B.C. teacher disciplined after showing 'age-inappropriate' film to Grade 2 and 3 students

A substitute teacher who showed an "age-inappropriate" short film to students in a Coquitlam French immersion class has been reprimanded and ordered to take a remedial education course.
B.C.'s Commissioner for Teacher Regulation reached a consent agreement with Amira Mounir Abraham earlier this month. The agreement was posted online Tuesday.
In it, Abraham acknowledges that her actions on May 9, 2022, constituted misconduct.
According to the consent agreement, Abraham was working on that day as a teacher on call for a Grade 2-3 French immersion class.
She was asked to "mark a class dictée and record the marks," and decided to show the class a short film while doing so.
While the students were eating their snack, the teacher put on an animated short film called "Life is Beautiful."
"Abraham had not seen the film before and therefore did not know its content before showing it to the class," the agreement reads.
The nine-minute short contains "scenes depicting sexual intercourse and suicide," according to the agreement.
"On two occasions, Abraham became aware that the Film was not age-appropriate," it reads. "However, she did not intervene or stop the film. Instead, she continued grading."
The school district issued a letter of discipline regarding the incident on June 6, 2022. The consent agreement indicates the district had issued a similar letter in February 2019 after allegations that Abraham had "failed to adequately supervise a Kindergarten/Grade 1 class."
In the consent agreement, Abraham agrees to a reprimand for her misconduct, and to complete the course "Creating a Positive Learning Environment" through the Justice Institute of British Columbia.
If she fails to provide proof of completion of the course by March 31, 2024, the commissioner may order the suspension of her teaching certificate until she has done so.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories

'The only choice': Defence Department going with Boeing to replace aging Aurora fleet
The federal government is buying at least 14 Boeing surveillance planes from the United States to replace the aging CP-140 Aurora fleet, cabinet ministers announced Thursday. The deal costs more than $10.3 billion in total, including US$5.9 billion for the jets themselves, and the planes are expected to be delivered in 2026 and 2027.
Blasted by Bloc, Conservative MP apologizes for asking minister to speak English
Conservative MP Rachael Thomas has apologized after drawing criticism from other members of Parliament for asking Heritage Minister Pascale St-Onge to answer questions in English at a committee meeting.
Jaw-dropping video shows collapse at Coquitlam, B.C., construction site
Emergency work is underway after a collapse at a Coquitlam, B.C., construction site that was caught on camera this week.
NHL veteran Perry apologizes for 'inappropriate' behaviour, says he is seeking help
Corey Perry says he has started seeking help for his struggles with alcohol following his release from the NHL's Chicago Blackhawks.
Filmmakers in Bruce Peninsula 'accidentally' discover 128-year-old shipwreck
Yvonne Drebert and Zach Melnick were looking for invasive mussels when they found something no one has laid eyes on for 128 years.
Israeli military confirms release of 8 more Israeli hostages from captivity in Gaza Strip
Hamas freed eight Israeli hostages Thursday in exchange for Israel's release of more Palestinian prisoners under a last-minute deal to extend their ceasefire in Gaza by another day.
On 1st day, UN climate conference sets up fund for countries hit by disasters like flood and drought
Nearly all the world's nations on Thursday finalized the creation of a fund to help compensate countries struggling to cope with loss and damage caused by climate change, seen as a major first-day breakthrough at this year's UN climate conference
B.C. man tries to appeal driving ban by claiming his designated driver crashed his Mercedes, fled the scene
B.C.'s Supreme Court has upheld a 90-day driving ban for a man who refused to give a breath sample after crashing his Mercedes into a ditch – rejecting his claim that an "unnamed designated driver" was behind the wheel and fled the scene.
Suspect arrested in Morocco could be behind Ontario bomb threats, OPP says
Investigators have 'strong reason' to believe that a suspect taken into custody in Morocco could be behind numerous bomb threats across Ontario in early November, police say.