HS teacher stabbed himself

The*Empress

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January 25, 2005

Students, colleagues shocked by teacher's suicide attempt
By Emily Richmond
<emily@vegas.com> and David Kihara
<david.kihara@lasvegassun.com>
LAS VEGAS SUN

A popular Green Valley High School history teacher attempted suicide Monday in a classroom minutes before the start of the school day, leaving students and colleagues shocked and distraught, school officials said.

The teacher, identified by students as 34-year-old Howard Wade Bycroft, was discovered at 6:47 a.m. suffering from a self-inflicted stab wound to his abdomen, said Darnell Couthen, spokesman for Clark County School District Police. Another teacher found Bycroft in the classroom, Couthen said.

Bycroft was taken to University Medical Center where he was listed in fair condition this morning following surgery. A former attorney who was hired by the district in August 2001, Bycroft unsuccessfully challenged Bob Beers the following year for the Assembly District 4 seat. He was in his third year teaching at Green Valley High School.

The evidence in the classroom indicated Bycroft had attempted suicide, Couthen said. He declined to say whether or not a weapon had been recovered or if Bycroft had left a note.

A district official said Bycroft was HIV positive. Because of the excessive blood at the scene, furnishings inside the classroom are being removed and replaced, the official said.

The classroom was processed and cleaned by police in accordance with the district's exposure control plan, which calls for treating all human blood and body fluids as potentially infectious, Couthen said.

Other sources familiar with Bycroft said his long-term personal relationship had recently ended, and as a result, Bycroft had apparently been living out of his classroom. Administrators had recently learned that he had been staying overnight at the school and were preparing to tell Bycroft that he could not continue to do so, sources said.

Bycroft is well-liked by his students and serves as advisor to Green Valley High School's Gay, Straight, Lesbian Pride Alliance. A graduate of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Bycroft earned his law degree in 1997 from the University of Tulsa.

Several former students praised Bycroft on Monday, saying he always makes himself available to students who need guidance or additional academic tutoring.

"He is the finest teacher I ever had," said Thomas Keeley, a 17-year-old junior who took Bycroft's advance placement history course last year.

Bycroft is also known by his students as being an independent, non-conformist teacher who sometimes does whimsical things.

For example, last year, during Green Valley High School's annual "pajama day" -- the day where students and faculty are allowed to wear pajamas -- Bycroft came to school wearing footed pajamas, Keeley fondly remembered.

"He isn't afraid of to be controversial and did not fit easily into the typical teacher role," Keeley said.

Another student, Blair Peterson, also praised Bycroft, saying the teacher often took time out of his own schedule to meet and help students on a one-on-one basis.

Last year, the 16-year-old Peterson considered attending Stanford University in California but was concerned that her academic record wasn't quite up to the university's standards. She went to Bycroft, who helped counsel her and offered his classroom for her to study in during her lunch break.

"He isn't afraid to get close to students," she said. "He was always available, after school or before school, if you need help."

Marc Ryan, 17, said he was surprised when he heard that Bycroft had allegedly attempted suicide, as he was a "very enthusiastic" teacher.

Ryan, who took Bycroft's history class last year, said he remembered only one incident when Bycroft said he was depressed: When Bycroft told his students that his father was going to have heart surgery.

Students arriving for Bycroft's Advanced Placement history class Monday were redirected to another classroom, where a counselor waited for them. Students said they were told only that a "medical emergency" had occurred. One student said she was shocked that the classroom Bycroft had apparently loved had become the setting for such a tragic scene.

Carlos Brandenburg, administrator of the Nevada Division of Mental Health and Developmental Services, said that in many cases people who attempt suicide are ambivalent and choose a method and venue that leaves room for intervention,

"Anytime someone attempts suicide it's serious, but there's a message in the teacher's choice of location," Brandenburg said. "He knew the schedule of certain staff members, he knew there was a chance he would be found, making his actions a cry for help."

The locale and his position of authority may also amplify the emotional trauma for Bycroft's students, Brandenburg said.

"If someone they admire, a teacher they view as having the abilities to cope with day-to-day stress attempts suicide, they may question how they themselves as students can be expected to cope," Brandenburg said. "They are more vulnerable now than ever."

