.060. The moral
fitness of a person to instruct the youth of this state must be determined from
an examination of all relevant conduct, is not limited to conduct that occurs
while performing the duties of a professional educator, and is not limited to
conduct that constitutes a criminal violation or results in a criminal
conviction or to conduct that constitutes a violation of Chapter 247 of this
title. It is a rebuttable presumption that an educator who violates written
directives from school administrators regarding the educator's behavior toward
a student is unworthy to instruct or to supervise the youth of this
state.
(F) Educators have positions
of authority, have extensive access to students when no other adults (or even
other students, in some cases) are present, and have access to confidential
information that could provide a unique opportunity to exploit student
vulnerabilities. Educators must clearly understand the boundaries of the
educator-student relationship that they are trusted not to cross. Any violation
of that trust, such as soliciting or engaging in a romantic or sexual
relationship with any student or minor, is considered conduct that may result
in permanent revocation of an educator's certificate.
(G) Administrators who hold Superintendent,
Principal, or Mid-Management Administrator certificates issued by the SBEC
have, as a result of their actual or potential positions of authority over both
students and other educators, an even greater obligation to maintain good moral
character than teachers and paraprofessionals. When an administrator's conduct
demonstrates that the administrator lacks good moral character, is a negative
role model to students, or does not possess the moral fitness necessary to be a
certified educator as described in subparagraph (D) of this paragraph, the
administrator may be subject to greater sanction than a teacher or
paraprofessional would receive for the same conduct.
(H) Evidence of rehabilitation with regard to
educator conduct that could result in sanction, denial of a certification
application, or denial of an application for reinstatement of a certificate
shall be recognized and considered. In addition, the following shall also be
considered:
(i) the nature and seriousness of
prior conduct;
(ii) the potential
danger the conduct poses to the health and welfare of students;
(iii) the effect of the prior conduct upon
any victims of the conduct;
(iv)
whether sufficient time has passed, and sufficient evidence is presented to
demonstrate that the educator or applicant has been rehabilitated from the
prior conduct; and
(v) the effect
of the conduct upon the educator's good moral character and ability to be a
proper role model for students.
Notes
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