Answers:
yes if she asked you to move it or pick it up by a certain date,
No, stab her.
Who cares if its allowed? You can't do anything about it. It's been done.
no she is not, unless no somebody wanted it
Yes, it's allowed. But you didn't say WHY it was done.
Are there copyright issues? Personal property issues? Was this digital art, sketches, oil or pastels, water colors? What was destroyed? Was this original work...or copies of other works?
I believe I'd need to know more before I could really say if this was ethical or not. Allowed...yes. Justified? Who knows?
Not very professional for what ever reason.
It is probably allowed but not really appropriate. She should have left it to you to decide what happened to it when it was no longer needed OR if it was needed, kill her! I know how it feels to lose coursework and I would have gone insane if my teacher ripped it up!
The way you've put it - no. There are two sides to every story though - why did they rip it up? Were you asked to take it or were you just a pain who didn't do as you were asked and wound your teacher up?
I very much doubt your teacher did it for no reason and you need to figure out what you did to provoke that strong a reaction - it might help you have a more successful year from Sept if you can combat that side of you as it might not just be your art teacher that you're conflicting with.
You should have taken home your work when school let out in June! Your art teacher is not a "public storage" facility.
It is too bad she didn't call you to come pick up your stuff first.
You aren't giving the full story, are you? I suspect it wasn't just that he/she made a mistake or was having a bad day. If the coursework was not your own work, eg somebody had helped you, or there were copyright issues then he/she could do that. However, it sounds as if there might have been more to it than that because it's a very serious matter to destroy a student's work, for whatever reason. If I was the teacher, I would at least have kept it as evidence. Was it a good standard? Were you proud of it? Have you had to re-do it? Or perhaps it was old coursework and you have already passed the GCSE or whatever it was for and you just had not collected it?
Anyway, the answer would be yes as long as there were very strong reasons to do so.
Why?
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