David Flom wasn't pacing the Eden Prairie sideline Friday night, coaching the Eagles boys basketball team like he had for the previous 16 years.
He was removed from the courtside action, sitting in the stands at Farmington High School as a parent, watching son Joey and his teammates take on the Tigers.
Flom was suspended from coaching by the school district Dec. 8, as it investigates his use of a racial slur during a meeting with players and assistant coaches the previous day. A former assistant coach for Flom has said, in an email sent to Eden Prairie families, that Flom was teaching about responsible use of social media and read the slur as an example of what not to do.
In the 10 days since, Eden Prairie has put Trevor Mbakwe, an assistant coach and assistant activities director, in charge of the basketball team while the investigation continues. Eden Prairie Schools officials have refused to comment beyond acknowledging a complaint was received and an investigation was begun.
Eden Prairie High School finds itself in a maelstrom that raises, again, a question educators have faced before:
Is it ever OK to use a racial slur?
Tia Sheree Gaynor has made racial healing a good portion of her life's work and does now as associate professor of leadership and management at the University of Minnesota's Hubert H. Humphrey School of Public Affairs.
"There are different views on the use of racial slurs in learning environments," she said by email. "Some may believe that no matter the situation and no matter the person, there is never a place to say a racial slur in a learning environment. I don't know if I am all the way there. However, if it is to be done in the classroom or other learning environments there are many things to consider before doing so. … Why did the coach feel comfortable enough to say the racial slur? And perhaps more important, what did it bring to the lesson to include the use of the slur?"