The Wisconsin English teacher, Jordan Cernek, argues in the suit that the district violated his freedom of religion and free speech in mandating the use of the students’ preferred names and pronouns.

A high school English teacher is suing a Wisconsin school district, alleging it did not renew his contract last year because he refused to use the preferred names of two transgender students.

Jordan Cernek’s federal lawsuit alleges the Argyle School District violated his constitutional and civil rights to be free of religious discrimination and to be able to express himself according to his religious beliefs when it did not renew his contract because he refused to abide by a requirement that teachers use the names or pronouns requested by students.

  • Eggyhead
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    283 months ago

    Are you telling me that if a kid named Timmy wants me to call him Tim, I should only be calling him Timmy? Fuck that noise.

    • Cadeillac
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      3 months ago

      If you call him Tim bad things could happen. It’s a slippery slope to child abuse

      Edit: /s

    • @lath
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      -343 months ago

      If you’re the teacher of a classroom and it’s not part of your contract to call Timmy as Tim, then little Timmy can go legally change his name to Tim.

        • @lath
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          3 months ago

          Your teachers seem to have failed you as your reading comprehension is lacking.

          In school, a teacher is an employee. It’s their job. Outside of working hours, they’re not an employee. It’s their personal time. Job, personal time, very different things. If you expect them not to be this way, you’re kinda being an asshole towards them as a person.

          To take the IT guy as an example. Do you expect to call them outside of their working hours to come fix your internet and call you pet names in the process? If so, wow do I have news for you!

          Edit: Talk about disconnected…

            • @lath
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              3 months ago

              I did answer it, you simply failed to recognize it as such.

              A school is an organization with a specific purpose. A teacher is an employee of that organization working there under a contract within a set of rules. The students are the beneficiaries of the services that organization offers. The teachers obligation is to provide those services as specified in their contract. Beyond that and other than the laws of the city and country they reside in, they are not obligated to provide any other service that is requested of them.

              Demanding something that is beyond their obligations and expecting them to accomplish it unconditionally is an assholeish thing to do.

              Ps: You presume too much. Just stuck to the written words and refrain the imagination that flows far beyond them. It will serve you better in the long run.

                • @lath
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                  -63 months ago

                  Uh huh. So calling students by their actual name is not respecting their human dignity now.

                  You seem lovely as well, so I’ll explain it more clearly, because you seem to have fallen into a hole. This little thing you seem so fond of is a fun thing called entitlement. And it’s fun because it need no explanation, it’s all there in the word itself. En-title-ment. Or in other words, pretentious drivel.

                  You have a name and it is being used in its exact form. That is in fact respecting your dignity as a human being. Anything beyond that is s privilege, not an obligation. And anyone can choose not to provide that privilege as that is their right just as it is yours in return.

                  You’re not wrong though. You don’t have to like it or the person who does that and the teacher’s contract doesn’t have to be renewed if they don’t fit in. But any expectations that aren’t included in the contract can and should be challenged.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    3 months ago

                    Uh huh. So calling students by their actual name is not respecting their human dignity now.

                    You seem to place parental choices and legal contracts over personal preference. Maybe you don’t care so much about human dignity in terms of being able to express one’s own identity, at least when it comes to children.

                    Did you not have an identity as a child, other than the one your parents picked out for you, as defined in a legal contract that your school recorded?

                     

                    You have a name and it is being used in its exact form. That is in fact respecting your dignity as a human being.

                    The human being didn’t choose their name at the time of birth. They were not able to produce language, and are not legally awarded have the capacity to express a choice (babies cannot sign contracts).

                    The human being is now older, and can now choose. That has precedence over a choice made for them.

              • @[email protected]
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                73 months ago

                A school is an organization with a specific purpose. A teacher is an employee of that organization working there under a contract within a set of rules.

                Are you LARPing being autistic? Because, as an autistic teacher of autistic students, I find your ignorant appeals to neutral logic pretty galling.

                • @lath
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                  -53 months ago

                  Good for you for being an autistic teacher for autistic children. I presume you were hired specifically for that purpose with the required resources given in mind.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    53 months ago

                    Nope. I didn’t know I was autistic when I got this job. The class is not a special needs class. Children might be found to be autistic while in the class. Children might be judged by me and by trained support staff to have a high likelihood of being autistic without an official diagnosis, because CAMHS is a very overburdened system.

                    Another wrong assumption that you have made.

