Luke Webster has been identified for gross misconduct in 2009 after the Mercury Bar released in Sydney that he used a worksheet that presents the block again and again.
The exercise encourages the class - all adults whose first language is not English - to discuss whether the word was being used as a noun or verb used in each case. The Mercury Bar argues that this was a very serious departure from standard teaching methods available credit.
Mr Webster, who was teaching in Sydney had two years, was forced to return to England after he rejects raising his Australian visa. However, said Mr. Webster, who as a witness by video-link from Nottingham States, the court found that the worksheet rather not offend, but it was "purely for educational purposes and designed to clarify the difference between" when is the word offensive and when not, and encourage students to be careful in their use. "
He told the court that the exercise was not more than 20 minutes a lesson in two hours had been used and explains how often the word was offensive, but in other cases, such as a sign of surprise, had a benign. "At the end of the lesson indicated that non-native speakers should not the F-word itself," he said in a written statement to the judge, Fair Work Australia.
"Today I have the senior adult students are taught not happy with the F-word is not clear to many students who have native English speaking friends, or watch Hollywood movies, and who abuse the word more."
John Rennie, a former colleague, supports the claims of Mr. Webster, said the adult learners of English often mentioned as a lesson about the F-word. "The students do not understand the nuances, intonation and context of the same word is now so easily inserted into the streets and on TV," wrote Mr. Renner to the court.
Lea Drake, Senior Vice President of the Tribunal found Mr Webster use of profanity in the lesson a good reason for their discard. But she found that the disposal was unfair and unreasonable because it was given to explain the opportunity to exercise within the training, and rough, because it required that he leave the country within 28 days.
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