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Monday, March 24, 2025

School sex videos light up Facebook

by

20150605

Sec­ondary school stu­dents con­tin­ue to heat up the In­ter­net with videos of them­selves en­gag­ing in sex­u­al ac­tiv­i­ty at their schools.

One of the re­cent videos post­ed shows two stu­dents en­gag­ing in oral sex, but it was tak­en down from Face­book with­in a mat­ter of hours as it start­ed to go vi­ral.

An­oth­er video shows two stu­dents en­gag­ing in sex in the class­room. At one point the male stu­dent who is hav­ing sex stops to ac­knowl­edge the stu­dent shoot­ing the video with a wave and smile.

In an in­ter­view yes­ter­day, Lana Ma­haraj-Boodoo, founder of Stop the Bul­ly­ing, said teach­ers need­ed to take some of the blame for these acts, since stu­dents need­ed more su­per­vi­sion if this trend was to be curbed.

"It all comes to this, they (stu­dents) can­not do these acts if they are su­per­vised. They (min­istry) need to put cam­eras in the schools. They (teach­ers) need to do their jobs, it is not on­ly to sit by a desk. They are re­spon­si­ble for the chil­dren once they are in the school," she said.

An­to­nia De Fre­itas, first vice pres­i­dent of the Trinidad and To­ba­go Uni­fied Teach­ers' As­so­ci­a­tion (TTUTA), said it was al­so so­cial is­sue.

"Par­ents need to take re­spon­si­bil­i­ty for what their chil­dren are do­ing and in­still the prop­er val­ues and they would not study to have sex," she said.

De Fre­itas said, how­ev­er, that teach­ers arrange school su­per­vis­ing and they can't al­ways ac­count for the where­abouts of the stu­dents.

"They hide all over the place, un­der the stairs, be­hind the school. When you con­tact the par­ents and in­form them about their chil­dren you don't al­ways get the cor­rect re­sponse.

"It is a so­cial prob­lem. Par­ents al­low chil­dren to go places and watch all kinds of things, it is a so­cial prob­lems," she said.

Con­tact­ed on this crit­i­cal is­sue yes­ter­day, Min­is­ter of Ed­u­ca­tion Tim Goopeesingh said he was not aware of the mat­ter and "could not com­ment."

He said he would nor­mal­ly be briefed on such in­for­ma­tion through a chan­nel of the prin­ci­pal, the school su­per­vi­sor and then the chief ed­u­ca­tion of­fi­cer.


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