Current through Register Vol. 35, No. 18, September 24, 2024
A. Preamble
(1) We, licensed New Mexico educators
acknowledge that ethical values in our schools cannot exist without ethical
leadership. It is our ultimate goal to educate children so that they may become
productive citizens; we understand that our guidance and ability to provide
choices has a profound effect on reaching this goal. In affording students and
each other choices, we agree to consider the consequence of each choice, the
moral value best exemplified by the recommended choice, and our position on the
choice if it were applied to us. These principles apply equally to all licensed
educators in all schools except where they are uniquely applicable to public
schools or where they conflict with principles of religious freedom.
(2) Moral values are to ethical leadership
what years of experience are to a successful educator. The former sets the
stage for success of the latter. Abstract principles that espouse excellence do
not easily equate into simple behavioral maxims. We are certain that some
foundational concepts can be embraced because they truly celebrate desirable
moral values. These concepts are: respect for one's self and others, honesty
and openness, the delicate balance between absolute freedom and safety, the
equally delicate balance between confidentiality and the right to know,
equality of opportunity, fairness to all, and personal integrity.
(3) In the final analysis it is our
consistent ethical leadership that wins the most allies and produces the best
results. Not only does this code highlight our professional responsibilities,
but also it stimulates us to discuss the professional implications of our
ethical choices and ethical recommendations, causes us to assess and reassess
our application of moral values, and sets forth concrete behaviors appropriate
for education professionals. We are committed to this code and understand that
it provides minimally accepted standards of professional conduct in
education.
B. Standard
I: Duty to the student. We endeavor to stimulate students to think and to learn
while at the same time we seek to protect them from any harm. Ethical
leadership requires licensed educators to teach not only by use of pedagogical
tools, but also by consistent and justifiable personal example. To satisfy this
obligation, we:
(1) shall, in compliance with
the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (
20
U.S.C. Section 1232 g, 34C.F.R. Part 99), the
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (
20
U.S.C. Section 1401
et seq.,
34 C.F.R. Part 300), the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code
(Section
43-1-19,
NMSA 1978), the Inspection of Public Records Act (Section
14-2-1
et seq., NMSA 1978), the Public School Code (Section
22-1-8,
NMSA 1978), and the Children's Code (Sections 32A-2-32, 32A-4-3, NMSA 1978),
withhold confidential student records or information about a student or his/her
personal and family life unless release of information is allowed, permitted by
the student's parent(s)/legal guardian, or required by law;
(2) shall not discriminate or permit students
within our control, supervision or responsibility to discriminate against any
other student on the basis of race, color, national origin, ethnicity, sex,
sexual orientation, disability, religion, or serious medical
condition;
(3) shall avoid using
our positions as licensed school employees to exploit or unduly influence a
student into engaging in an illegal act, immoral act, or any other behavior
that would subject a licensed school employee or student to discipline for
misconduct whether or not the student actually engages in the
behavior;
(4) shall tutor students
only in accordance with local board policies, if any, only after written
permission from the student's parent(s)/legal guardian, and only at a place or
time approved by the local school and/or the student's parent(s)/legal
guardian;
(5) shall not give a gift
to any one student unless all students situated similarly receive or are
offered gifts of equal value for the same reason;
(6) shall not lend a student money except in
clear and occasional circumstances, such as where a student may go without food
or beverage or be unable to participate in a school activity without financial
assistance;
(7) shall not have
inappropriate contact with any student, whether or not on school property,
which includes but is not limited to:
(a) all
forms of sexual touching, sexual relations or romantic relations;
(b) inappropriate touching which is any
physical touching, embracing, petting, hand-holding, or kissing that is
unwelcome by the student or is otherwise inappropriate given the age, sex and
maturity of the student;
(c) any
open displays of affection toward mostly-boys or mostly-girls; and
(d) offering or giving a ride to a student
unless absolutely unavoidable, such as where a student has missed his/her usual
transportation and is unable to make reasonable substitute
arrangements;
(8) shall
not interfere with a student's right to a public education by sexually
harassing a student or permitting students within our control, supervision or
responsibility to sexually harass any other student, which prohibited behavior
includes:
(a) making any sexual advances,
requests for sexual favors, repeated sexual references, any name calling by
means of sexual references or references directed at gender-specific students,
any other verbal or physical conduct of a physical nature with a student even
where the licensed educator believes the student consents or the student
actually initiates the activity, and any display/distribution of sexually
oriented materials where students can see them; and
(b) creating an intimidating, hostile or
offensive work/school environment by at a minimum engaging in any of the
prohibited behaviors set forth at Paragraph (7) or Subparagraph (a) of
Paragraph (8), Subsection B of 6.60.9.9 NMAC, above.
