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Parents, students fight for assistant principal's job

Racheida Lewis/NovelTeenInk, Banneker AHS

Issue date: 8/10/08 Section: Cover
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Media Credit: Novelteens' Ink

Parents, faculty and students gathered in the Banneker Academic High School teacher's cafeteria on June 19 seethed with anger. Their popular assistant principal Bevadine Z. Terrell had been terminated - a casualty of DCPS Chancellor Michelle Rhee's aggressive effort to reform District public schools. This was the woman who had pictures of her students and her accomplishment on her desks. She had papers for scholarships, programs, and contests scattered across a table.  She knew every student by his or her name and got things done without question.

But Terrell had become one of 48 D.C. schools assistant principals whose contracts were not renewed this year. According to D.C. law, principals and assistant principals serve on a year-to-year contract and can be terminated without cause.  A source at the DCPS central office told The District Chronicles that they would not comment on the non re-appointment of Dr. Terrell for "personnel reasons."

Terrell's supporters had demanded to know why she was terminated. Principal Anita Berger initially denied that she had anything to do with Terrell's termination. But PTA members and other Terrell supporters were not convinced. They decided to organize meetings to find answers and to try to keep Terrell employed as an assistant principal in the school system.

"The fact that she can't work as an assistant principal in DCPS anymore at all is absurd," grumbled 18-year-old Latasha Russell, a 2008 graduate of Banneker.

Other Banneker students of all grades, alumni and even students from other schools found Terrell's termination bizarre. "A dire mistake occurred at Benjamin Banneker Academic Senior High School," e-mail and text messages on Facebook proclaimed.  "A 'diamond' is being discarded with the dust."

News of Terrell's demise among students got around just as fast as it happened. Jerod Hairston, 17, a rising junior at Banneker, just cried. "Why does this happen to me now," he asked.  "I'm going to really miss her. I don't think there is anyone that can replace her."

Hannah During, 16, a rising senior, said, "She was more than an assistant principal; she was a friend. She knew us personally and really cared for us, not because it was her job but because she truly loved us. I cannot believe they would do this to her."

Aziza Tichavakunda, 16, was shocked when she heard the news. "I found out from Facebook a few days before the first PTA meeting," she said. "She knows my name, genuinely cares about me, and has helped me win scholarship money.
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DIAMOND

posted 8/13/08 @ 9:50 PM EST

THIS IS AN OUTRAGE!!
AS ONE OF THE CURRENT STUDENTS AT BBAHS, DR. TERRELL WAS ONE OF THE MANY ADULTS THAT STRIVED FOR GREATNESS WITH THE CHILDREN. EVEN IF THE CHILD HAD BEHAVIOR PROBLEMS, AND SOME OF THE STUDENT BODY DID, SHE WAS THERE. (Continued…)

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