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Published: 06:09 BST, 23 March 2019 | Updated: 06:09 BST, 23 March 2019
A gay arts teacher who had sex with two female teenagers could face 20 years in prison.
The 28-year-old woman was arrested last year after it was revealed she had sexual relationships with students in a Perth school for more than two years.
The teacher would take her students on trips to the beach and would host photography and graphic design workshops, The West Australian reported. 
She could face a maximum sentence of 20 years in jail for sexual conduct with a child under 16, which she admitted to. 
A 28-year-old lesbian arts teacher had a sexual relationship with students in a Perth school for two years (file image)
An investigation was launched after a teenage girl claimed she had been in a relationship with the teacher.  
The woman pleaded guilty to 48 sex offences including sexual penetration on her victim aged between 13 and 16 at the time of the offence. 
She indecently assaulted the victim up to 19 times on multiple occasions including repeated assaults on Australia Day 2016. 
In 2017, the teacher indecently dealt with a second student and sexually penetrated on her 14 times, the Rockingham Magistrate’s Court heard.
The woman who has been teaching since 2013 was arrested in July 2018 and dismissed by the Education Department not long after. 
She will be sentenced in May however a pre-sentence and psychological report have been requested by her lawyer.   
She pleaded guilty to 48 sex counts including sexual penetration on her victims aged under 16 at the Rockingham Magistrates Court (pictured)
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Published by Associated Newspapers Ltd
Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media Group



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I Love My Lesbian Daughter: 17 Years and 27 Days
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STAY IN THE KNOW We've got the wisdom, advice, and comfort you're searching for
The text lit up my phone like an atomic bomb.
Chloe wore a goofy smile every time she mentioned Miranda’s name; my instincts told me they were more than just friends. I’d finally decided to ask her. She laughed, shaking her head with startled embarrassment, and said, “I can’t believe you just asked that!”
“Oh,” I answered. “Sorry about that.” I apologized for my intrusion, my miscalculation about her sexuality .
Chloe came out to me at the age of 17 years and 27 days. Why count the days? Because I need to give her credit for every single day I’d misunderstood her.
“It’s okay if you’re still finding out who you are,” I naively told her.
“Mom, I’ve always known who I am. I just didn’t let anyone else know.”
I’d again been one step behind, as parents often are.
Chloe has always been a tomboy. Hot Wheels instead of Barbies. Blue instead of pink. Baseball instead of ballet. My little Chloe-the-Bear, her nickname from early on. Until she was three, I adorned her with dresses and bows and gave her dollies to play with. Until she was three and old enough to tell me what she wanted.
Chloe cried when the boys’ Little League coach told her it was time to play girls’ softball. She politely declined all glitter and lip gloss. She asked for boys’ character underwear for her sixth birthday.
She’s never had a boyfriend, never gone on a date.
Chloe’s girlfriend reached out to me. “I feel like I should talk to you, but I don’t really know what to say,” she texted. “I’ve always been so unhappy, but didn’t know why. With Chloe, now I’m happy.”
“Just be yourself,” I told her. “That’s all anyone could ask of you.”
“But my mom won’t understand.” Miranda was terrified of her parents finding out.
The struggle for gay rights suddenly became so much closer to home.
Chloe doesn’t much like going to church, and after confirmation, hardly went at all. But a few times she actually asked to go. Wanted to go. I’d fancied that maybe she needed absolution for a sin committed, or strength to deal with it.
Years later I brought this up with Chloe.
“When I was little, I always asked God why he made me this way,” she confessed with tearful brown eyes. “I’d keep asking myself, ‘Why do I have to be like this?’” Though she knew who she was, she also suffered through the pain of being different from her tribe.
But why should she have to ask herself that question? She’s always known. It’s the rest of us who haven’t. She’s the same person; it’s our perceptions that have been wrong.
That’s when I realized I’ve always treated her like someone she wasn’t. Why did her family unjustly assume she was a certain way; why did we approach our parenting with a preconceived notion of who she was? I knew she didn’t like girl stuff. But why had I always assumed she’d like boys? It wasn’t fair for her family to just assume.
“How should I refer to you?” I asked her, to treat her with the respect she deserved. “ Lesbian, gay ?”
Chloe was embarrassed. “Why do we have to use labels? Why do we have to decide what to call somebody?”
She was right. Hopefully her generation won’t need to label people. But unfortunately, older generations tend to find categories helpful when dealing with differences.
There are only three people in our family who know about Chloe; she’s still not ready to come out to the rest. I think she should trust them, but she’s afraid they’ll treat her differently. I reminded Chloe that it takes time for people to reconstruct their image of a person. Right or wrong, we all have preconceived ideas that take time to change. But she’s still afraid.
My heart is breaking under the weight of her secret. No one should have to hide who they are.
I know we’ll have a struggle with some family members, with some of Chloe’s classmates, with some parents. With many others out in the world. I’m still teaching my husband to be more sensitive—no “gay wad” comments about effeminate men on TV, no “she’s-so-pretty-it’s-such-a-shame-she’s-a-lesbian” comments. Chloe said that most kids at school are cool with classmates being gay, but there are still some who pull out the God card, believing it’s a sin punishable with a trip to hell.
