• Skip to main content
District Home

8-Day Cycle Thursday Day 8

School Supply LIst
eagle head logo

Reiffton School

Grades 5-6 | 610-779-7640

Search
Close
  • Schools
    • Exeter Township Senior High
    • Exeter Township Junior High
    • Reiffton School
    • Jacksonwald Elementary
    • Lorane Elementary
    • Owatin Creek Elementary
    • Exeter Cyber Academy
  • About Us
    • Principal’s Welcome
  • Academics
    • Curriculum Overview
    • Teams
      • 5th Grade
      • 6th Grade
      • Specials
      • Student Support & Special Education
    • Library
    • PSSA Testing
  • Students & Parents
    • Attendance
    • APT
    • Bell Schedule
    • Bullying Policy
    • Character COWnts
    • Commuter & Busing Information
    • Flexible Instruction Day (FID)
    • Food Services
    • Forms
    • Health Services
    • Music
    • ParentSquare
    • Safe2Say Tipline
    • Schoology
    • Skyward
    • Student & Family Resources
    • Student Handbook
  • Counseling
    • Counseling
    • Student Assistance Program (SAP)
  • News & Calendars
    • News
    • Calendars & Events
Directory

Reiffton School

4355 Dunham Drive | Reading, PA 19606
(610) 779-7640

Click Here For A Searchable Directory
  • Office

    x7006 Greg Fries, Principal
    x7005, Jennifer Cameron, Assistant Principal
    x7003 Kristy Reeser, Attendance Secretary
    x7001 Karyn Talarico-Werner, Secretary

  • Counselors & Psychologist

    x7405 Kylie Fry, Counselor A-L
    x7403 Emily Seeberger, Counselor M-Z
    x7022 Chad Rutherford, Psychologist

  • Nurse

    x7015 Tammy Hughes

  • Technology Support

    x7208 Cathy Bittinger

Note: Faculty phone numbers go to voice mail during school hours

  • Grade 5 - Team Neversink

    x7715 Carolyn Bihl
    x7716 Lauren Eddy
    x7709 Krista Gilham
    x7708 Derek Wolfe

  • Grade 5 - Team Dunham

    x7305 Jessica Schaeffer
    x7317 Karen Timura

  • Grade 5 - Team Rugby

    x7717 Patricia Frederick
    x7704 Heather Kirlin
    x7705 Drew Schaeffer
    x7718 Anna Zielinski

  • Grade 6 - Team Gibraltar

    x7205 Kim Grogan
    x7216 Rick Spraut
    x7217 Erin Trostle
    x7206 Michelle Woolsey

  • Grade 6 - Team Perkiomen

    x7616 Matt Hoelscher
    x7605 Amanda Karich
    x7617 Russell Keith
    x7604 Olivia Winthrop

  • Grade 6 - Team Shelbourne

    x7613 Brian Druzba
    x7606 Erin Gross

  • English as a Second Language

    x7406 Megan Block
    x7607 Kellee Fries
    x7612 Rachel Gierlich

  • Reading & Intervention Specialists

    x7209 Carol Bagoly, Intervention Specialist
    x7316 Meredith Hudome, Reading Specialist

  • Special Education

    x7218 Justin Blatt, Gifted
    x7212 Deb Carl, Learning Support
    x7409 Lidie Dawson, Emotional Support
    x7713 Paxton McGinnity, Emotional Support
    x7608 Miranda Pochron, Learning Support
    x7207 Mandy Rumberger, Special Education
    x7505 Emily Showalter, Learning Support
    x7213 Corri Speakman, Learning Support
    x7314 Kim Watson, Life Skills

  • Specials

    x7507 Gianna Digiacomo, Art
    x7041 Jen Dorta, Physical Education
    x7106 Dawn Keebler, Music
    x7126 Patricia Kline, Music
    x7119 Sally Lamm, Library

  • Therapist

    x7504 Jessica Dimitriades, Occupational/Physical Therapist
    x7313 Melanie Zaborowski, Speech Therapist

Home » Exeter Schools & Police to Hold Parent Presentation

Tuesday, December 12th at 6PM in the LGI in Exeter Township Senior High School
PRESENTED BY:
Mrs. Alycia Lenart, Exeter Township School District K-12 Student Support Coordinator
Sergeant Detective Rocco DeCamillo, Exeter Township Police Department

Please RSVP in ParentSquare

“Make no mistake, this is an eye-opening, worldwide problem affecting our students here in Exeter,” said Sergeant Detective Rocco DeCamillo to the faculty of the Exeter Township School District during a professional development session held at the Senior High last Tuesday. “To make things worse, we know there are a lot of cases here that are not being reported because it takes a lot of courage to go to a parent, a friend or to the police. This is why I think it’s important for you to be aware of this issue in case you have a student who considers you a role model and decides to confide in you.”

