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The Philadelphia Inquirer
The Philadelphia Inquirer
National
Alexandra Dematos and Robert Moran

Students protest teacher's suspension for Parkland school shooting comments

CHERRY HILL, N.J. _ The controversy over the suspension of a Cherry Hill High School East history teacher over his comments on security issues following the massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., continued Tuesday with a walkout by students, a plea from the mayor for the School Board to "take action on school security," and a night meeting of the board that drew an overflow crowd.

Late Tuesday, a large crowd waited at Cherry Hill Alternative High School's gym waiting for the board to finish its agenda so they could discuss what's been happening at Cherry Hill East, beginning with the walkout.

The walkout began about 8 a.m. and was orderly, with some students chanting, "Free Locke!" It ended around 9:30 a.m., when students filed into the school's auditorium, where Principal Dennis Perry listened to them in a public-forum setting.

Timothy Locke, 59, has said he was placed on administrative leave on Thursday after a pupil became upset when he discussed the Parkland shooting in his history class and expressed his fear that a similar crime could happen at 2,200-student Cherry Hill East. In an interview Monday, Locke explained his actions: "The bottom line is that I was very concerned about the security at my school."

A video posted later Tuesday on a township group Facebook page shows the students at one point asking Perry why he had threatened to suspend student protesters and bar them from attending prom and senior trips.

The principal's response, shown in the video, was indirect: "I'll say it again, this right now is a protest where your voice is being heard. A protest where your voice will not be heard is when you are blocking some of the 2,200 students from going to point A to point B _ that isn't a protest," Perry said to jeers.

By day's end, Perry had retracted his earlier suggestion that students who participated in the protests should not be permitted to attend the senior prom, senior trip or graduation. Instead, he thanked the students for "the respectful manner" of their conduct.

His initial reaction, he said in a statement Tuesday afternoon, stemmed from "concern for the safety of all students" after he read an online post urging students to "create as much disruption as possible" at the school.

Support for increased security also reached as far as Township Hall.

Cherry Hill Township Mayor Chuck Cahn and the Township Council on Tuesday issued a statement calling on the school board to "address and take action on the issue of school security."

Police Chief William Monaghan also declared his commitment to school security Tuesday and recommended that the district, in weighing any new security measures, consider using armed police officers.

Even as the focus shifted to security measures, students remained upset about Locke's suspension and continued to press for its reversal.

The early-morning walkout was just one of the efforts by students and parents in support of Locke. A petition on Change.org garnered more than 1,100 signatures in just one day.

Ryan Munn, a ninth-grader at the high school, said most of the campus organizing had been done by students that had taken classes with Locke, who shared their protest plans via social media.

"There was this energy in the school of rebellion that I've never felt before," he said, commenting on the force behind on the protests.

"From what I heard in the auditorium, Locke was the only teacher (students) could relate to, the fact that he was suspended made them feel that much more unsafe," he said. "The one teacher who comforted him feel that much more unsafe."

According to Munn, most of Cherry Hill East's teachers remained silent on safety and protest issues because they are afraid of being punished by the administration.

"One of the biggest complaints when students spoke in the auditorium ... was that we don't ever discuss this stuff. After the Parkland shooting they didn't bring up anything," he said. "We think that can't happen to use because we're East."

Barbara Wilson, a spokeswoman for the Cherry Hill School District, said she could not comment on personnel matters. Several students and parents reached out to the Inquirer and Daily News in support of Locke, who began teaching at the school in 2001.

District Superintendent Joseph Meloche told parents at a meeting Monday night that he could not comment on Locke, said Scott Seligman, a parent of two children who attend Cherry Hill East.

"The bigger problem is the school is missing the point _ the school failed to recognize the huge link between Cherry Hill and Parkland. A lot of kids knew each other through night camp," Seligman said. "A lot of the children have videos on their phones of the shooting and massacre within the school. It's burned into their memories, they come back into their school and they don't feel safe."

Cherry Hill East does not have armed security or metal detectors, he added.

In an interview Tuesday night, Cherry Hill East seniors Amanda Seligman and Lilly Checkoff said they never felt unsafe in Locke's classroom.

"God forbid anything ever happened, I feel like he's the only teacher who would even know what to do," Seligman said.

She said she was disappointed that he was suspended from the high school because he was one of the only teachers who ever made an effort to connect with his students.

"I feel like it's his job as an educator to teach us about what's going on in the real world," she said. "We're upset this was the result of him talking about something that happened."

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