Cranbrook School crisis talks are continuing.

Cranbrook School crisis talks are continuing.Credit:Wolter Peeters

The eastern suburbs private school is attempting to minimise disruption to students. Sports games continued as scheduled on Saturday,while volunteers ran a sausage sizzle outside the school grounds.

In a letter sent to parents on Friday afternoon,newly appointed acting head of school Michele Marquet acknowledged the week had been “distressing” but said that staff were working to “restore the harmony” of the school.

“I firmly believe that by coming together as a community we can overcome any challenges that may lie ahead,” she wrote. “It is during these testing times that our bonds must grow stronger,and our commitment to our school’s vision and mission must deepen.

“Together,we will lean on each other,provide comfort for each other,uplift each other,and emerge from this period stronger than ever before.”

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The ABC reported on Friday that the allegations relate to a male teacher currently employed at Cranbrook,who allegedly sent multiple graphic emails in 2014 to a former female student that he taught at a Catholic girls school.

The former student was a young adult when the emails were sent,and contained details about looking up girls’ skirts in class,and described sexual fantasies about his students.

In a statement sighted by this masthead,the girls’ school said it first became aware of the emails in 2015 and referred the matter to the NSW Police,the NSW ombudsman,the Association of Independent Schools NSW,and Cranbrook.

“The[school] discharged its legal responsibilities as required at the time,” the college statement read.

The ABC Four Corners program,which aired on Monday,detailed allegations of workplace bullying and abuse at the school,as well as previously reportedchild abuse royal commission findings relating to Sampson’s response to abuse allegations about a maths teacher at Geelong Grammar in Victoria.

Federal Education Minister Jason Clare announced an investigation into the school,requesting his department look into “the issues raised in the media relating to Cranbrook and take any appropriate action”.

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Cranbrook’s council held an emergency meeting on Thursday night at which the board communicated its concerns to Sampson. Sampson resigned from his $1 million a year role on Friday morning.

In a message posted on the school’s website on Friday,Cranbrook’s council president Geoff Lovell said the council was “made aware for the first-time of allegations of an extremely concerning past conduct matter involving a current Senior School teacher at Cranbrook”.

He stressed that the allegations do not involve past or present Cranbrook students.

“The circumstances of the matter and subsequently Mr Sampson’s failure to disclose the matter to the current school council in the context of this week’s ABCFour Corners broadcast,have led to an irrevocable breakdown of trust between the headmaster and the school council,” he wrote.

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