Hey Rob - Can't help you with the social presence thing, but I note here that it did not take long for students to be back in person at schools for the incidents to start back up. This was done in 2014 as something a teacher saw on YouTube.In that case, " ...the teacher who poured rubbing alcohol on a student's hand and lit the solvent with a lighter was fired and charged with "neglect of a dependent resulting in bodily injury and criminal recklessness" for this incident."The teacher should be hiring a lawyer...Please add this one to the webpage on your site if you haven't already.Sammye
--- For more information about the DCHAS-L e-mail list, contact the Divisional membership chair at membership**At_Symbol_Here**dchas.org Follow us on Twitter **At_Symbol_Here**acsdchasOn Fri, Apr 8, 2022 at 9:57 AM Info <info**At_Symbol_Here**ilpi.com> wrote:--- For more information about the DCHAS-L e-mail list, contact the Divisional membership chair at membership**At_Symbol_Here**dchas.org Follow us on Twitter **At_Symbol_Here**acsdchasCan someone find the videos on social media? I have no social media presence or savvy. Thanks.The recent lull has now been broken… https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2022/04/07/texas-teacher-sets-students-hands-fire/9498190002/A Texas middle school teacher has resigned after putting hand sanitizer on a student's hands then lighting them on fire, leaving the student with third degree burns.
A 37-year-old teacher at Granbury Middle School was conducting a science experiment last week when she put hand sanitizer on the hands of a 12-year-old student and lit them on fire, according to a statement from the Granbury Police Department.
The experiment was conducted with other students without incident, but the 12-year-old suffered third degree burns on his hands.
"The Granbury Police Department responded to Granbury Middle School for a report of a student who had been burned on campus," the statement said.
The Granbury Independent School District, in a tweet posted Tuesday, said the teacher resigned and is no longer an employee of the district.The Granbury PD said the incident is under investigation and "will be submitted to the District Attorney's Office for review."Additional reports.It looks like every class that day had a group of students that volunteer to do it," Grizzard told NBC affiliate KXAS. "There was also another classroom that was doing the same thing where there was no incident.https://ktemnews.com/not-good-texas-teacher-resigns-after-purposely-lighting-students-hands-on-fire/Lt. Grizzard says investigators have interviewed several students and are reviewing a possible video of the incident circulating on social media.
"My first thought was that it definitely sounded irresponsible," he said. "But you know, again, whether it's criminal or not is not up to us to decide. That's going to be the DA's office that decides that."
FOX 4 reached out to the Hood County DA's Office, but it declined to comment on a pending investigation.
Lt. Grizzard says the teacher could be charged with injury to a child. But he says the DA could also decide to send the case to a grand jury for review.The student's parents took to Facebook to share some visuals of the horrifying incident. The father also informed readers that his son received due treatment and had been discharged.
Online, many parents were taking sides - while some defended the teacher, many others called the experiment "inexcusable". An angry parent said that "putting a flammable substance on bare hands and igniting it is not a science experiment. It's just stupid." Another said that "there's absolutely NO excuse for putting a child in danger like that!!"…Some sources told CBS that the incident happened after a class finished a test early and the teacher asked students if they wanted to see something "cool".
Photos and videos posted online show the blisters from serious burns the student suffered. A video shows the student quickly putting out a fire on his hands, which was covered in sanitizer.
Dr. Anthony Pizon, chief of medical toxicology at UPMC in Pittsburgh, said, "Hand sanitizers with high concentrations of ethanol and hydroxypropyl are flammable. Any amount of hand sanitizer can light on fire. The volume controls how rapidly the flame will spread. If you have a little bit on your hands, a little bit will light on fireLooks like if the district took half as much effort at reviewing laboratory safety as they did their library, this wouldn't have happened: https://cjtackett.medium.com/granbury-isd-is-reviewing-books-a0579c36588eRob TorekiSurgical grade US-Made FDA/NIOSH N95 just 64 cents each: https://www.safetyemporium.com/11192NIOSH-approved N99 and N95 for $1 or less: https://www.safetyemporium.com/covid/Safety Emporium - Laboratory and Safety Supplies
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