Jeff Horn, principal of Green Valley High School, said the district's crisis response team was on campus Monday and would return this week.

"When something traumatic occurs our priority is providing emotional support to our students, teachers and staff," Horn said. "We're all struggling at this point to understand and deal with what happened."

Green Valley High School remained open on Monday, and while the incident unsettled and disturbed some students and teachers, the attempted suicide did not greatly impact the functioning of the school.

Yellow police safety tape closed off the section of classrooms where Bycroft was found, and eight classes needed to be relocated to alternate classrooms throughout the school, Horn said.

He said the classes near Bycroft's were relocated to the school's lecture room and the back of the theater.

Two students interviewed Monday afternoon, Martha Peza, 17, and Daniel Coronado, 15, both had attended a foreign-language class next door to Bycroft's and said they were moved to a spare classroom after their teacher told them that there was a medical emergency.

One teacher, who declined to be identified, said on Monday that she was stunned by the news about Bycroft.

"He's a great teacher," she said. "His students' successes were his successes."
 
Lately there has been a rash of attention suicides.

These are these folks who want to end their lives in shocking manner...to grab attention.

Little do they know how selfish they are. A mere suicide affects so many folks.
 
that happened here in my town.

one of my very close friends was in his class
 
It is disgusting. That teacher showed that he didn't really care about the well-being of his students. He selfishly thought about himself only. If he was really a wonderful teacher, he wouldn't have exposed the students to the trauma of his suicide attempt, and he wouldn't have exposed them to the danger of his HIV-contaminated blood.
 
Aw, that soo sad...I feel bad for him :(
 
^Angel^ said:
Aw, that soo sad...I feel bad for him :(
I don't feel bad for the teacher. I feel bad for the students.
 
Reba said:
I don't feel bad for the teacher. I feel bad for the students.

Reba,

I know he attempted suicide in his classroom, but when someone is soo depressed, it makes them not think before they actually killing themselves...I don't think he meant to hurt his students, I think he picked the wrong time of doing so....We weren't there so it would have been so easy to judge by reading this or how did it really happened or what came to his mind of thinking of doing that in his own classroom, for that I won't look at it that way, I would look at it more of how it feels to be in his shoes, he must have been hurting so badly that he couldn't even wait to walk out the door and do it somewhere else, no one really know only him....so I am not going to say, he did this to seek the attention cause that would be guessing , I would rather feel him as what he was feeling that moment when he did stabbed himself ...


You have your own view how you see on this and I have my own as well....:)
 
Reba, now i wonder if anyone who committed
sucide will go to heaven ?
 
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Just IMO: Think about and protect kids first.

The teacher put his own problems before the safety and well-being of the students. Especially the way he tried to kill himself. He did it in a place that he knew would strongly impact the students. He did it in a manner that would be most dangerous to other people (by contaminating the area with his blood). Why didn't he just take some pills if he really just wanted to kill himself? No, he wanted to make a big show of his "suicide", and hurt as many people as possible. That kind of "suicide attempt" is not done to end one's misery; it is done in anger to say, "humpf; I'll show them, ha!" He knew that the kids cared about him, but he didn't care how much he hurt them.

He was the adult in control of the situation. The kids were innocent bystanders.

Again, that is just my opinion. Each to his/her own.
 
Y said:
Reba, now i wonder if anyone who committed
sucide will go to heaven ?
Excuse me if we are getting :topic:

If that person is a born-again Christian, then yes.
 
Reba said:
I don't feel bad for the teacher. I feel bad for the students.


yes me too.. cuz it was the most stupidest thing to do.. doing it in a classroom trying to scare his students who think highly of him.. let alone who look up to him!! what a fooked up and selfish teacher he is!! sheesh!!
 
Miss*Pinocchio said:
yeah and that man in California is stupid, too.
Yes, that is the same thing. Eleven innocent people died, a couple hundred seriously injured, a train crew and rescuers traumatized. All for one person's selfish reason.

I agree with District Attorney Steve Cooley about Alvarez:

"His despondency doesn't move me," Cooley said. "The mere fact that he was a little upset or despondent doesn't mean he has a defense for anything."
 
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