Teachers Beware: Facebook May Cause Firing

by Ari Herzog on November 11, 2009 · 5 comments

A former Georgia high school teacher wrote obscene language on her Facebook wall and uploaded racy photos, according to school officials who asked for her resignation in August 2009. A legal case is pending, and this could be yet another precedent in how and if school teachers should use Facebook.

The more I read the uproarious response to this scandal, the more absurd I think it is. But maybe I’m missing something in the interpretation, so let me know what you think.

The facts

Ashley Payne, 24, is a former Barrow County, Georgia high school teacher who taught literature for two years to ninth and tenth grade students.

While on vacation in Europe, she uploaded a picture on her Facebook photo album depicting her holding an alcoholic drink. Her photos have private settings and she is not Facebook friends with her students.

She separately posted a status update on her wall that she was going to an Atlanta restaurant to play the “Crazy Bitch Bingo” video game.

Ashley was forced to resign from Apalachee High School on August 27. She intends to sue.

Ashley speaks out

In the below video (transcript here), Ashley elaborates:

Readers chime in

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution summarizes the above and reporter Maureen Downey opines alongside quotes from regional newspapers, including the Barrow Journal and the Athens Banner-Herald.

Maureen writes:

Unless the school system has other concerns about this teacher, I can’t understand how her Facebook page content – which would be tame for even my mother – would get her fired.

Barrow has a policy that states employees can be investigated and disciplined for postings on Web sites that contain provocative photographs, sexually explicit messages, use of alcohol, drugs or anything students are prohibited from doing. And the policy allows for termination for such transgressions.

There are 87 reader comments and counting below her story in the AJC. Have a look.

My take

I’m trying to understand how anyone in the school district would know about her Facebook page in the first place, especially if she didn’t befriend her students. I won’t begin to speculate, other than suggesting if she identified herself as part of the “Atlanta, GA network,” then anyone in that network, friend or not, could see her wall content and potentially photos, too.

Nevertheless, I’m curious to see the outcome of this case — and to learn your thoughts.

Thanks to Dave Murray for the tip.

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{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }

1 Dave Murray November 11, 2009 at 5:49 PM Twitter: @DaveMurr

The subject of how people get fired via the social web is of great interest to me. I’ve seen examples that range from no common sense, to scenarios that raise questions to the rules of social web engagement. I feel this example falls into that later. We can only assume Ashley is telling the whole story, and it shows that Facebook privacy is not that private.

Based on the policy Barrow has, it appears Ashley crossed the line, though I feel the punishment is rather harsh. The lesson: think twice before saying, doing, posting, anything online.
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2 Paul C November 11, 2009 at 6:05 PM Twitter: @quoteflections

I can see this incident providing a valuable lesson not only for teachers but students. How motivating for students to see a teacher get in trouble.
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3 Reg from Cheap van leasing November 12, 2009 at 7:12 AM

Being fired from her position for these alleged crimes is ridiculous. It’s a massive over-reaction to what should be considered personal activity that has no bearing on her work as a teacher.
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4 Mike Wilton November 12, 2009 at 1:08 PM Twitter: @mwilton13

Honestly this doesn’t surprise me. In any industry where drugs, alcohol, and the like are deemed as negative you are at risk of this. Especially when children are involved. It’s the sad reality of social sites and the transparency they come with. What’s nothing to you could be a HUGE liability to a your company or organization.
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5 Mitch November 14, 2009 at 5:26 PM

School systems across the country are getting ridiculous with all this stuff. It’s no wonder that no one can find qualified teachers anymore, as more colleges are dropping education from their curriculum. Just plain idiocy.
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