Posted by: Lone Wolf on: May 19, 2008
Land ‘O Lakes, Florida — The stories in the news about inappropriate relationships between teachers and students have been overwhelming. There was even a substitute teacher in New Port Richey who got in trouble after investigators say she had a relationship with an underage student.
Well, another Pasco County substitute teacher’s job is on the line, but this time it’s because of a magic trick.
The charge from the school district — Wizardry!
Substitute teacher Jim Piculas does a 30-second magic trick where a toothpick disappears then reappears.
But after performing it in front of a classroom at Rushe Middle School in Land ‘O Lakes, Piculas said his job did a disappearing act of its own.
“I get a call the middle of the day from the supervisor of substitute teachers. He says, ‘Jim, we have a huge issue. You can’t take any more assignments. You need to come in right away,’” he said.
When Piculas went in, he learned his little magic trick cast a spell that went much farther than he’d hoped.
“I said, ‘Well Pat, can you explain this to me?’ ‘You’ve been accused of wizardry,’ [he said]. Wizardry?” he asked.
Tampa Bay’s 10 talked to the assistant superintendent with the Pasco County School District who said it wasn’t just the wizardry and that Picular had other performance issues, including “not following lesson plans” and allowing students to play on unapproved computers.
Piculas said he knew nothing about the accusations.
“That… I think was embellished after the fact to try to cover what initially what they were saying to me,” he said.
After the magic trick, Rushe’s principal requested Piculas be dismissed. Now, Piculas believes the incident may have bewitched his ability to get a job anywhere else.
“I still have no idea what my discipline involves because I’ve never received anything from the school district actually saying what it entails,” said Piculas.
As a substitute teacher, the Pasco County School District considers Piculas to be an “at will employee.” That means the district doesn’t need to have cause for not bringing him back at all.
And Florida stupidity reaches a new low.
The teacher was fired for wizardry. Wizardry. A magic trick is wizardry?
Update 5/19/08: This was talked about on the SGU and at the Bad Astronomy Blog and I’m now getting updating my blog post on it.
It turns out it he wasn’t fired for wizerdry
In fact, assistant superintendent Renalia DuBose told the St. Petersburg Times, it wasn’t the magic trick at all. Rather, the district had written reports from the principal and a teacher at Rushe Middle School detailing Piculas’ use of profane language, his inability to control the class and his decision to put a student in charge — something the student’s parent complained about.
But those details got drowned out as the tale bounced from blog to blog. It was the wizardry angle, with all its Harry Potter imagery, that grabbed the spotlight.
“The teacher was very smart,” said Sree Sreenivasan, a professor of new media at the Columbia University School of Journalism. “It was in his interest to spin it the way he did. … That’s a headline I would click and read.”
So I was wrong Florida did not reach a new low.
2 | N. Palmer
May 20, 2008 at 5:50 pm
Yes based on the the article presented I’d say this was definitely an overblown incident!!
Also thanks for visiting and commenting on my site the other day. Much appreciated!

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1 | mylesfromnowhere
May 7, 2008 at 3:46 am
I like your take on this….I just wrote a bit about it as well… you cant write fiction this retarded