Tuesday, May 12, 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

1,308 COVID19 cases for Tuesday

1,308 COVID19 cases for Tuesday
There are 6,348 active cases of COVID-19 in the province, and 220,741 people who tested positive have recovered. Of the active cases, 192 individuals are in hospital and 76 are in intensive care. The remaining people are recovering at home in self-isolation.

1,308 COVID19 cases for Tuesday

British Columbians need to prepare for harsh winter

British Columbians need to prepare for harsh winter
A series of strong storms will clash with cold Arctic air throughout B.C. during the holidays, according to Environment and Climate Change Canada. Periods of heavy and blowing snow, freezing rain and very cold weather are likely in many parts of B.C. between now and New Year’s Day.

British Columbians need to prepare for harsh winter

End 'duty to report' for CAF misconduct: Report

End 'duty to report' for CAF misconduct: Report
The Canadian Armed Forces is facing fresh calls to create an “explicit exception” for victims of sexual misconduct and their confidantes from having to report incidents to their commanders.

End 'duty to report' for CAF misconduct: Report

Days numbered for plastic straws in Canada

Days numbered for plastic straws in Canada
Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault published draft regulations Tuesday outlining how Canada will ban the manufacture, sale and import of these items, along with plastic cutlery, stir sticks, straws and six-pack rings, by the end of next year.

Days numbered for plastic straws in Canada

Feds file challenge to softwood lumber duties

Feds file challenge to softwood lumber duties
The federal Liberals have put the White House on notice that Canada will officially challenge the legality of an American decision to hike duties on softwood lumber heading south of the border. The government is filing the grievance under the recently renewed North American free trade pact.

Feds file challenge to softwood lumber duties

Liberals look to tamp down on investment homes

Liberals look to tamp down on investment homes
Canada’s housing minister says the federal government plans to take a tougher stand on investment properties to help cool housing prices. The broad strokes of the agenda were outlined in the mandate letter the prime minister gave to Housing Minister Ahmed Hussen.

Liberals look to tamp down on investment homes