Texas teacher sorry for feeding sick kitten to classroom snake, district says | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: National Post
Author: National Post Staff
Publication Date: September 30, 2025 - 11:49

Texas teacher sorry for feeding sick kitten to classroom snake, district says

September 30, 2025

A Texas science teacher has apologized for feeding an “ailing” but still living kitten to a classroom snake and then telling students about it early in the school year.

One student, however, alleged that students were present when the sick animal was devoured and her mother later contacted the school district and the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) to raise concerns.

But in a statement to “correct the record” obtained by the Wise County Messenger , the Alvord Independent School District (ISD) Superintendent Randy Brown confirmed the feeding took place but insisted that it occurred before the school day began and not in the presence of any students.

“The teacher, an experienced educator and animal lover, has apologized to the students for her actions and voluntarily removed all snakes from her classroom,” Brown wrote.

National Post has contacted the ISD for more information and a copy of the statement.

The school district became aware of the Sept. 3 incident after its own police department received allegations of misconduct by a staff member from a parent who also contacted the Wise County Sheriff’s Office animal control division.

An investigation was launched with the assistance of the county attorney’s office, at the end of which all three decided the matter was not criminal in nature and should be dealt with at the district level.

“While we cannot provide additional details, we can confirm this was a one-time, isolated incident that has been addressed and fully remediated,” Brown said.

The Alvord ISD only has three schools — an elementary/intermediate, a middle and the high school.

The statement also indicated that more kittens were spared a similar fate when a student, with approval from a parent, was permitted to take them home, where they ultimately succumbed to their illness.

The mother of the girl who rescued the kittens said her daughter allegedly bottle-fed the three remaining kittens for two weeks before they died, according to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram , which withheld both their identities.

“It was really hard on her — she was up every two hours trying to feed them,” the woman said

The kittens, according to the Messenger , were born by one of the teacher’s own cats.

The mother also told the Star-Telegram, the Messenger and PETA that the teacher allegedly indicated to students that she had another pregnant cat at home and planned to feed those kittens to her snakes if they, too, were unhealthy.

“Reportedly, the teacher claimed to have another pregnant cat at home and taunted the student, saying, ‘You can’t save them all,’ and said that she is also feeding kittens to snakes at her home,” PETA wrote in its statement .

The animal rights group called on the school district to implement a ban on “the use of live animals” in classrooms and said the allegations against the teacher, if proven, could constitute a violation of the state’s animal cruelty laws.

“An educator who should be teaching her students empathy and respect for others is instead tearing newborn kittens from their mother and subjecting them to a painful, terrifying death in front of shocked and traumatized teenagers,” vice-president Rachelle Owen wrote.

“Anyone who would demonstrate such cruel and disturbing behavior shouldn’t be around children or animals.”

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.



Unpublished Newswire

 
The Alberta government is expected to introduce back-to-work legislation on Monday to force striking teachers to return to classrooms after three weeks, raising fears among labour advocates that the province will invoke the Charter’s notwithstanding clause to override workers’ rights. More than 750,000 students have been out of class since Oct. 6, after negotiations between the Alberta Teachers’ Association and the province broke down.
October 26, 2025 - 21:24 | Meera Raman | The Globe and Mail
Health Canada has for the first time approved a disease-modifying drug for Alzheimer’s disease, a watershed moment that offers hope for patients but does not guarantee that the complex and expensive intravenous therapy will be widely available in this country. The federal regulator on Friday granted a conditional authorization for lecanemab, an antibody drug that can slow the progression of the disease for some people with mild cognitive impairment or early-stage dementia owing to Alzheimer’s.
October 26, 2025 - 21:08 | Kelly Grant | The Globe and Mail
The BC General Employees’ Union announced Sunday a tentative deal with the provincial government to end a strike that has disrupted services across the province for the last eight weeks. Some 25,000 workers have been on strike since early September, with escalating job action slowing or shuttering everything from student aid delivery to liquor distribution.
October 26, 2025 - 20:41 | Stephanie Levitz | The Globe and Mail