Sunday, May 10, 2026
ADVT 
National

Surrey high school teacher Jasmine Kaur disciplined for speaking harshly and telling the class a student was failing

Darpan News Desk , 04 May, 2022 05:03 PM
  • Surrey high school teacher Jasmine Kaur disciplined for speaking harshly and telling the class a student was failing

A Surrey teacher is being disciplined by the British Columbia Commissioner for Teacher Regulation for aggressive behaviour in the classroom and telling the class that a student wasn’t passing a Grade 8 science course and pulling on the student’s arm.

High school teacher Jasmine Kaur, teaching at a Surrey School, the school's name being kept confidential, was teaching a Grade 8 science class on Oct. 28, 2021, when angrily yelled at a student identified only as “Student A,” whom Kaur felt was behaving disrespectfully. 

According to a documented source Kaur raised her voice and said in front of the class that Student A was not passing Grade 8 science and that every teacher in the School was saying negative things about Student A.

“Kaur also said, in front of the class, that Student A’s elementary school teacher said that Student A had done no work in elementary school,”
 
"When the teacher then asked Student A to show her Student A’s workbook, and the student did not, Kaur went into the student’s bag and got it herself". 

“Kaur told Student A that she could not tolerate Student A in her class, and so asked Student A to leave the classroom to go to the Learner Support Team room. When Student A refused, Kaur held onto Student A’s arm and pulled on it.”

The document also states Kaur spoke rudely to another student, after which the student began to cry. 

The Surrey School District issued Kaur with a letter of reprimand on Nov. 16, 2021.

On March 24, 2022, in a consent resolution agreement with the  British Columbia Commissioner, the teacher confessed that her behaviour was out of line and constituted professional misconduct contrary to the Professional Standards for BC Educators.

She agreed to being disciplined under the Teachers Act. She must now complete a course on creating a positive learning environment through Justice Institute of British Columbia by March of next year. 

In figuring out the appropriate punishment for Kaur, The Commissioner reached the conclusion: “Kaur failed to treat students with dignity and respect and failed to model appropriate behaviour expected of an educator.”

Photo courtsey of Istock. 

MORE National ARTICLES

1,518 cases for Thursday

1,518 cases for Thursday
There are 25,554 active cases of COVID-19 in the province, and 299,657 people who tested positive have recovered. Of the active cases, 985 COVID-positive individuals are in hospital and 145 are in intensive care. The remaining people are recovering at home in self-isolation.

1,518 cases for Thursday

Mixed Martial Arts teacher charged with sexual exploitation of a young female: Ridge Meadows RCMP

Mixed Martial Arts teacher charged with sexual exploitation of a young female: Ridge Meadows RCMP
In October of 2021, police received information that a mixed martial arts trainer based out of Pitt Meadows had allegedly sexually exploited a female youth, for several years, during training sessions dating back to 2016.

Mixed Martial Arts teacher charged with sexual exploitation of a young female: Ridge Meadows RCMP

Feds earmark $18M to support pardon applications

Feds earmark $18M to support pardon applications
Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino says the money will go to organizations active in corrections, conditional release and community reintegration.

Feds earmark $18M to support pardon applications

No vaccine exemption for truckers, feds clarify

No vaccine exemption for truckers, feds clarify
The Canada Border Services Agency created widespread confusion last month after it issued a statement to media saying that unvaccinated truckers would remain exempt from quarantine and testing requirements after entering the country at the Canada-U.S. border.    

No vaccine exemption for truckers, feds clarify

PBO: More money needed for child-care plan

PBO: More money needed for child-care plan
The Liberals' budget last year set aside $29.8 billion in new spending starting this fiscal year through to 2026 for the Canada-wide system by sending money to provinces and territories to cover costs.

PBO: More money needed for child-care plan

GoFundMe called to Commons committee

GoFundMe called to Commons committee
New Democrat MP Alistair MacGregor won the unanimous approval today of the House of Commons public safety committee to invite representatives from the crowdfunding website to answer questions about its security measures to ensure its funds are not used to promote extremism.    

GoFundMe called to Commons committee