St. Paul's Como Park High School found itself the recipient of unwelcome scrutiny Thursday, a day after one teacher was placed on leave after posting controversial Facebook comments about student misbehavior and another was involved in a scuffle with two students.
On a crisp, sunny morning, students arrived for classes, then boarded the buses at the end of the day, all as usual. Early in the evening, some students and parents returned for conferences, many smiling and chatting. Nothing appeared amiss.
Parents "shouldn't be afraid to send their kids to school," said Jon Schumacher, chairman of the St. Paul school board. "These are the kind of isolated, high-profile incidents that are going to happen across society."
But one longtime teacher expressed strong criticism of the school's handling of the situation. And an honors student stayed home out of concern citing what she called a potentially combustible environment created in large part by angry, often speculative online comments.
Black Lives Matter leader Rashad Turner, who had pushed Como Park to put teacher Theo Olson on leave because of his Facebook comments, said of Wednesday's fisticuffs, "We don't condone putting hands on another human being. Not from teachers, not from students." He added that he believes Como Park needs an overhaul because the "racial climate … is harming everyone in that building."
In Wednesday's incident, teacher Mark Rawlings was assaulted by two 16-year-old male students who entered and tried to disrupt his classroom, according to St. Paul police. The dispute became physical when the students refused to leave and punched the teacher in the chin and eye.
Eventually all three ended up on the floor in the hallway, according to police and a cellphone video taken by another student. Rawlings struck his head on the floor and was at home Thursday on paid leave. He declined a request to comment.
St. Paul police spokesman Steve Linders said Thursday that the students "likely" will be charged.