C. Standard II: Duty to the
profession. The education profession has been vested by the public with an
awesome trust and responsibility. To live up to that lofty expectation, we must
continually engender public confidence in the integrity of our profession, and
must strive consistently in educating the children of New Mexico, all of whom
will one-day shape the future. To satisfy this obligation, we:
(1) shall not make a false or misleading
statement or fail to disclose a material fact in any application for
educational employment or licensure;
(2) shall not orally or in writing
misrepresent our professional qualifications;
(3) shall not assist persons into educational
employment whom we know to be unqualified in respect to their character,
education, or employment history;
(4) shall not make a false or misleading
statement concerning the qualifications of anyone in or desiring employment in
education;
(5) shall not permit or
assist unqualified or unauthorized persons to engage in teaching or other
employment within a school;
(6)
shall not disclose personal, medical, or other confidential information about
other educational colleagues to anyone unless disclosure is required or
authorized by law;
(7) shall not
knowingly make false or derogatory personal comments about an educational
colleague, although first amendment protected comments on or off campus are not
prohibited;
(8) shall not accept
any gratuity, gift, meal, discount, entertainment, hospitality, loan,
forbearance, favor, or other item having monetary value whose market value
exceeds $100, excluding approved educational awards, honoraria, plaques,
trophies, and prizes;
(9) shall
avoid conduct connected with official duties that is unfair, improper, illegal
or gives the appearance of being improper or illegal;
(10) shall not sexually harass any school
employee, any school visitor or anyone else we might encounter in the course of
our official duties, which includes:
(a)
making any sexual advances, requests for sexual favors, repeated sexual
references, and name calling by means of sexual references or references
directed at any gender-specific individuals named above;
(b) making any other verbal gesture or
physical conduct with any of the above-named individuals even where the
licensed educator believes they consent or they actually initiate the
activity;
(c) displaying or
distributing any sexually oriented materials where the above-named individuals
can see them; and
(d) creating an
intimidating, hostile, or offensive work/school environment by engaging in any
of the prohibited behaviors set forth at Subparagraphs (a), (b) or (c),
Paragraph (10), Subsection C of 6.60.9.9 NMAC, above;
(11) shall educate oneself at least annually
about avoiding sexual harassment by either attending periodic training,
reviewing sexual harassment literature or the EEOC guidelines found at Title 29
Code of Federal Regulations Part 1604 (
29 C.F.R. Section
1604.1
et seq.), or
contacting appropriate school human resources personnel;
(12) shall not engage in inappropriate
displays of affection, even with consenting adults, while on school property or
during school events off campus;
(13) shall not without permission of a
supervisor use public school property to conduct personal business or our
personal affairs;
(14) shall use
educational facilities and property only for educational purposes or purposes
for which they are intended consistent with applicable policy, law and
regulation;
(15) shall not
discriminate against any school employee, or any other person with whom we have
any dealings or contact in the course of our official duties, on the basis of
race, color, national origin, ethnicity, sex, sexual orientation, disability,
religion, or serious medical condition;
(16) shall not engage in any outside
employment:
(a) the performance of which
conflicts with our public school duties, such as where a licensed educator
takes a private job that would require performance in the very school district
where he/she is employed;
(b) where
we use confidential/privileged information obtained from our public school
employment as part or all of our private employment duties; and
(c) that impairs our physical ability to
perform our school duties;
(17) shall not, with the intent to
conceal/confuse a fact, change or alter any writing or encourage anyone else to
change or alter any document:
(a) in
connection with our official school duties;
(b) in connection with another licensed
person's official school duties;
(c) in connection with any standardized or
non-standardized testing;
(d) in
connection with any school application or disclosure process; and
(e) in connection with any writing submitted
to the public education department related to our initial or continued
licensure, including endorsements;
(18) shall not in connection with any state
board-approved teacher test knowingly make any misrepresentations about one's
identity, or engage in any false or deceptive acts of test-taking or
test-registering;
(19) shall not
engage in any conduct or make any statement:
(a) that would breach the security of any
standardized or non-standardized tests;
(b) that would ignore administering portions
or the entirety of any standardized or non-standardized testing
instructions;
(c) that would give
students an unfair advantage in taking a standardized or non-standardized
test;
(d) that would give a
particular school or a particular classroom an unfair advantage in taking a
standardized or non-standardized test; and
(e) that would assist students in obtaining
services or benefits for which they do not qualify or are not
entitled;
(20) shall
not, when on school property or off campus while representing the school or
attending a school function, engage in violent, abusive, indecent, profane,
boisterous, unreasonably loud or otherwise disorderly conduct which tends to
disturb the peace;
(21) shall not
hold, or continue to hold, employment for which educator licensure or
certification is required when the individual knew, should have known or is
informed by the PED, that the individual does not hold the required
credentials; and
(22) shall not use
school information technology equipment, hardware, software or internet access
to view, download, display, store or print pornographic images or
advertisements, nude images, or sexually explicit depictions or
language;
(23) shall not engage in
unprofessional conduct, which conduct shall include but not be limited to the
following:
(a) striking, assaulting or
restraining a student for no valid reason;
(b) using any written or spoken words in
public schools or at school events that are inflammatory, derogatory or
otherwise demonstrate a bias against a person or group, on the basis of their
race, religion, culture, ethnicity, sexual preference, sexuality or physical
disability;
(c) bringing firearms
onto school property or possessing them on school property, except with proper
authorization;
(d) possessing or
consuming alcohol beverages at school;
(e) possessing or using illegal
drugs;
(f) being under the
influence of alcohol or illegal drugs at school;
(g) actively obstructing an investigation
into the possible unethical or illegal conduct of a school employee;
and
(h) engaging in favoritism or
preferential treatment toward any school employee or applicant in regards to
that individual's hiring, discipline, terms of employment, working conditions
or work performance due to that individual's familial relationship with the
licensee;
(24) shall
report any knowledge of inappropriate contact, as provided by Paragraph (7) of
Subsection B of 6.60.9 NMAC with a student or other school employee to the
local school authority within 30 days of obtaining such knowledge.