Tuesday, December 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

Saskatchewan Teacher 'Having A Bad Day' Fined For Throwing Marker At Student

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Feb, 2017 11:30 AM
    REGINA — A Saskatchewan teacher has been reprimanded for throwing a white board marker at a student, hitting her above her right eye.
     
    The Saskatchewan Professional Teachers Regulatory Board held a disciplinary hearing last fall for Michel Andre Joseph Levesque after a formal complaint was made.
     
    The decision, posted on the board's website, says Levesque threw the marker to get a disruptive student’s attention in a Grade 9 shop class on Nov. 15, 2015.
     
    Instead, it hit another student above her right eye, causing a cut and swelling.
     
    The discipline committee found Levesque guilty of misconduct and ordered Levesque to pay $10,000, or about 20 per cent, of the cost of the hearing within 30 days or have his teaching licence suspended.
     
    The board would not confirm if Levesque paid the penalty, but the public registry does not show him as a registered teacher.
     
    “After a number of unsuccessful attempts to secure the attention of the inattentive student, and feeling rather stressed, I picked up a white board marker and tossed it in the direction in order to get his attention, not to injure him,” Levesque told the disciplinary hearing.
     
    “Under normal circumstances, I would simply walk over to the student and address the behaviour directly. However, a recent foot injury made walking difficult, and I chose, unwisely, to obtain his attention in a manner which I now deeply regret.”
     
    The decision also acknowledged Levesque was having a bad day after waking up early with an allergic reaction to medication and not getting a good night’s sleep.
     
    The girl said Levesque was “angry” and “whipped” the marker at her. Her mother took her to the police station, and photographs her father took within an hour of the incident showed a red mark on her forehead, with some swelling surrounding the abrasion.
     
    "The incident caused loss of dignity and humiliated Student A," the decision said, adding "throwing an object at a disruptive student is not appropriate classroom management."
     
    The decision does not say what school this happened at.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    In Canada, Dream Of Home Ownership Not So Much Far-flung As Just Far Away

    In Canada, Dream Of Home Ownership Not So Much Far-flung As Just Far Away
    TORONTO — Julien Simon and his wife were living happily in their condo in the Vancouver suburb of Burnaby when life intervened last year in the form of a baby on the way.

    In Canada, Dream Of Home Ownership Not So Much Far-flung As Just Far Away

    White House Says: Media Need To Cover Terrorism More, Cites Canadian Examples

    White House Says: Media Need To Cover Terrorism More, Cites Canadian Examples
    The White House wants journalists to write more stories about terrorist attacks, which President Donald Trump says are being under-reported.

    White House Says: Media Need To Cover Terrorism More, Cites Canadian Examples

    October Appeal Set For Const. James Forcillo, Convicted In Sammy Yatim Shooting

    October Appeal Set For Const. James Forcillo, Convicted In Sammy Yatim Shooting
    Const. James Forcillo was sentenced to six years in prison last July but has been granted bail while he appeals his case.

    October Appeal Set For Const. James Forcillo, Convicted In Sammy Yatim Shooting

    Canadian Cabinet Ministers Roll In For First Meetings In Trump's Washington

    Three ministers have meetings in Washington this week: Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland landed Tuesday for a two-day visit, just after her colleague Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan left town 

    Canadian Cabinet Ministers Roll In For First Meetings In Trump's Washington

    Vancouver, Toronto, Montreal Now Home To One-Third Of Canadians

    Vancouver, Toronto, Montreal Now Home To One-Third Of Canadians
    The latest figures also show that the once yawning gulf in growth rates between the spreading suburbs and their urban centres has continued to narrow, with young professionals and aging baby boomers alike opting for the downtown-condominium life.

    Vancouver, Toronto, Montreal Now Home To One-Third Of Canadians

    Southern B.C. Braces For High Winds, Snow, Rain In Next Round Of Winter Storms

    Environment Canada's storm and snowfall warnings stretch from Victoria to Alberta.

    Southern B.C. Braces For High Winds, Snow, Rain In Next Round Of Winter Storms