I pray that other family members will accept Chloe for who she is and realize she’s the same person she’s always been.
Hopefully with love and growing understanding, there will be no more Hushed Up Life of Chloe-the-Bear.
Emily Lane writes about her imperfect parenting at Mamaconfidential.net
Parenting teens is all of this: Lonely-Hilarious-Frustrating-Fun-Loving. 
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Halle Berry had to answer difficult questions about her sexuality after accidentally showing her teenage daughter a lesbian sex scene she was in.
Halle Berry had to answer difficult questions about her sexuality after accidentally showing her teenage daughter a lesbian sex scene she was in.
The Hollywood actress, 55, plays a UFC fighter who beds a man — and a woman — in Netflix hit Bruised.
And she said 13-year-old Nahla was stunned when she saw the love scenes during an early screening, telling her superstar mum: “We need to have some conversations.”
Halle, who has made her directing debut with the sports drama — revealed her film editor unexpectedly jumped to the movie’s raunchiest moment during the screening.
She said: “So Nahla watches the love scene (with a man). She’s looking at me and she’s like, ‘Oh, whoa, Mum. Really? Wow!’ So then, my editor, who’s sitting next to me not really realising my daughter is there, says, ‘Go to the second love scene, I want to see what that looks like’. Well, that’s a love scene with a woman.
“My daughter’s like, ‘Whoa, Mum, we need to have some conversations. You didn’t tell me’.
“And I said, ‘Nahla, this is a movie, none of this is true. Like, none of this is real’. It started a conversation — really for the first time — about what I do and about playing characters and what’s real and what’s not real.
“She was asking, ‘How do you do that?’ and, ‘How does it make you feel?’ I explained those are some of the hardest scenes actors do, the most awkward. It’s not always fun.
“So I had a real conversation with my daughter about that, about my sexuality, about my work in the business and how hard I had to fight to do the film.”
Halle plays disgraced mixed martial arts fighter Jackie Justice, who is making a comeback while juggling personal issues.
A brief romance sparks between Jackie and tough trainer Bobbi Buddhakan (Sheila Atim) as she gets ready to take on bantamweight champ Lady Killer, played by real-life MMA fighter Valentina Shevchenko.
Even though the film has a 15 certificate, Halle let her teen daughter watch it to see the hard graft she had put in for the role.
Nahla is the daughter of her ex-boyfriend, Canadian fashion model Gabriel Aubry, 45. Halle, also has eight-year-old son Maceo, whose dad is her ex-husband, French actor Olivier Martinez, 56, who she divorced in 2015.
Halle said: “I asked Nahla, ‘Would you please come to my film? You may never see it on the big screen because it’s on Netflix. So I’d really love you to see what I did’.
“I said, ‘It’s not totally appropriate for you, you’re 13. But you’re my kid, so I really want you to see what I worked so hard on and why I missed so much time with you’.
“The irony is that she only ended up seeing those two love scenes because the colour was all wrong so the editor called time on the screening.”
Another unique parenting experience came when she homeschooled her two kids in their Malibu, California, beachfront home during lockdown in 2020.
Halle, who also has a pad in the Hollywood hills, said: “I became so involved with my children in a whole new way. I became a homeschool teacher and we had to find things to do within the house. Our creativity went to a higher level.
“We became closer as a family. My children found ways to start getting along because they had to actually talk to each other. They were friends.”
Halle has spent her 30-year career convincing people she is more than a pretty face.
Now dating musician Van Hunt, 51, she revealed: “The truth is I long for someone to come up and say, ‘You’re talented’, or ‘You’re a good mother’. But I always just get people commenting on my looks.
“I have tried to fight through that and prove myself. But at 55 I’m tired of trying to fight all the time.”
She won the Best Actress Oscar in 2002 for her role in hard-hitting drama Monster’s Ball, making her the first black woman ever to lift the gong. But after her major win she says “no scripts came in”.
Chatting with fellow actors Jason Bateman, Will Arnett and Sean Hayes on their SmartLess Podcast, Halle said: “I thought, ‘This is the highest award of our industry, it’s going to garner me better opportunities’. But nothing changed.
“The script truck didn’t back up to my door. Because there was still no way for people of colour.
“So I feel like that award means different things for different people. If you ask Nicole Kidman, she might have a different reality on what that award meant for her.
“But it didn’t mean that for me. I didn’t get offered all these wonderful scripts with these great directors.”
But Halle proudly told how her milestone win had helped smash down barriers and build opportunities for the next generation of screen talent.
She said: “If you look at our evolution from 20 years ago to now, black women are everywhere.
“They’re in all kinds of roles. They’re taking roles for men and changing them into women and becoming more inclusive. I do think that moment inspired many people to think differently and to believe that anything was possible. So in that way, I feel like it mattered.
“It’s always really gratifying and satisfying. And it reminds me that I’m doing my part throughout history. We all just carry the ball as far as we can and hope the younger generation picks it up, and then go even farther. It’s what we wish for our children.
“We always want our children to be better, smarter, go farther than we could.”
This story originally appeared on The Sun and is republished here with permission.
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