Vermilion Teachers' Ass'n v. Vermilion Local School District Board of Education

648 N.E.2d 1384, 98 Ohio App. 3d 524, 1994 Ohio App. LEXIS 4913
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 4, 1994
DocketNo. E-93-49.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 648 N.E.2d 1384 (Vermilion Teachers' Ass'n v. Vermilion Local School District Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vermilion Teachers' Ass'n v. Vermilion Local School District Board of Education, 648 N.E.2d 1384, 98 Ohio App. 3d 524, 1994 Ohio App. LEXIS 4913 (Ohio Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

Handwork, Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Erie County Court of Common Pleas which denied appellants’ motion for summary judgment and granted appellees’ cross-motion for summary judgment.

The facts relevant to this appeal are as follows. In the 1990-1991 school year, David Frank Workman (“Workman”) was a tenth grade student in appellant Bryan’s (“Bryan”) high school biology course at Vermilion High for both semesters. Workman received a passing grade for the fall semester but received an F for spring semester in biology. Workman’s failure and his subsequent treatment by appellee Vermilion Local School District Board of Education (“the board”) gave rise to litigation and ultimately this appeal.

Bryan’s biology course requirements and grading procedures were clearly delineated in a document that was disseminated to the students at the beginning of each semester. The document was reviewed orally with the students at the beginning of each semester. The document stated that an incomplete notebook would result in course failure for the nine-week grading period and course failure for the entire semester. A complete class notebook consisted of several separately graded assignments within different categories of work, such as (1) the student’s notes from class sessions, (2) outlines of chapters from the textbook, and (3) written laboratory reports. The spring course requirements also included submission of two major laboratory projects, a plant lab study and a behavior lab study.

Spring semester consisted of two nine-week grading periods. At the end of the first nine-week grading period of spring semester, Bryan required the biology students to submit their class notebooks. When Bryan returned the notebooks, he included a checklist of the items in the notebook with comments where improvement was needed. During the second nine-week grading period of the spring semester, Bryan met individually with each biology student to go over the student’s progress. The student was required to bring the class notebook to this one-on-one session. When he met with Workman, Workman did not have his class notebook.

At semester’s end, Workman did not submit the two major laboratory projects and submitted an incomplete class notebook. Although Workman had a passing *527 grade on quizzes and exams, because of the omission of the other course requirements, Bryan gave Workman an F for the grading period as well as the semester utilizing the “override procedure.” Bryan also used the override procedure with two other biology students that spring semester.

Vermilion High School has a grading policy that was developed by a committee of teachers and evaluated and modified by the high school administration. The high school principal testified that she sent this grading policy to the board during the summertime. The board had neither modified nor raised objection to the grading policy. One part of this grading policy was the override procedure, a means of “overriding” the computer averaging of grades from two nine-week grading periods. Another part of Vermilion High grading policy states: “No student can be failed for failing to complete a single item such as a project, assignment, book report, etc., unless: * * * 3. A completed Failure to Complete Requirements Report will be sent to the parents. * * * ” Thus, when a student fails to complete more than one single assignment, he can be failed without parental notification pursuant to the grading policy. This failure could result from a teacher’s use of the override procedure.

Sometime in June 1991, Bryan met with Workman’s mother to discuss her son’s biology grade. Both of Workman’s parents met with the superintendent of Vermilion schools in late June or early July to discuss their son’s grade and the override procedure. After this meeting, the parents also went to a board meeting and, during the public session, Mr. Workman expressed the parents’ concern over their son’s grade and the override procedure. The board directed the superintendent to investigate the issue. The superintendent met with Bryan and the high school principal and Bryan explained the course requirements and grading procedure. The superintendent had a series of conversations primarily with the principal, but also with Bryan and with Workman’s parents to find a way to resolve this issue.

In September, the superintendent, Workman, his parents, the high school principal and Bryan had a meeting to discuss the grade issue and a possible resolution. A proposal was made for Workman to retake spring semester biology with Bryan and to replace the grade. Normally, when a student retakes a failed course, both the failure and the second grade appear on the transcript but in Workman’s case the grade would have been replaced. While the parents were considering the proposal, Bryan said something that apparently enraged them and the meeting dissolved without resolution. Shortly after this meeting, Workman’s father told the superintendent that he wanted to talk with an attorney. *528 The superintendent received a letter from an attorney representing Workman’s parents requesting a meeting. The superintendent and the principal met with the Workman’s attorney and discussed the proposal for Workman to retake biology. According to the superintendent, he tried to leave the impression that there were not a lot of other options. The board was kept aware of the attempts to resolve the issue of Workman’s grade because the superintendent submits written communications to the board called “Friday reports.”

On October 7, 1991, there was a regular meeting of the board. Workman’s parents were at this meeting and spoke to the superintendent, asking to speak privately to the board about their son’s spring semester biology grade. The superintendent told the presiding board officer about this request. After the board conducted its regular session business, a motion was made to move into executive session to discuss personnel compensation. Workman’s parents were invited into this executive session to discuss the issue of their son’s grade. No motion had been made to move into executive session to discuss this specific issue.

After Workman’s parents explained their complaint to the board, proposals were made and then rejected by various board members. A proposal was made that Workman do an alternative assignment to allow the grade to be changed. It evolved that Workman would do three separate assignments, designed and graded by a certified science teacher outside the school district. If completed satisfactorily, the grades of these three assignments would be averaged into the grade for the second nine-week grading period; Workman’s semester grade would be adjusted accordingly with the override taken off. No vote was taken by the board on this proposal nor was any rule, regulation or any formal action adopted when the board went back into regular session.

Later in October, Workman was assigned to write three science reports, not on biology topics but on environmental science topics. These topics were designed, and the papers later graded, by a county supervisor. Workman successfully completed the assignments by January 1992. Although not initially changed because of the litigation, ultimately, Workman’s grade in biology was changed to a “pass.”

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Bluebook (online)
648 N.E.2d 1384, 98 Ohio App. 3d 524, 1994 Ohio App. LEXIS 4913, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vermilion-teachers-assn-v-vermilion-local-school-district-board-of-ohioctapp-1994.