          • @[email protected]
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            143 months ago

            The fact that you think a pet name and a preferred name are the same thing shows how much you understand what you’re talking about.

            • @lath
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              3 months ago

              For both the beauty of understanding and its ugliness is that the more you think you understand something, the less you understand it.

          • @[email protected]
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            73 months ago

            In school, a teacher is an employee. It’s their job.

            It’s my job, as a teacher, to support my students. I do this by calling them by their preferred name if they ask.

            Feel free to complain about that.

            • @lath
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              -53 months ago

              Your job as a teacher is whatever the contract asks of you. Anything you do beyond that is a choice that might not be supported by the administration of the school that employs you.

              I mean, good for you for being supportive of your students. But if your school decides you shouldn’t do that and you refuse, well bye.

              • ObliviousEnlightenment
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                23 months ago

                Well, the administration of the school in op clearly felt that the teachers religiously motivated insistence on being a dick violated their contract; so where’s that leave you lol

                • @lath
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                  13 months ago

                  It leaves me at my original post. This particular teacher’s dumb reasons doesn’t change the idea in itself.

                  Sure the teacher was dumb, sure the institution didn’t agree. But it’s just the circumstances of this case. Can’t say things will be the same every time, when the circumstances will be different.

                  • ObliviousEnlightenment
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                    13 months ago

                    Sure, but the problem is that leaves states and districts open to enforce a form of bigotry

      • @[email protected]
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        93 months ago

        then little Timmy can go legally change his name to Tim.

        How I ‘legally changed’ my name:

        1. I told everyone that knew me by my old name what my new name was.

        2. This involved sending letters to places of business I had an account with, e.g. bank and utilities.

         

        Do you have to do that for a nickname?

        1. No.

         

        So, if Timmy says “I prefer Tim”, is that going against a ‘contract’? Doesn’t seem so.

        • @lath
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          -53 months ago

          Just because Timmy prefers Tim doesn’t mean everyone has to call him Tim. Maybe the other person prefers to call him by the given name.

          • femtech
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            33 months ago

            It’s not up to someone else what they call me. It’s up to me.

            • @lath
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              -13 months ago

              Nah, I’m pretty sure anyone can call you whatever they like.

        • @lath
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          -143 months ago

          On Lemmy, I have registered with that nickname and as such I expect it to be used.

          Is that so hard to comprehend?

          • @[email protected]
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            73 months ago

            On Lemmy, I have registered with that nickname and as such I expect it to be used.

            Is that so hard to comprehend?

            In school, the child asked to be referred to by a name, and as such they expect it to be used.

            Is that so hard to comprehend?

            • @lath
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              -63 months ago

              Not if it isn’t the one they registered with.

              • @[email protected]
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                63 months ago

                Not if it isn’t the one they registered with.

                You have a creepily excessive regard for rules. Humans are more important than rules - that’s human decency.

                • @lath
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                  -43 months ago

                  Yes they are. We just disagree on proportion.

      • Eggyhead
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        33 months ago

        Im so glad you have insight on this. You see, I get a lot of international students in my class and I’ve had to deal with this type of thing a lot. Maybe you can help me out.

        Let’s say I have a polish student whose name is “Żółć”, which is somewhat difficult to pronounce in English. After a few failed attempts, he just tells me he prefers “George” because it sounds close enough, he likes that it sounds like English, and is easier for everyone to pronounce. His English-speaking friends call him George as well.

        Do I…

        1. Go on and call him George since he prefers it, everybody knows him as that, and move on with the lesson?
        2. Call his parents to request that they have his name legally changed to George so I can use it in the classroom, then butcher his actual name in front of his friends until they do?
        3. Assign him a nick name (not a pet name, because that might be a little weird) “Polish kid” or “Student number 8” so I can call him something easy, be technically correct, and disregard his preferred, yet technically incorrect name?

        I could really use some help with this since it happens all the time. Please let me know what you think.

        • @lath
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          -33 months ago

          Learn to pronounce their name. Duh.

          • Eggyhead
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            53 months ago

            OR, just bear with me…

            Call them the name they’d prefer to be called because it’s easier than making a scene and nobody actually gaf.

            • @lath
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              -33 months ago

              Never give up, never surrender!

              • Cadeillac
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                33 months ago

                You could use more time outside, and less watching movies

                • @lath
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                  03 months ago

                  That counts as one.

        • @lath
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          -103 months ago

          I’d give you a picture of a mirror, but you’ll probably think it really is one.