calteacher
Junior Member
Hi everyone, I'm a teacher at a private high school in California that primarily serves English language learners. My question concerns a former student who comes from a very wealthy (Chinese) background and who failed, through total lack of effort, just about every class in the two semesters he was enrolled at the school where I teach. Because he's over 18, he went ahead and enrolled at a California community college that doesn't require a high school diploma of its students. He's still friends with many of the students at my school and comes back and visits many of them on the weekends.
The rumor going around about this student -- and it's a rumor I find VERY believable -- is that he's paying someone to impersonate him at his community college. I don't mean just a test here and there; rather, the impersonator is taking all of my former student's classes in exchange for money, while my former student ends up getting the college credit. I've gone ahead and notified my dean about this rumor, and my dean has contacted the community college, and the c.c. administrator said they would investigate.
Yet I have to wonder if this should be a law enforcement issue. I've looked into laws regarding impersonation and they seem mainly to focus on misrepresenting one's identity either to lie to or pretend to be a police officer. Which is not at all what's happening here. Clearly, this situation, if I understand it correctly, is unethical, and anyone caught impersonating or paying to be impersonated would be expelled from the school -- but that seems like a pretty slight punishment for something that seems to me to be wildly unacceptable.
Your thoughts? If I've got it right, is a law being broken here? What would you recommend?
The rumor going around about this student -- and it's a rumor I find VERY believable -- is that he's paying someone to impersonate him at his community college. I don't mean just a test here and there; rather, the impersonator is taking all of my former student's classes in exchange for money, while my former student ends up getting the college credit. I've gone ahead and notified my dean about this rumor, and my dean has contacted the community college, and the c.c. administrator said they would investigate.
Yet I have to wonder if this should be a law enforcement issue. I've looked into laws regarding impersonation and they seem mainly to focus on misrepresenting one's identity either to lie to or pretend to be a police officer. Which is not at all what's happening here. Clearly, this situation, if I understand it correctly, is unethical, and anyone caught impersonating or paying to be impersonated would be expelled from the school -- but that seems like a pretty slight punishment for something that seems to me to be wildly unacceptable.
Your thoughts? If I've got it right, is a law being broken here? What would you recommend?