The issue is called sexting, and it can often lead to an even more serious issue called sextortion. “One can lead to the other one, but they are two very different things,” said DeCamillo, who was joined during the presentation by his colleague, Exeter Township Police Detective Anthony Pendell.

In short, DeCamillo explained that sexting is sending sexually-explicit messages, images or videos to another person. Sextortion, however, is a form of cyber blackmail where a perpetrator often demands money to refrain from publicly releasing sexually-explicit messages, images or videos of the victim. These issues, said DeCamillo, are ones that affect adults–as well as minors, too. “You might think of this as a high school problem, but we’re seeing sexting more frequently at the junior high level,” he said. “But what’s even scarier is that we’re starting to see it more frequently in preteens, too, which is scary. The victims–and their offenders–are becoming younger.”

To complicate matters, minors are very savvy with finding ways to hide explicit content and conversations from their parents–and perpetrators are just as savvy at finding their victims. Rather than using traditional texting methods, DeCamillo said that minors and offenders alike use social media, texting or gaming platforms to send or receive content, such as WhatsApp, XBox, Instagram, Playstation, Roblox and Snapchat. On these platforms, adults often pose as minors, cultivating trust and a following by requesting mutual friends. Once a relationship and trust has been established, DeCamillo said that perpetrators will often start by requesting selfies of the minor victim. “Younger kids–those who are 11 or 12–almost can’t help but send these selfies of themselves out naked. They think they’re talking to a 15 year old, but it’s really a 43 year old who is harvesting child pornography.”

Currently, the most frequently used platform is Snapchat. “Snap is the devil,” DeCamillo said as he discussed the app’s encrypted feature called “My Eyes Only,” which is a hidden vault that erases all content as soon as a user asks for a password reset. This, he said, even prevents law enforcement from finding and recovering those photos once a report’s been filed, giving kids a false sense of security about hiding–or sending–naked selfies on the platform. “Kids often don’t think of the ramifications of when they hit that send button there’s a whole lot of things that can come out of it,” he said.

Minors who send sexually-explicit photographs lack the understanding that this is a crime under PA law; however, DeCamillo stressed that the focus of Exeter PD is more on education rather than on the arrests of minors. “This is not a situation where we can arrest our way out of it. It’s not that simple, and arrest isn’t always the answer.” Instead, he said that the department works to educate minors about the pitfalls of sending sexts and how repeated or more serious offenses can get them in serious trouble. Beyond criminal or legal issues, he also warned that sexting can lead to other problems, such as, grooming, destroying a person’s reputation, sextortion or mental health problems. The latter, he said, is unfortunately common, and is something that profoundly worries him and his department. “If the messages wind up in the wrong hands, it can be so mentally damaging to an adolescent teen.” Reflecting on cases outside of Exeter, he said solemnly, “Sometimes, it’s so extreme that children have taken their lives over it,” he said. “Sometimes therapy doesn’t quite work out, their reputation is destroyed and they feel they have no other option other than suicide,” he said with a pause, “It’s heartbreaking.”

Superintendent Dr. Christy Haller and Assistant Superintendent Mrs. Dawn Harris organized the session with Detective Sergeant DeCamillo and Detective Pendell to bring a greater awareness to teachers of this issue, which is only growing, according to the figures the detectives presented. Between 2019 and 2021, the number of reports involving sextortion doubled, according to their report, wth 45% of sextortion perpetrators actually carrying out threats, and 25% of victims seeking mental health help following an incident.

Like last year’s edibles presentation, the professional development session proved to be so popular with educators that Detective Sergeant DeCamillo and Detective Pendell, along with the district’s K-12 Student Supports Coordinator, Mrs. Alycia Lenart, have decided to offer a similar session to parents and families so that they, too, could learn what police are seeing in the local community, as well as how to talk to their kids about sexting and sextortion. The parent and family session will be held on Tuesday, December 12, 2023 at 6PM in Exeter Township Senior High School’s Large Group Instruction (LGI) room.

Reiffton School

reiffton

Address & Contact Info

  • 4355 Dunham Drive
    Reading, PA 19606

  • Phone:
    610-779-7640

  • Fax:
    610-779-6995

Follow us on social media

Our Schools

Exeter Township Senior High

Exeter Township Junior High

Reiffton School

Jacksonwald Elementary

Lorane Elementary

Owatin Creek Elementary