Latest featured videos from DaytonDailyNews.com

Blogs

Blogs

E-mail this page
Goff to lose license, avoid jail | Get on the Bus | Observations on schools, kids, teachers, teaching and education by Scott Elliott, Dayton Daily News
 

Home > Blogs > Get on the Bus > Archives > 2008 > January > 09 > Entry

Goff to lose license, avoid jail

muggoff.jpg

Roseda Goff

A stern Judge Tony Capizzi bluntly lectured former City Day Community School Superintendent Roseda Goff to take responsibility for her actions that endangered children at the school and said he would strongly consider sending her to jail if she failed to follow his sentencing orders.

Capizzi gave Goff six months probation, the maximum $500 fine and a 60-day suspended jail sentence for her conviction in December of attempted obstruction of official business for discouraging teachers from reporting child abuse. He also ordered her to surrender her teaching license or he would ask the Ohio Department of Education to revoke it and he required her to complete 120 hours of community service at Childrens’ Medical Center working with child abuse victims.

“In many ways you deserve to go to jail today,” Capizzi told Goff. “There is a very strong agrument to order you to spend time in the Montgomery County Jail. If I was using you as an example to other teachers and people in authority, that would be a strong reason to put you in jail.”

Capizzi said he was irked that Goff told a probation officer that she still believed she was not guilty and he said only her more than 30 years of service to the community as a teacher and a spotless criminal record saved Goff from going to jail.

“You have to be held accountable for what you did,” Capizzi said. “You sat through a trial and heard witnesses testify and didn’t listen to a word they said. You’ve gone home and spent the last month or so, again, in complete denial of what occured.”

At the trial, former City Day teachers testified that a girl at the school told them last April her mother had beaten her with a belt and an extension cord. Educators in Ohio are required by law to report to law enforcement any suspicion of child abuse, but the teachers said Goff told them that was her decision. They said Goff called the girl a liar and sent her home without taking action. Capizzi said the girl was beaten again that night.

“Teachers, principals and individuals with control over children’s lives can’t expect to do what you did and get away with it,” Capizzi said. “Somewhere along the way you lost your acceptance of responsiblity for your position. I’m not sure if was pressure of the job or because you wanted to absoultely control every person under your school system. But something happened.”

This was the end of one chapter of a nearly year-long saga involving Goff and City Day that began last February when the Dayton Daily News reported students at the school had practiced on actual test questions taken from the 2006 Ohio Achievement Test prior to taking the test that year. That launched investigations by the state and the school’s sponsor into possible cheating. The state investigation still is ongoing.

In May, with test proctors on site during the administration of the 2007 state exams, a teacher was caught taking notes on the test. That prompted the sponsor, Cincinnati-based Education Resource Consultants of Ohio, to demand that the school’s governing board fire Goff. When the board refused, ERCO fired the board.

A newly installed governing board fired Goff in July and later that month the criminal charge related to a child abuse case was filed in Capizzi’s court. The school’s test scores, released in August, showed a dramatic drop in performance from the prior year.

Permalink | Comments (8) | Categories: City Day Investigation

Comments

By Ms. Cornelius

January 17, 2008 8:49 PM | Link to this

Appalling.

By Keith

January 10, 2008 8:35 PM | Link to this

This woman intimidated working teachers. She threatened them with their jobs since they don’t have tenure nor do they have employment rights with a union. She deserves a MUCH larger fine. She deserves JAIL time. What is the judge thinking. And this lady gets NO JAIL TIME. Something’s wrong in our society. We have adults entrapped talking to adults pretending to be kids in Xenia getting jail time while this woman, who shows a harsh persona, threatens her teachers and actually hurts kids (not imaginary kids who are really adults enticing them) and she doesn’t get any jail time.

By Oldprof

January 10, 2008 4:38 PM | Link to this

Keep in mind that we all pay for jail time. In this case, Goff doesn’t pose a threat to anyone in the community if she’s no longer able to teach or administrate—so I think the sentencing was perfect, it hammered a point home hard while saving money. Don’t worry, the good people at Childrens’ will not leave her unsupervised.

By Socialwrkr

January 10, 2008 12:32 AM | Link to this

I really think this woman earned jail time. But ok, foregoing that, she should NOT be allowed to work with child abuse victims. If she believes she was oh so right, why in God’s name would we subject victims to her and her attitudes? Way to victimize these children again Judge Capizzi! Community service is fine, but DON’T victimize these kids again.

By Laura

January 9, 2008 8:34 PM | Link to this

Skeptic makes a good point regarding the pressure to perform. I have seen teachers become nearly hysterical when they looked over their students tests and saw they had performed poorly. They were afraid of what their building administrator was going to say to them and afraid they would lose their jobs. No one puts any of the responsibility for learning on the students themselves or their parents.

By davidSS2

January 9, 2008 8:00 PM | Link to this

She should have had jail time.

By JM

January 9, 2008 6:38 PM | Link to this

How does one get through to someone with a “hard head” like Goff has? It sounds like Goff still thinks she is above the law. I won’t be surprised if Goff ends up in jail. People like her never get it. Thank you Judge Capizzi for taking her license! Now no other children or teachers will have to put up with Goff and her “power.” I just hope the girl who was beaten gets the proper care and attention she needs. Great job of reporting Scott!

By Skeptic

January 9, 2008 4:48 PM | Link to this

It sounds like justice has been served on this one, although personally I would’ve given her at least a little jail time, even just a weekend to think about what she did. Is this another blow for the charter school movement? It seems that the need to perform is so high that this administrator cracked under the pressure that our public schools face every day, in every city.
 

Copyright © 2011 Cox Media Group Ohio, Dayton, Ohio, USA. All rights reserved.

By using this site, you accept the terms of our Visitors Agreement and Privacy Policy. You may wish to note our other business policies.